Friday, June 26, 2026

Integrating Adventurer Conqueror King System II (ACKS II) with the legendary, chaotic, and maximum-gonzo DNA of Dave Hargrave’s Arduin Grimoires - Converting The Techno PC Class To ACKS II Part II

 At 3rd level, the Techno’s calibration capacity transitions from utility gadgets and personal defenses into heavy military ordnance. These schematics consume significant power and thermal cooling capacity, essentially turning the Techno into a walking heavy-weapons platform. This blog post picks right up from 

Integrating Adventurer Conqueror King System II (ACKS II) with the legendary, chaotic, and maximum-gonzo DNA of Dave Hargrave's Arduin Grimoires - Converting The Techno PC Class To ACKS II



Following the precise balancing math of ACKS II, these 3rd-level Arcane equivalent schematics are devastating but bound by the rules of tactical positioning, area radii, and situational deployment.

3rd Level Heavy Ordnance Schematics

1. Shoulder-Mounted Micro-Missile Pod

  • ACKS II Original Spell: Fireball (Arcane 3)

  • Range: 240 ft

  • Area of Effect: 20-ft radius sphere

  • Execution: A compact launcher mounted on the Techno's shoulder rig flips upward, painting the target area with a laser designator before unleashing a swarm of high-explosive micro-missiles.

  • Mechanical Translation: Deals 1d6 explosive/fire damage per class level of the Techno (maximum 20d6) to all targets within the blast radius. Targets may make a Saving Throw vs. Blast/Breath (replaces Save vs. Spells for physical explosions) for half damage.

  • Arduin Campaign Environmental Note: Because this is a physical kinetic explosion, it can cause severe structural collapse in tight dungeon corridors, requiring a localized structural integrity check if used underground.

2. Directed EMP & Plasma Suppression Beam

  • ACKS II Original Spell: Lightning Bolt (Arcane 3)

  • Range: 180 ft

  • Area of Effect: 60-ft long by 5-ft wide linear beam

  • Execution: The Techno overclocks their central power core, unleashing a blinding, linear discharge of superheated plasma combined with a high-intensity electromagnetic pulse.

  • Mechanical Translation: Deals 1d6 electrical/plasma damage per class level (maximum 20d6) to all creatures caught in the line of fire. Targets may make a Saving Throw vs. Blast/Breath for half damage.

  • The Techno Twist: Constructs, droids, power armor, and cybernetic entities take a -2 penalty to their saving throws against this schematic. If they fail, they are also Stunned (unable to act) for 1 round as their systems reboot.

3. High-Frequency Sonic Disruption Field

  • ACKS II Original Spell: Dispel Magic (Arcane 3)

  • Range: 120 ft

  • Area of Effect: 30-ft cube

  • Execution: The Techno drops a specialized sonic resonance beacon or fires a wide-dispersion sound cannon that emits counter-vibrations designed to shatter magical matrixes and scramble active electronic frequencies.

  • Mechanical Translation: Operates exactly like Dispel Magic to neutralize active spells, enchantments, or curses.

  • The Techno Twist: This field is equally effective at neutralizing enemy technology. It can shut down active force fields, deactivate holographic traps, or temporarily brick enemy comms/scanners within the zone for 1 turn per level of the Techno.

4. Flash-Bang / Cryo-Gas Mortar

  • ACKS II Original Spell: Hold Person (Arcane 3 / Divine 2 up-scaled)

  • Range: 120 ft

  • Area of Effect: Up to 4 targets within a 20-ft forward arc

  • Execution: The Techno fires a multi-chambered grenade launcher that blankets the target area in a blinding magnesium flash combined with a localized endothermic (freezing) gas cloud.

  • Mechanical Translation: Targets must successfully make a Saving Throw vs. Paralysis (representing physical freezing/stunning). Failure means they are completely immobilized and incapacitated for 1d4+1 turns.

