Colonel_Liam
Supernova
- Joined
- Sep 24, 2018
To determine pregnancy, the DM (Liam or Bloom) makes a roll for the female character first, taking into account any modifiers inherent to her. Anything that makes pregnancy more difficult is a positive modifier, while anything that makes pregnancy more likely is a negative modifier. If you have any modifiers you want taken into account, please reach out to one or the the other.
Example:
Elizabeth rolls a 1d20 and gets a 12 as a result. She adds a 2 for being an older character, she was also sick recently so she adds another 2, however she recently found a plant in the area that when eaten gives helps with fertility and she mixed that into her salad for lunch giving her a -1.
12+2+2-1= net 15
After establishing her fertility threshold, any male partners from that particular scene who creampied the female character, or otherwise have reason to think they might be a pregnancy risk make a roll. However for them, things that improve conception chances are treated as a positive modifier and things that would hinder them are treated as a negative modifier.
Nathan rolls a 1d20 and rolls 14. He is young and healthy so gets a +2 for each of those, but he shot his load early, and gave Elizabeth a shallow creampie so he'll get a -2 for that.
14+2+2-2= net16
Then compare the results. Nathan's 16 is greater than or equal to Elizabeth's 15 so he has successfully impregnated her. If his score had been less than 15 he would have failed to get her pregnant in that scene.
In the event of multiple male partners in a scene or within the 7 in game days of each weekly journal update, each relevant male character would made a roll, and the one with the highest positive result is the one to succeed.
If a pregnancy is confirmed, a roll is made for the female character. A roll of 1-16 results in a normal pregnancy. A roll of 15-17 results in fraternal twins, 18-19 identical twins and a 20 is triplets, or more depending on the character writers preference.
Example:
Elizabeth rolls a 1d20 and gets a 12 as a result. She adds a 2 for being an older character, she was also sick recently so she adds another 2, however she recently found a plant in the area that when eaten gives helps with fertility and she mixed that into her salad for lunch giving her a -1.
12+2+2-1= net 15
After establishing her fertility threshold, any male partners from that particular scene who creampied the female character, or otherwise have reason to think they might be a pregnancy risk make a roll. However for them, things that improve conception chances are treated as a positive modifier and things that would hinder them are treated as a negative modifier.
Nathan rolls a 1d20 and rolls 14. He is young and healthy so gets a +2 for each of those, but he shot his load early, and gave Elizabeth a shallow creampie so he'll get a -2 for that.
14+2+2-2= net16
Then compare the results. Nathan's 16 is greater than or equal to Elizabeth's 15 so he has successfully impregnated her. If his score had been less than 15 he would have failed to get her pregnant in that scene.
In the event of multiple male partners in a scene or within the 7 in game days of each weekly journal update, each relevant male character would made a roll, and the one with the highest positive result is the one to succeed.
If a pregnancy is confirmed, a roll is made for the female character. A roll of 1-16 results in a normal pregnancy. A roll of 15-17 results in fraternal twins, 18-19 identical twins and a 20 is triplets, or more depending on the character writers preference.