View Full Version : How to Attack
dandrum1
May 2nd, 2017, 00:55
Although I've been using Fantasy Grounds for D&D 5e, it obviously doesn't work the same for BRP. I just bought the BRP ruleset, and I put two characters in the combat tracker, then dragged-dropped them onto a map and started the combat. I dragged the weapon skill from one character to the other character, which in D&D 5e causes the attack roll to occur and judge hit/miss, but here it just drops the dice without a roll being made. I tried to use the Token Target Mode to target the other character, but again, it neither displays who is being targeted in the combat tracker, nor does anything when I drop the weapon skill on the target.
Obviously, I'm a noob when it comes to BRP. I assumed my experience with Fantasy Grounds would carry over somewhat from D&D 5e to BRP, but obviously not. Can someone help me out here? How can I perform a basic attack and inflict damage?
damned
May 2nd, 2017, 01:03
Welcome dandrum1
I dont have that ruleset so I dont know the answer. Every ruleset can vary significantly in interface, features and how things are done. There are a bunch of reasons for that including different programmers, when the system was coded (newer rulesets tend to have better features and more consistency) and the amount of use a ruleset gets too.
Hopefully someone with BRP experience will be along soon.
Trenloe
May 2nd, 2017, 01:55
Welcome to the forums!
In the <FG app data>\docs directory there is a user guide: Basic Roleplaying for Fantasy Grounds II - User Guide.pdf
Get to this directory by clicking the folder icon in the top right of the main Fantasy Grounds startup screen, thill open a file explorer at the main FG app data directory, then go to the "docs" directory.
Trenloe
May 2nd, 2017, 01:58
Also, note that with BRP, you don't really attack a target number (like AC in d20 based rulesets), you make an attack against your own percentage chance, which can be modified; and then the target has a change to parry/dodge. So dragging an attack to a target doesn't really make the same sense like it does in 5E, for example. Just roll your attack (with modifiers applied), then the target gets to do their defending as a separate action.
dandrum1
May 2nd, 2017, 02:08
Thank you very much! I searched around the internet but couldn't find an answer or how-to on youtube. Thanks again for the rapid and helpful feedback!
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