Heavy Ordnance Combat Constraints

To ensure these military-grade weapons don't entirely invalidate the martial classes in your ACKS II campaign, enforce the following structural limits:

Thermal Overload: Firing a 3rd-level Heavy Ordnance schematic vents massive amounts of superheated exhaust. After activating any of these schematics, the Techno's Armor Class is reduced by 2 points for the next round as their cooling vents open, making them highly vulnerable to counter-attacks. Furthermore, they cannot activate back-to-back Heavy Ordnance schematics on consecutive combat rounds.



To integrate high-tech gear fabrication into the rigorous economy of ACKS II, a Techno cannot simply pull gadgets out of thin air. They must operate under the exact mathematical laws governing standard ACKS II magical cross-breeding and item creation, adapted here into the Technic Workshop Rules.

Instead of rare monster parts and alchemical ingredients, the Techno uses Technic Salvage Value (SV)—the gold-piece equivalent of recovered microchips, wiring looms, radioactive cores, and exotic alloys harvested from ruins or crashed starships.

1. The Technomantic Engineering Formula

In ACKS II, item creation costs are tied directly to the item's mechanical power and utility. To build a permanent piece of tech, a Techno requires a Functional Workshop (costing a minimum of 2,000gp in specialized tools, diagnostic computers, and soldering rigs).

The base production rate for a Techno working alone is 25gp of Salvage Value processed per day (175gp per 7-day week).

Hiring Lab Assistants (Accelerating Production)

A Techno can hire assistant engineers or salvaged labor-droids to speed up the process. Each assistant increases the workshop's weekly output:

  • Apprentice Mechanic: Costs 15gp/month; adds +25gp to weekly production.

  • Master Cyberneticist: Costs 125gp/month; adds +100gp to weekly production.

  • Max Assistants: A Techno can supervise a maximum number of assistants equal to their level.

2. Techno Workshop Crafting Table

The following table dictates the Salvage Value (SV) in gold pieces required to build permanent items, along with the standard solo fabrication time.

Tech ItemACKS II Functional BlueprintSalvage Value (SV)Solo Time RequiredBattery / Fuel Requirements
Glow-Rod / FlashlightLight (Permanent Item)250 gp10 DaysBuilt-in kinetic winding generator.
Comms-Headset (Pair)Telepathy (Limited to 1 mile)1,000 gp40 Days1 Power Cell provides 48 hours of talk time.
Plasteel Riot ShieldShield (+2 AC passive bonus)1,500 gp60 DaysNone (Non-powered alloy).
Phaser Pistol / Laser SidearmMagic Missile (1d6+1 energy damage)3,000 gp120 Days1 Power Cell yields 20 shots.
Med-Scanner VisorDetect Magic & Disease (Visual spectrum)4,000 gp160 Days1 Power Cell yields 10 hours of active use.
Blaster Rifle / Laser CarbineWeb / Scorching Ray hybrid (2d6 damage)6,000 gp240 Days1 Power Cell yields 10 heavy shots.
Jet-Pack RigFly (Speed 120 ft, 10 min max per use)10,000 gp400 DaysRequires 100gp worth of Promethium Fuel per flight.
Personal Deflector FieldProtection from Normal Missiles15,000 gp600 Days1 Power Cell drains completely per combat encounter.

3. The Fabrication Process & Mishap Check

When a Techno begins a project, they must commit the required Salvage Value upfront. At the end of the calculated crafting time, the Techno must make a Proficiency Check using their Technological Aptitude (Thievery re-allocation) or a custom Engineering proficiency.

                  [End of Fabrication Time]
                             |
                   [Roll Proficiency Check]
                             |
       +---------------------+---------------------+
       |                                           |
[Success: Stable Build]                    [Failure: Fabrication Glitch]
       |                                           |
Item works flawlessly.                     Roll 1d6 on Mishap Table.

The Modification & Mishap Table (On a Failed Check)

If the Techno fails their engineering check, the item isn't necessarily a total loss, but it suffers an Arduinian quirk. Roll 1d6:

  1. Catastrophic Overload: The components melt into radioactive slag. All Salvage Value is lost. The workshop is offline for 1 week for decontamination.

  2. Power Leak: The item functions perfectly, but it drains power cells at double the standard rate.

  3. Volatile Intermittent Glitch: Whenever the item is used or fired in combat, a natural attack roll or check roll of 1–3 causes it to jam, requiring a full round to clear.

