![]() You make decisions for your character and describe to everyone else what your character says and does. If you’re a player, your primary job is to take responsibility for portraying one of the protagonists of the game, which we call a player character (or “PC” for short). These are optional, but they’re very handy for recording aspects during play. You can use pencil marks on your character sheet in lieu of tokens, but physical tokens add a little more fun. You’ll want to have at least thirty or more of these on hand, just to make sure you have enough for any given game. Poker chips, glass beads, or anything similar will work. (For Fate’s purposes we’ll continue to call them Fate dice, but call them whatever you like!) Fate dice can be purchased at your friendly local game shop or online. You can get these dice from many hobby and game stores, often under their original name, Fudge dice. ![]() Fate dice are a special kind of six-sided dice that are marked on two sides with a plus symbol ( +), two with a minus symbol ( -), and two sides are blank ( 0). ![]() (GMs, any important characters you play might have a character sheet also.)įate dice, at least four, preferably four per person. One of you is going to be the gamemaster (or “GM” for short), and everyone else is going to be a player.Ī character sheet, one per player, and some extra paper for note-taking. What You Need to Playīetween three and five people. The rules in this wiki apply the rules of Fate Core from the Fate SRD with the changes made for this game, to present a cohesive ruleset in one place. Every game of Fate Core features certain tweaks and changes to adapt it to the game’s setting. Restitutor Orbis uses the rules from Fate Core to put you in the place of a fifth century Romano-British warrior, the historical antecedent to one of King Arthur’s knights.
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