Naturalism
Description
Ability Score Used: Choose One Armor Check Penalty Applies? No
Only Barbarians, Druids and Rangers may learn this bailiwick skill. No other class may place ranks in it unless they have an ability which specifically states they may put ranks into a bailiwick skill not normally offered by their class. A bailiwick skill is a skill that represents the core competency of a style of adventure, and has many useful applications.
The naturalism skill is an expression of your practical knowledge of the wilderness and nature. For each rank a character places in naturalism, the character receives a free rank in Knowledge (Nature). Note that no character may ever have more ranks in a skill than her character level.
Each character class gains a single bailiwick skill at character creation, and this bailiwick skill is always a natural talent for your character. When you place your first rank in this skill, you must select one of your ability modifiers, and use that ability modifier as the key ability modifier for this skill. Once selected, this ability modifier may not be changed, except through the Reselection rules. Natural talent skills never suffer an armor check penalty, even if you associate that skill with your STR or DEX modifier.
If you gain a second bailiwick skill (usually through a racial trait), it is not automatically a natural talent (even though you typically get to choose which of your ability score modifiers is aligned to the second bailiwick skill). Armor check penalties do apply to the second bailiwick skill if you choose to associate it with your STR or DEX modifier, and you do not gain matching ranks in the linked skill for that bailiwick skill (in the case of naturalism, Knowledge (Nature)).
As with all skills, the uses below are merely suggestions, and by no means the full gamut of possible ways a skill can be used. Players and GM's are encouraged to find additional ways to use each skill.
Concentrate
To cast a spell, you must concentrate. If something interrupts your concentration while you're casting, you must make a Concentration skill check or lose the spell. The more distracting the interruption and the higher the level of the spell you are trying to cast, the higher the DC.
Concentration checks are typically made for the following reasons (though other reasons may occur as well):
Casting Defensively You can attempt to cast a spell while threatened by an enemy in combat, but it is inherently risky. This is sometimes referred to as 'casting while threatened', 'casting defensively', 'concentration check', or 'combat casting'. These terms are all effectively interchangeable, as they all refer to making a skill check to cast a spell due to being threatened by an enemy. Note that casting defensively cannot normally provoke an attack of opportunity. Instead, the spell either succeeds or fails, depending on the outcome of the check. The target DC of defensive casting is 10 + (spell level x 4). As a result, casting lower level spells while threatened is far less risky to a higher level caster than trying to cast one of their best spells while threatened. Overcome Spell Resistance You can use concentration to attempt to force your spells through the defenses of a creature which is immune to spells. Such creatures have a special ability called Spell Resistance, which means that all spells or spell-like abilities must first make a concentration check versus a DC of the target creature's Maneuver Defense, or the spell fails to affect that creature. This special ability is effectively an immunity to spells! However, as a big damned hero, you can focus your will, and try to blast through this defense anyway. You're just that much of a bad-ass. Manipulate Spell Effect Some spells, such as Black Tentacles (Sorcerer/Wizard Spell), emulate the effects of one or more Combat Maneuvers. As such, the effects of the spell go against the creature's Maneuver Defense score, instead of its Armor Class. Instead of using your own Might or Sleight of Hand skills to challenge your target, you use the power of your spell to manipulate your opponent on your behalf. You don't need bulging muscles and an obsession with high-protein diets to grapple monsters — you've got MAGIC! Spells which work inflict combat maneuver-like effects will also describe the need to use a concentrate check in place of might or sleight of hand in the text of the spell. Casting While Grappling If you are suffering under the grappled condition due to the actions of an enemy creature, you can cast a spell without any somatic components simply by casting defensively (see above). However, spells with somatic components require a Concentration check to cast, versus a DC of the grappler's Maneuver Defense, or the spell fails and the action to cast it is wasted. This Concentration check counts as the Casting Defensively check for casting the spell in melee (i.e. it is not in addition to a defensive casting Concentration check). Adverse Conditions If you are vigorously moving, in the middle of a violent storm, trying to stay upright on a tossing ship, or are otherwise being aggressively affected by your environment, you don't normally need to make a concentration check to cast a spell, because you're just that awesome. However, if you are attempting to cast a spell in the middle of a typhoon while on a sinking ship AND you are forced to make a concentration check for any reason, you suffer one or more penalties to the check due to the adverse conditions present. | |
Action Required: |
Usually part of the same action as casting a spell |
DC of Check: |
|
Modifiers to Check |
|
Take 10? / Take 20? |
No (though some class features, feats, and abilities may allow this). |
Allows Assists? |
No |
Results of Success |
You successfully cast the spell. |
Consequences of Failure |
You lose the spell, just as if you had cast it to no effect. |
Retry Allowed? |
Yes, with a new spell. The spell of the initial attempt is lost, as though it had been cast. |
Provokes AOO? |
No |
Identify A Spell
You can attempt to identify a spell or spell-like ability as it is being cast. This may provide useful information about how it can be resisted, or what secondary effects it might inflict.