  4. Unintended Radiation: The item works, but using it forces the user to make a Saving Throw vs. Poison/Radiation once per day or suffer 1 point of temporary Constitution damage.

  5. Sub-Optimal Calibration: The item works, but its range, damage, or structural effectiveness is permanently reduced by 25%.

  6. Unstable Success: The item works, but the next time the Techno fails an engineering check on any item in this workshop, this item explodes dealing 3d6 explosive damage to anyone nearby.

In David A. Hargrave’s Arduin, Power Armor turns a user into a walking dreadnought capable of shrugging off dragon fire and energy blasts alike. To implement this artifact within ACKS II, it must fit precisely into the system’s structural grid: encumbrance, tactical combat maneuver constraints, structural domain wealth, and mass combat Battle Factors.

Here is the mechanical breakdown of Arduinian Power Armor designed for the ACKS II chassis.

1. Blueprint & Construction Requirements

Power Armor is treated as a Tier 4 Legendary Artifact Vehicle/Exoskeleton. It cannot be bought on standard markets, nor can it be built without a dedicated High-Tech Foundry (Workshop value: 10,000+ gp).

  • Blueprints Required: Arduinian Exoskeletal Matrix AND Cold-Fusion Internal Reactor.

  • Fabrication Cost: 25,000 gp in Technic Salvage Value (SV).

  • Time to Build: 1,000 Solo Crafting Days (reducible by hiring Master Cyberneticists and Labor Droids to a minimum floor of 100 days).

  • Prerequisite: Techno Class Level 9+ or an Engineer with the Ancient Lore (Technology) proficiency.

2. Combat Framework & AC Benefits

When fully powered, the armor completely alters the character’s baseline combat mechanics.

Armor Class (AC) & Protections

  • Base Armor Class: AC 11 (Equivalent to AC 0 in legacy systems). It replaces all standard armor and shields. Dexterity bonuses to AC do not apply while inside the armor, as its mechanical reactions dictate dodging speed.

  • Hardened Plating: Grants a passive +3 bonus to all Saving Throws vs. Blast/Breath and Poison/Radiation.

  • Kinetic Shielding: The armor absorbs the first 15 points of damage from any non-magical, primitive missile attack (arrows, bolts, slings) per combat encounter before the kinetic gel layers require a reset turn.

Offensive Augmentation

  • Hydraulic Actuators: The user's physical Strength is mechanically treated as 18 (+3) for melee attack damage, forcing doors, or lifting barriers, regardless of the pilot's natural stats.

  • Integrated Hardpoints: The suit features two weapon hardpoints. The Techno can hard-mount Heavy Ordnance schematics or Technic Ranged Weapons directly into the forearms/shoulders, reducing their individual encumbrance footprint to 0 stone while worn.

3. Encumbrance & Tactial Penalties

Power Armor is incredibly heavy, transforming the user's tactical limits.

       [Powered State]                           [Unpowered State]
• Encumbrance: 4 Stone (Active)          • Encumbrance: 25 Stone (Dead Weight)
• Movement: 90 ft / round                • Movement: 0 ft / round (Immobilized)
• Swim/Climb: Automatic Failure          • Swim/Climb: Automatic Failure

The Active vs. Dead-Weight Encumbrance Math

  • When Active: The suit bears its own weight. It registers on the character's sheet as 4 stone of encumbrance (representing the structural strain of piloting the rig). The user’s baseline tactical exploration speed is locked to 90 feet per turn (30 feet per round in combat scaling).

  • When Depleted/Unpowered: If the suit runs out of power cells or is hit by a devastating EMP, the servo-motors seize. The suit instantly collapses into 25 stone of dead-weight encumbrance. The user is entirely Immobilized (0 feet movement) and cannot exit the suit without spending 3 full rounds manually turning emergency safety release valves.

  • Environmental Penalties: Regardless of power status, the density of the plasteel frame means the user automatically fails all Swimming checks and Sink/Swim hazards, plunging straight to the bottom of any liquid mass. It also prevents the use of standard Thievery skills like Hide in Shadows or Move Silently.

