HWalsh wrote:Actually yes, you are wrong.
Here is why:
When an attack is made against your character your clothing is not taken into account.
Source?
We may not have statistics for a lot of clothing, but that doesn't mean they don't have potential stats to take into account.
I always treated normal clothing as "padded" body armor, because cloth is a form of padding.
HWalsh wrote:Even armor only counts as an additive.
I'm not sure what you mean by additiv.
HWalsh wrote:Armor and clothing are not treated as separate pieces of the character or as secondary structures.
Wrong: spells which affect the self such as 'impervious to fire' or 'invisibility simple' have phrases like "no damage to the person or to anything he is wearing" or "the spell caster and anything he is wearing" clearly showing that worn things like clothing are not considered to be part of the person.
HWalsh wrote:You already admitted, in this thread, that you are only mocking it because you find the rule silly. This is the second time I've mentioned that this is inappropriate and is only baiting which is against the TOS of this board. Stop. Thank you.
I'm getting sick of these false accusations Walsh. You are misrepresenting an earlier comment I made. I don't appreciate you painting me as a flame-baiter based on your own inaccurate speculations. Since you keep bringing up this ad hominem attack and trying to derail the thread, I will review the issue and hopefully you will let it rest upon understanding it better.
Here is what I said:
Poking fun at the vague wording of a rule could be seen as mockery, but if so that would be "also" mockery, not "only" mockery. Your responses to this have taken an all-or-nothing interpretation which mis-characterize my motivations.
The only mention of trolling I can find on the rules thread is
viewtopic.php?p=2737595&f=1#p2737595 which makes a promise of explaining it in 2013 but which hasn't shown up yet. So please restrict your use of terminology to terms such as "baiting" which have actually been explained.
This is discussed at
viewtopic.php?p=2024109&f=1#p2024109 under 2. Flaming/Harassment
"Egging someone on to provoke them into lashing back with a flame post is called "flame-baiting" and is also not welcomed."
So I would not be breaking a rule against flame-baiting unless I flamed you to begin with, which I do not think I have.
I am not being malicious (it is not with malice I make my posts) and I am not attempting to harass or insult you.
I like the idea of people surviving MD attacks so I'm reading the RAW which talks about targets behind targets being safe and taking it to the extreme conclusion which its vague text allow.
Are protective sweaters over undershirts or hammer pants over long johns absurd? Sure, but absurd examples are the best way to show the end result of absurd ruling for a rule.
My 'poking fun' was merely using fun examples because everyone is talking about shooting through flags which itself seemed more absurd since worn barriers would actually be more practical, even if the worn barriers were goofy-looking.
I am not mocking you, and really I'm not mocking the rule either, because the 'energy transfer' discussions were pretty interesting about how MD could operate differently in RUE.
Fun-poking, which you call mockery, would be about the situation created by these rules unless we can find explanations to avoid those situations.
You are attempting to do that by offering arguments about clothing being considered part of a person or something along those lines, which is fine. I do understand where you're coming from (a lot of GMs hand-waive the idea of clothing) but still respectfully disagree because I believe there are too many examples of it being addressed separately from the 'self' (Impervious to Fire and Invisibility: Simple, both mentioned above, being 2 good examples) to accept the premise of your argument.
Even if clothing is not always considered armor, it is considered a separate thing, which is why it gets mentioned apart from the self under supernatural abilities.
My being goofy in the examples I use to illustrate a word's ruling does not mean my arguments do not hold weight. It does not mean I have ill will behind the arguments I offer.
So please drop the ad hominem attacks against me and playing a victim and just keep on the topic, which is what I will now proceed to do...
Killer Cyborg wrote:HWalsh wrote:When an attack is made against your character your clothing is not taken into account. Even armor only counts as an additive. Armor and clothing are not treated as separate pieces of the character or as secondary structures.
I agree.
Clothing is treated as a separate piece apart from the character, as a secondary structure, by merit of it being addressed separately from the spellcaster in Impervious to Fire and Invisibility Simple.
HWalsh wrote:I do need to amend that only pertains to SDC armor. MDC armor actually DOES count differently. (Which is why MD weapons don't penetrate.)
SDC armor is even more distinctly a separate structure than SDC clothing. I'm going to re-quote your excellent find from page 1 which is a great observation that I never noticed before until you brought it up.
"It stops upon hitting whatever is behind the first target" seems quite universal to me.
Hammer pants and longjohns are separate things. Sweaters and undershirts are separate things.
Humans are even more distinctly not longjohns or undershirts.
You give the example of a secondary cover inside a tent protecting campers. How is a bit of webbing or mosquito netting any different than some clothing? Seems about the same thickness.
I think earlier the issue of proximity was brought up, like clothing laying against flesh. I don't really think that matters since even if you lay against something you are still a separate thing.
But even with that argument: what if I was leaning my head against the side of the tent?
This would press the 2 layers of the tent together and my head would be against it.
Do you think I would still be protected or would doing that allow the MD shot to pop my head?