Hello all,
I was just wondering what you all think are the limitations of the Glamours power? A friend of mine is new to the game, and is planning a character with it, and I was concerned about how it works?
It seems to me that the power just changes the appearance of something, without changing its function and allows Veils?
1) So could he use it to disguise himself to look like a specific person, or does it just let him look different than his normal appearance?
2) Monopoly money to real money? Would this allow you to roll Deceit/Discipline rather than Resources when trying to buy something? Or would that take a stunt that requires the Glamours power?
3) How would it effect things like a metal detector at the court house, for instance?
As I recall Glamours allows the PC to create ectoplasmic based illusions, which would mean the the illusions are physically 'real', ie. If your 5' tall skinny Changling Glamoured himself into an image of a 6' 6" 'Roided out Weightlifter, then to a cursory check the height and mass would be real, they'd even have an appropriately increased weight if someone decided to weigh them, but the mass isn't actually real matter, it won't last past sun-up and could probably be interfered with by magic.
1) I'd allow the PC to look like a specific person. If this was a person they were unfamiliar with (for example a random person they met on the street or a person they saw on TV or in a photo) I
might impose some form of penalty or increase the difficulty of maintaining the persona.
2) I'd definitely allow the conversion of Monopoly money to real money, maybe even the wholesale creation of "Fairy-Gold" banknotes, however see above on their dispersion upon sun-up. Added to which there are numerous anti-forgery techniques that Governments embed into their currency and I wouldn't expect a glamoured note to be able to encompass them all. Cue intrusive investigation on behalf of the Federal Authorities. (On the other hand if the character had the
"Document Forging" Deceit stunt and a high Burglary or Craftsmanship skill I'd probably go more easy on this).
3) I don't think it would effect a metal detector at all, even if you cover your sword in a glamour, making it look like cane or walking stick, it's still made of metal, and the detector will react as expected. An interesting occurrence would be where the material of the illusion is the same and the illusion simply makes it appear different, a compact submachine gun covered with an illusion of a high-tech TV studio camera perhaps. If this item passed through an X-Ray machine (and the machine wasn't Hexed through exposure to active magic), then would the machine see through the illusion, or would the illusionary material behave the same as real material. Personally I'd leave this up to GM Fiat.