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Status Effects

The dangers aren't just fangs and claws. A spectral touch or a whispered curse can be just as deadly. Here's a rundown of the various afflictions both Hunters and their foes might face:

Ending a Status Effect

Most status effects don't last forever. Unless an effect's source states otherwise, a creature can attempt to shake off an affliction at the end of each of its turns by making a check: roll 2_ON_D10 and add the modifier of the attribute most relevant to resisting that effect, as judged by the Overseer (Durability against poison, Charm against terror, Strength against a grapple, and so on). If the result meets or exceeds the Core Threshold (CT) of whatever inflicted the effect, the affliction ends. If the source has no CT, the Overseer sets a Difficulty Threshold instead.

Some effects work a little differently:

  • Fixed-duration effects like Burning, Bleeding, and Frozen are not ended by a resisting check. Unless their source states otherwise, Burning and Bleeding each last 3 turns, while Frozen lasts until the end of the affected creature's next turn. They deal their damage each turn until then, and can always be cut short by a sensible action such as smothering the flames, binding the wound, or shattering the ice.
  • Effects with their own escape rule, such as Grappled and Prone, use that rule instead of the check above.

Finally, any status effect can also be removed for narrative reasons. A well-placed bandage, dousing a Burning ally in water, dragging a Frozen Hunter to a fire, or speaking a word of comfort to the Terrified can all end an effect when the fiction supports it. The Overseer always has the final say on what the story allows.

Incapacitation

Several effects below leave a creature incapacitated: it cannot move or take actions. Stunned, Frozen, Petrified, and Unconscious all build on this same baseline, each adding its own extra consequences on top. Wherever you see "incapacitated" in a status, it means exactly this.

StatusEffect
AntihealingHealing effects are entirely negated.
BleedingThe creature bleeds out, becoming weaker and weaker. Deals 1d4 true damage each turn for 3 turns, or until the wound is treated.
BlindedThe creature can't see. Its range reduces to 0 ft. and all visual checks automatically fail.
BurningThe creature is ablaze, taking 1d6 fire damage each turn for 3 turns, or until the flames are put out.
ConfusedThe creature's mind is scrambled. Its targets and movement directions are randomized.
DeafenedThe creature can't hear. All audio checks automatically fail.
DisarmedThe creature's equipped weapons are dropped on the ground.
EnragedThe creature feels a surge of bloodlust, and is compelled to attack the nearest target, even if it's an ally.
FrozenThe creature is incapacitated and encased in ice, taking 1d6 cold damage each turn. It breaks free at the end of its next turn.
GrappledThe creature's movement is reduced to 0 ft., and it must succeed on an opposed Strength check to escape.
IncapacitatedThe creature can't move or take actions.
IncorporealThe creature's form becomes ghostly and indistinct, making it impossible to physically interact with.
InvisibleThe creature fades from view, making it extremely hard to detect or target. They automatically succeed sight based checks and gain +2 HT
MuteThe creature cannot speak.
PetrifiedThe creature is turned to stone. It is incapacitated and cannot be moved, but it is immune to all damage while petrified.
PoisonedThe creature is poisoned. It takes 1d6 toxic damage each turn.
ProneThe creature is lying on the ground, its movement is reduced to 0 ft., and it must use 50% of its movement to stand up.
SlowedThe creature's speed is reduced by 50%.
StunnedThe creature is incapacitated until the end of its next turn.
TerrifiedThe creature's mind is clouded by terror, and it can't move toward the source of its overwhelming fear.
UnconsciousThe creature is incapacitated, blinded, and deafened. It falls prone and is utterly defenseless.
Example

Overseer: "David, the eldritch horror reaches out and touches you. Suddenly, you feel a wave of nausea and your limbs go numb."

David: "That can't be good. Am I dying?"

Overseer: "Something like that. Starting from your next turn, you are poisoned. Each turn you'll take 1d6 toxic damage."

Amy: "I think I have a remedy for that. On my turn, I'll use that strange concoction we bought at the haunted carnival."

John: "You sure that's not going to make him worse? We don't want to turn him into some kind of weird tentacle monster... or worse... a clown."