Identifying a spell as it is being cast requires no action, but you must be able to clearly see the spell as it is being cast, and this incurs the same penalties as a Perception check due to distance, poor conditions, and other factors. | |
Action Required: |
Free action, which can be performed outside of your turn. |
DC of Check: |
10 + double the caster's level or CR |
Modifiers to Check |
|
Take 10? / Take 20? |
Yes |
Allows Assists? |
No |
Results of Success |
You successfully identify the spell or spell-like ability being cast. |
Consequences of Failure |
You are unable to determine what the spell or spell-like ability is. |
Retry Allowed? |
No |
Provokes AOO? |
No |
Create a Secure Campsite
You can select a location for a campsite which is difficult for enemies to approach without giving your party a good chance of spotting them. Such a shelter is often blocked on one or more sides by a natural feature, such as a cliff-side, or impassibly thick undergrowth. This skill use allows you to create a campsite which reduces the chance of a random encounter by half for one full night's rest, and grants anyone on watch a +4 circumstance bonus to their Perception checks to notice any potential threats approaching your campsite.
You must assign at least one ally to keep watch at all hours in which you are in the campsite or the benefits of this skill use are immediately lost (the chance of a random encounter returns to normal). This need not be the same character the entire night, of course. | |
Action Required: |
1 hour to set up the campsite: establish clear sight-lines, set up warning trip-lines, etc. It is assumed you also spend an hour during your travel time to actually locate an appropriate site, but this does not slow down your overland movement, so it is ignored unless your means of overland movement would prevent searching for a suitable campsite. |
DC of Check: |
|
Modifiers to Check |
|
Take 10? / Take 20? |
You can take 10, but you cannot take 20. |
Allows Assists? |
Yes (up to 5 allies). Allies must have ranks in the naturalism skill. |
Results of Success |
You cut the chance of a random encounter interrupting your next full night's rest (up to the next 12 hours) in half. In addition, allies who are on watch gain a +4 circumstance bonus to notice any potential threats approaching your campsite.
|
Consequences of Failure |
Your campsite provides no useful benefit against random encounters, and your allies on watch receive no circumstance bonus to Perception checks. |
Retry Allowed? |
No. The check represents your best efforts, and building up the camp site a second time doesn't let you anticipate something that you never considered in the first place. |
Provokes AOO? |
Yes. Don't try this during combat. |
Improve Overland Travel
You can use naturalism to increase your party's overland travel speed by 1 mile per hour if walking, or 2 miles per hour if hustling. This check may be made up to once per hour, at the end of each hour of travel.
While improving overland travel, your attention is fully occupied, leaving you unable to perform any other tasks, such as making Perception checks to avoid surprise, etc. This is also true for any character which is assisting you with improving overland travel. | |
Action Required: |
One hour |
DC of Check: |
Challenging DC vs. the highest CR of person/creature in your party |
Modifiers to Check |
|
Take 10? / Take 20? |
You can take 10, but you cannot take 20. |
Allows Assists? |
Yes (up to 5 allies). Assisting allies must have ranks in naturalism. Assisting allies are, like you, fully occupied for the entire duration of the skill use, and may not perform any other tasks while assisting, such as making Perception checks to avoid surprise, etc.
