flight average

Upload: wayne-hanlon

Post on 03-Jun-2018

219 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

  • 8/11/2019 Flight Average

    1/1

    Average maneuverability

    Minimum forward movement speed

    - You must move this number of actual movement (not cost of altering directionsor some such) each round or you start to fall per the falling rules. For a Hawk,this is 30ft, (1/2 maximum movement). This means that every round you stay airb

    orn you must burn a move action to keep moving (unless you have a 10ft fly speedand take a flying 5ft step to stay airborn).

    Hover - no, you can't hover. A creature that can hover has a zero minimum forward movement and can stop in the middle of the air.

    Move Backwards - Flight pays attention to facing. You must pay attention to thedirection your character is moving. You cannot fly backwards as a hawk, you haveto actually turn around.

    Reverse - If you could fly backwards, this is the amount of your total distancelost in making a u-turn inside a single square. You can't as a hawk.

    Turn - This is the amount of turning you can do per square covered by movement.A Hawk can turn 45 degrees per square. This means that a hawk can make a bankingturn and twist around 180 degrees, but it will cover 6 squares of movement andhe will end up 20ft to his left or right. This form of turning does not cost movement. Think of this as turning without slowing down.

    Turn in place - This is the amount of turning you can preform without moving squares. This costs movement. A hawk can loose 5ft of movement to turn an extra 45degrees per square moved. This allows a Hawk to make a breaking turn by moving forward (turning 45 degrees for free), turning an extra 45 degrees for 5ft of movement, moving forward (now right or left of his original facing) and turning 45degrees for free, followed by turning 45 degrees for an extra 45 degree turn. Th

    en to finish off the hawk moves forward (he has turned full 180 from his original position) and ends up one square to the left or right of his starting position, using 25ft of movement and actually moving 15ft (this is the part that countstowards not falling)

    Maximum turn - This is the sum of the creatures tun + turn in place. This is themaximum change in direction per square moved. A hawk can make a 90 degree turnin a square, no more.

    Up angle - This is the maximum angle you can fly up. A hawk must fly roughly onesquare forward for every 2 squares he moves up. Thus he moves 15 feet and manages to climb 10.

    Up speed - But those up squares cost double, so it costs him 25ft of movement.

    Down angle - A hawk can move down at any angle, just watch out to save yourselfenough movement to make that turn at the end or faceplant in the ground after adivebomb. Some creatures can't fly strait down.

    Down speed - You also move faster while going down. Each 10ft of downward movement cost 5ft of fly speed, so you can dive 120ft as a move action.

    Between up and down - You must move 5ft horizontally between flying down and flying back up. This means that you must have 15ft of horizontal space, and 20ft ofmovement left to break out of a dive. (10ft to make a 90 degree turn out of the

    dive moving 5 foot (bottom square of the dive), 5 ft of movement between up anddown, and 5ft of movement turning back up.