

In fact I don't see why you couldn't have all 3 apply to the same character. So looking at it I don't see a real problem with having all 3 in the same party. It differs from Obligation and Duty in that it is unique to force users and has no meaning or bearing on non-force sensitive characters. At certain thresholds you fall to the Dark side (with mechanical implications) or rise to Jedihood. Morality, from Force and Destiny is a general indicator of how in tune a character is to the Light or Dark sides of the force. No real examples from cannon save that everyone tied to the Rebellion has some. You generally want to increase it in play. You generally want to try to decrease it in play, although you can gain more (at char gen and in play)as an alternative to paying cash for items or services.ĭuty, from Age of Rebellion is a measure of ones standing with the Rebel Alliance.


The cannon example would be Han's debt to Jabba the Hutt. Obligation, from Edge of the Empire is a source of trouble, essentially some sort of underworld tied debt which haunts the PC. Mechanically the big differences between the 3 flavors of PCs come down to the one sub-system that is unique to each book. Yes, it's a bit stupid that if you want Han, Luke and Obi-Wan in the same party you need 3 separate books, but the bigger question is: Can you have Han, Luke and Obi-Wan in the same party? Taking a closer look however I'm not sure my trepidation is justified. So when I saw the FFG Star Wars game (leaving aside the money hungry structure of the releases) I was non-plused by the splitting of the game into 3 segments. In fact they have a lot of compatibility traps and weird differences between them.
#Age of rebellion character sheet fillable series
This is a series of 5 RPGs which, in spite of portraying the same universe and using what is ostensibly the same system are not particularly compatible. I've played a fair amount of the various FFG 40k games.