|
Results of Success |
You increase the distance traveled by your party by 1 mile for the hour walked. If your party was hustling, you increase the distance traveled by 2 miles. |
Consequences of Failure |
Any check which is failed grants no benefits to overland speed for the previous hour of travel. |
Retry Allowed? |
No, you must travel overland for another hour before you can try again, and doing so has no effect on this most recent hour of travel. (Unless it's time travel. Huh? Get it? HUH?!? *nod* You get it.) |
Provokes AOO? |
No |
Identify Magic Item
You can use naturalism to identify the properties and command words (if any) of a magic item you are holding. This is identical to the Divinity, Reason, Spellcraft, Spycraft, and Warfare ability to identify magic items. It is also very similar to the Barter ability, except that it is faster.
Naturalism may also be used to assist another party member's attempt at determining the properties of a magic item, even if the other party member is using a different skill to make the check. | |
Action Required: |
3 rounds per item you are attempting to identify |
DC of Check: |
10 + double the caster level of the item |
Modifiers to Check |
- |
Take 10? / Take 20? |
No |
Allows Assists? |
Yes (up to 5 allies). |
Results of Success |
Item is identified, including the command words (if any) needed to trigger its magical properties. |
Consequences of Failure |
Item is not identified |
Retry Allowed? |
You must wait 24 hours before retrying on the same item. Any attempts in the meantime always fail. |
Provokes AOO? |
Yes |
Craft Magic Item
When combined with the Creator feat, naturalism can be used to create magic items.
In addition to the Creator feat, you must have the components listed in the magic item's 'creation' section on its description page. These items include a remnant, an item symbolic of the enchantment, and a gold cost equal to half the item's retail price. If the symbolic item being used has a monetary value, that value is subtracted from the gold required to craft the item. The creator feat and the gold cost are mandatory, but the symbolic item and remnant are not. You may attempt to craft the magic item with a lesser-tier remnant, or a poorly-matched symbolic item, or you can skip these items altogether. However, doing any of this causes the target DC to increase (see 'modifiers' below). You also need an appropriate place in which to work. The nature of such a place can vary wildly. A noisy pugilarium full of hard-training warriors might be ideal for a Brawler to work on his new amulet of natural armor, but it is probably not going to be a good place for a Sorcerer to get anything done. For users of Spellcraft, any place suitable for preparing spells is suitable for making items. Warfare works best in forges and smithies and training halls; rough, rude places of strife. Spycraft works best in hidden spyholes full of small secretive nooks and hidden tools. Naturalism works great in grottoes and caves and glades, anywhere the Nascent Seed is strong and vital. Divinity works well in temples and crypts and ossuaries, anywhere the sense of the Divine is strong. Reason works best in libraries and meditation halls, dojos and saunas, places where quiet thought is enhanced. If the workspace is considered a poor fit for the item being created, the base time required is doubled. If the workspace is inconsistent, or the item is being moved around between creation days (such as attempting to create an item while journeying overland), the required time is doubled again. Each day of crafting requires 8 hours of work, with no more than 1 hour of interruptions (not counting food and rest breaks). If you are unable to work 8 hours in a given day, the entire day's efforts are wasted, and not counted toward your progress. The days spent creating a magic item need not be consecutive. Partially finished magic items stored in a safe fashion will keep indefinitely. Since magic items in progress keep indefinitely, you may schedule time to work on one as you wish. Once you have determined the base number of days required to craft the magic item, you must craft the item for half this amount of time before you may make a skill check to determine the item's success or failure. | |
Action Required: |
2 days, +1 day per creator level of the item being created. You can never reduce the time to create a magic item below 3 days, no matter how well you roll. |
DC of Check: |
The base DC of a magic item is 10 + double the Creator Level of the item being created. |
Modifiers to Check |
|
Take 10? / Take 20? |
No |
Allows Assists? |
No |
Results of Success |
|
Consequences of Failure |
|
Retry Allowed? |
Yes, though you must procure new components to replace the destroyed ones, and begin the process again. You gain a +5 circumstance bonus on each retry after a failure, as you incorporate your new knowledge of what not to do. |
Provokes AOO? |
Yes. Don't try this during combat. |