Difference between revisions of "FAQ"

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A: This is a form of powergaming. It is a veiled attempt at an instant death/knockout effect, and even if the combat code dictates that a direct hit is achieved, the target player can pose receiving significantly less severe damage. This sort of thing isn't fun for anybody but the person who thinks they should be able to do it, so it isn't allowed.
 
A: This is a form of powergaming. It is a veiled attempt at an instant death/knockout effect, and even if the combat code dictates that a direct hit is achieved, the target player can pose receiving significantly less severe damage. This sort of thing isn't fun for anybody but the person who thinks they should be able to do it, so it isn't allowed.
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==Q: Why are settings assumed to be equal? My setting has better stuff in it than everybody else's!==
 
==Q: Why are settings assumed to be equal? My setting has better stuff in it than everybody else's!==

Revision as of 09:02, 23 February 2014

Q: What is Unification?

A: Unification is the event that brings a universe (or world) into the Multiverse. Mass-unifications are usually significant events, but every world that becomes integrated into the Multiverse experiences Unification. At one moment they're alone in their universe, and the next they're quite suddenly not so alone.


Q: How does a world unify? Can a universe leave the Multiverse once it has unified?

A: Unification is achieved when a temporal tweak introduces an alternate timeline in which the target universe unifies into the Multiverse. It's not possible to leave the Multiverse, because there's nothing to go back to -- your timeline is here now.


Q: How much of my setting comes with me to the Multiverse?

A: Only the important parts. But, depending on setting that might be quite a lot. Star Wars is likely to bring the whole galaxy, while Fullmetal Alchemist will probably only bring along a single planet, or at bare minimum maybe just a few nations.


Q: The news files say souls are retroactively indestructible across all settings. But my series relies a lot on souls being destroyed! What do I do?

A: Souls CAN be maimed to the point that they cannot be resurrected or reincarnated, and this can be hard to distinguish between actual destruction. This is easily mistaken for the destruction of the soul.


Q: If all of these settings are sharing with each other, does that mean I can get a lightsaber or a phaser as easily as a sword or a gun?

A: Yes! Keep in mind, rare or unique items from other settings shouldn't be obtained without significant RP and an upgrade application, and getting actual powers from other settings is its own can of worms. But, if something is common in any given world you can get it pretty easily. So yes, you could buy a phaser or a blaster pretty easily. Maybe not a lightsaber, but definitely a beam sword, or commercially available materia.


Q: What about heavy military stuff, like Star Destroyers?

A: Even very rich people usually can't purchase an aircraft carrier. Most people can't purchase a Star Destroyer. On the other hand, purchasing a YT-1300 Freighter (like the Millennium Falcon) or a Runabout from Star Trek, or a Firefly-class starship, is rather like purchasing an automobile or 18 wheeler.

Q: If I (as an off-worlder) buy a YT-1300 or Firefly-class starship, could they be better than the Millennium Falcon or Serenity?

A: This is a complex question. As a general rule, no, and definitely not right out of the gate. It's poor form to take something from another setting and try to pass it off as better than the big guns of that setting, and you probably wouldn't want that done to you. In the long haul, with a lot of RP and a character (or group of characters) competent in the relevant fields, this isn't completely impossible but it is still iffy. It's also a lot easier for those big guns to upgrade past you with much less effort.


Q: What stops General Zod from opening a Star Destroyer like a can opener and venting the crew into space, or Nightcrawler from teleporting into the cockpit of a mecha and taking out the helpless pilot?

A: This is a form of powergaming. It is a veiled attempt at an instant death/knockout effect, and even if the combat code dictates that a direct hit is achieved, the target player can pose receiving significantly less severe damage. This sort of thing isn't fun for anybody but the person who thinks they should be able to do it, so it isn't allowed.


Q: Why are settings assumed to be equal? My setting has better stuff in it than everybody else's!

A: The MUSH is not about any one setting, least of all your pet series. This wouldn't be fun for the people NOT in "your" setting, so the MUSH is set up specifically so settings do not have primacy over one another. Some settings have advantages over others, but mostly the playing field is level so everybody gets to have a good time. And yeah, that means settings like Warhammer 40k lose a lot of their oomph in the translation.


Q: Does that mean that I got nerfed when I came to the Multiverse?

A: No. This sort of thinking promotes all kinds of wankery. Our setting just works that way. This is, by the way, to your benefit. No matter what your pet series is and how great you think it is, we can find something that could stomp it and anything in it flat.


Q: Which is better, Magic or Technology/Science?

A: Neither. Magic and Technology (or Science, as the case may be) are equal. Whether they are compatible or comparable depends on the source material. Science-based PCs should be aware that magic doesn't always adhere to the laws of physics, and attempting to de-mystify it has historically caused a lot of OOC strife. Please don't do that.