Asteroids and maintenence update
Image from Mrs. McMahon’s 4th Grade Class
“Asteroids do not concern me, I want that ship” – Darth Vader
If you know how to play Intercept already you may skip to the last section of this post, dealing with the newly added Asteroid rules.
The rules have been rearranged slightly to make them easier to learn bit by bit. The best way to learn these rules quickly is either play with me, I’ll gladly teach you but not everyone live in Uppsala, or even Sweden for that matter. Ask questions here on the blog may also work of course. Another way to learn the rules is that you alone or with a friend try to play a test game. Start off by flipping through the booklet getting a feel for what’s in there, lots and lots of tables, diagrams and text with boldface lines sprinkled here and there. Daunting? Not to worry, the rules are structured in such a way that you can read the rules and learn each stage as you read.
Sequence of play
The first page hold a fairly detailed summary of the sequence of play. Yeah, the black page with a space battle barely discernible behind it and that cool Intercept logo tilted 90 degrees like some kind of layout pro made it, that page. Read this page carefully but you really don’t have to understand it, just familiarize yourself with the order of things. Note that all players do each step in parallel, there is no I-move-shooot-inflict-damaga then You-move-shooot-inflict-damaga.
Initiative
First you read page 2-3 that tell you have to resolve tasks with dice rolling and how the Initiative system works ie in what order within a phase the players perform things. When you have determined Initiative (rolled 2D6 and noted the result, various tie-breakers handle when both rolled the same result. OK, Initiative is determined now go on to movement. Read page 4-5 on movement and perform the movement step by step where low Initiative goes first, then high. If you like you can skip the hidden movement and sensors aspect of the game to make it simpler, just assume that both ships have Tracked result on the other so there’s no need for secret plotting etc.
Sensors
If you want to do the Sensors phase you should read page 6-7, not that only the first Scan target question need be asked if there’s no planet or asteroid on the map, the question “Does your Scan touch your´ship’s Sunglare column?”. OK, follow the Sensor rules, roll Sensor tasks for getting a tracked result etc. Remember that you don’t have to do this the first time you play but do come back to it later as it is the secret plotting and Sensor rules that set Intercept apart, creating that submarine feeling lacking in all other space combat systems.
Combat
If the ships are close enough for combat you should read page 8-9 for the general procedure of combat and page 10 and 11 for beam combat and missile combat respectively. If you hit and defenses such as sandcasters against lasers, lasers against missiles completely stopped the attack you continue with damage. Page 12-13 tell you how to do hitlocation, penetration and damage. Page 14 explains what effect damage has on the ships six hitlocations and 15 finally explain how you repair damage using the Repair Crew. This is the end of the basic game and all tables as well as important figures are doubled on the last four pages.
Tables
The last four pages could be printed double-sided as each side is used for one distinct part of the game, print one set of these per player. The few tables with gray headings are only used in the optional Deterministic rules (yeah, no random elements at all if you’ prefer that but learn the basic game first).
Page 45 holds data on weapons, missiles and sensors but these are already filled in on the ready-made data cards. If you made your own ships these values will be calculated for you and all you must do is fill them in on a blank Datacard, this page is rarely used.
Page 46 holds tables and figures on Task determination (rolling 2D6 vs a number with a bunch of modifiers), Initiative, Movement and Sensors.
Page 47 holds tables and figures for combat, attacks, defenses etc.
Page 48 finally holds the tables and figures for Hitlocation, Penetration and Damage, Damage effects and Repairs.
Asteroids
This is straight from the rulebook page 22, at the end of the Planets section, jus before the optional rules begin on page 23.
Small asteroid
Small asteroids are at least 1 km in diameter but less than 100 km. Their mass is too low for any significant gravity, ships can Mass Scan to or from Small asteroids without penalty.
The only planetary LOS rules are for their Sun column of infinite length and their Shadow column of 1 square.
Large asteroid
Large asteroids are at least 100 km in diameter but less than 1000 km. Their Mass is high enough to forbid Mass Scans to or from them, look at the next section for gravity effects when calculating Drift in the same square as an large asteroid.
The only planetary LOS rules are for their Sun column of infinite length and their Shadow column of 5 squares.
Asteroid gravity and movement
Asteroids, large and small, behave like ships when you enter the same square as them. You cannot accidentally crash into them, asteroids cannot crash into other asteroids, but they can crash into planets but players cannot alter the vectors of asteroids their course will be predetermined from the start of the scenario.
Asteroids move as drifting ships, they have vectors, calculate Drift just as normal and ships landed on the follow along. They are also affected by gravity in the same way, to model Phobos or Deimos of Mars, just have two small asteroids in orbit around a Small planet.
Large asteroids have a small gravity field affecting their square itself. Ships that was not landed have their Drift moved into any adjacent square if the ship is Piloted, or their fwd square if unpiloted, (landed ships are never affected by gravity except being forbidden to Mass Scan). A ship is unpiloted if it has a Hull damage of Critical+, a Crew damage of Critical+ or a Thrust damage of Critical+.
Landing on asteroids work the same as for small planets; chose whether landing in the Sunside or the Darkside, see the Landed or Docked signatures and Scans on page 17.
Asteroid LOS
Asteroid LOS procedure is simpler than for planets.
Ask if the Scan touches the Sunglare column and if yes reduce the Scan by -6 (Sun). This rule always apply, even when neither planets nor asteroids are on the map.
If a Scan touches the Sun column ask if the Scan was from the Shadow column and if yes ignore any targets in the Suncolumn.
If a Scan touches the Shadow column ask if the Scan was from the Sun column and if yes ignore any targets in the Shadow column.
Special sensors
The above rules on Sunglare, Sun column, Shadow column all apply to the Visual and IR Scans, other sensors have certain restrictions.
Radar Ignores the Sunglare rules, all other above rules apply.
Neutrino Ignores all asteroid LOS rules except Sunglare.
Mass Ignore all asteroid LOS rules as well as the Sunglare rules. Mass Scans are illegal to or from large asteroids. Yes, ask if a Mass Scan was to or from a large asteroid.
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