4. The Fuel Engine: Core Drain

The suit is driven by standard Arduinian Heavy Power Cells or a rare Plutonium Core.

  • Combat Drain: A single standard Power Cell provides exactly 1 hour (6 turns) of active exploration, or 2 full combat encounters.

  • Overclocking: The Techno can choose to Overclock the armor's systems to guarantee an automatic maximum damage roll on a heavy ordnance weapon or an automatic success on a physical strength check. Doing so instantly drains 50% of the currently loaded cell's remaining lifespan and vents superheated plasma, blinding anyone standing directly behind the suit for 1 round.

5. Domain & Mass Combat Integration

When your Techno rules a domain or leads armies using the Domains at War mechanics, a single suit of Arduinian Power Armor shifts the strategic balance of the entire hex hex-crawl grid.

Domain Law Enforcement & Upkeep

  • If a high-level Techno garrisons their stronghold with themselves or henchmen in Power Armor, the local Domain Unrest modifier drops permanently by -1 due to the sheer psychological deterrence of the automated juggernauts.

  • Logistical Cost: Keeping a suit maintained within a domain costs 250 gp per month in refined lubricants, tech calibration metrics, and circuit-swaps. This must be paid directly from the domain treasury or the suit suffers a cumulative 5% structural failure rate every month it is neglected.

Mass Combat: The Single-Unit Juggernaut

In the mass combat system of ACKS II, a warrior in Arduinian Power Armor does not fight as a standard infantryman. They are deployed as a Heroic / Fantastic Unit onto the hex grid.

  • Battle Factor (BF): The armor grants the pilot an effective +4 Battle Factor increase.

  • Shock Troop Trait: When charging primitive medieval infantry, the suit possesses the Shock trait, forcing an immediate morale check on any unit of Class Zero or Class 1 troops (goblins, peasants, basic militia) before melee dice are even rolled.

  • Siege Damage Resistance: The hardened frame treats standard field artillery (ballistas, light catapults) as normal missile attacks, completely ignoring their typical structural damage multipliers against human-sized targets.

 

Thursday, June 25, 2026

A Massive D100 Random Space Encounters Table for Cepheus Engine rpg & 2d6 Old School Science Fiction rpgs

 

Here is a comprehensive D100 random space encounters table tailored for the Cepheus Engine (and classic 2D6 sci-fi roleplaying).

To keep this massive table highly scannable and practical for a Referee mid-session, it is broken down into thematic categories by roll.

D100 Space Encounters Table

01–15: Commercial & Civilian Vessels

RollEncounterDetails & Referee Hooks
01–03Subsidized MerchantFat Trader running a standard route. Crew is bored; willing to trade local market rumors or fuel for fresh luxury rations.
04–06Tramp FreighterShabby Free Trader running on a shoestring budget. Currently suffering a minor drive sputter and broadcasting a polite request for spare parts.
07–09Luxury YachtOwned by a minor noble or corporate executive. Shielded by a private security detail. They ignore hailings unless the players possess high Social Standing.
10–12Interstellar Passenger LinerMassive vessel carrying hundreds in low-berth (cryo) and high-berth. Someone onboard has managed to transmit a bootleg, encrypted distress signal.
13–15Fast CourierHigh-jump, low-tonnage vessel. It is running dark (transponder off) and changes course immediately to avoid the players' ship.

16–30: Industrial & Mining Operations

RollEncounterDetails & Referee Hooks
16–18Asteroid ProspectorSolo miner or small family crew in a modified seeker. They've found a rich vein of radioactives and are paranoid the players are claim-jumpers.
19–21Heavy Ore FreighterGiant, slow-moving barge hauling unrefined minerals. Surrounded by a small cloud of loose gravel-sized debris that registers on sensors.
22–24Fuel Harvesting RigStationed in the upper atmosphere of a gas giant or near an ice planetoid. Willing to sell unrefined fuel at a steep discount if players help clear a mechanical clog.
25–27Corporate Research VesselHeavily shielded ship conducting deep-space sensor sweeps. They warn the players to maintain a distance of at least 10,000 km due to "active testing."
28–30Orbital Salvage TeamCutting apart a massive structural fragment from an old station. They are looking to buy specialized tools or sell scrap metal and mechanical components.

31–45: Military, Law Enforcement & Government

RollEncounterDetails & Referee Hooks
31–33System Defense Boat (SDB)Local law enforcement. They hail the players for a routine customs inspection, cargo manifest check, and transponder verification.
34–36Naval Patrol CorvetteActive military vessel hunting for pirates. They require the players to log their vector and may request data logs from their last jump.
37–39Military ConvoyA fleet of heavy transports escorted by frigates. Communications are strictly locked down; jamming frequencies fill the local spectrum.
40–42Diplomatic ShuttleSleek, unarmed government craft carrying an ambassador. Escorted by two fighters. They demand immediate right-of-way.
43–45Prison TransportArmed transport moving high-risk political or criminal prisoners. One prisoner has just breached containment and is trying to hotwire a communications array.

46–60: Derelicts & Debris

RollEncounterDetails & Referee Hooks
46–48Fresh Battle DebrisShrapnel, twisted hull plating, and frozen atmosphere vapor from a skirmish that happened within the last 24 hours. No signs of life, but salvage remains.
49–51Abandoned Colony ArkAncient, sub-light generational ship. The crew is long dead, but its automated defense turrets are still active and tracking anything that approaches.
52–54Drifting LifepodEmergency capsule from a commercial ship. Sensors indicate life support is failing; contains one passenger in a malfunctioning cryo-berth.
55–57Ghost MerchantA fully intact freighter drifting with zero power. The airlocks are sealed from the inside. Interior scans show no biological life forms, but cargo is untouched.
58–60Scuttled Scout ShipOld military or survey vessel stripped of its jump drive and electronics. Left behind as a hollowed-out husk, potentially hiding a smuggler's dead-drop cache.

61–75: Cosmic Anomalies & Natural Hazards

RollEncounterDetails & Referee Hooks
61–63Rogue Comet ClusterA dense swarm of ice and rock traveling at high speed. Navigating through requires a difficult Pilot check to avoid micro-meteoroid hull pitting.
64–66Ion Storm / Solar FlareA massive wave of radiation sweeping through the hex. Sensors are blinded, and ship electronics will suffer minor power surges unless shields are doubled.
67–69Micro-Wormhole / Gravity WellA transient spatial tear. Sensors spike wildly. If approached, it threatens to yank the ship out of its current vector, potentially shaving days off or adding days to travel.
70–72Radioactive Dust CloudLeftover remnants of an ancient planetary demolition or super-dense nebula. Prolonged exposure will degrade the ship's exterior sensor arrays.
73–75Hyper-Spatial EchoThe ship's sensors detect an exact duplicate of their own vessel running parallel to them. It mimics their movements exactly before vanishing after 1D6 minutes.

76–90: Pirates, Raiders & Lawless Elements

RollEncounterDetails & Referee Hooks
76–78Q-Ship (Decoy)Appears on sensors as a crippled, drifting civilian vessel broadcasting a medical emergency. If the players approach, it drops its false bulkheads to reveal heavy lasers.
79–81Pirate InterceptorLight, fast, and heavily armed. Transmits a blunt demand: cut your drives and prepare to be boarded, or face a missile lock.
82–84Smuggler Running ColdA small cargo vessel using heat sinks to mask its thermal signature. If spotted, they offer the players a hefty bribe to forget they ever saw them.
85–87Mercenary CruiserA private military company ship returning from a contract. They aren't hostile but will demand a high fee if the players ask them for assistance or escort.
88–90Raider WolfpackTwo to three light fighters or heavily modified shuttles hunting in tandem. They attempt to bracket the players' ship to prevent a micro-jump escape.

91–00: Unique, Bizarre & Xenological Encounters

RollEncounterDetails & Referee Hooks
91–93Void-Dwelling OrganismA massive, silicon-based life form floating through the vacuum. It feeds on solar radiation and ignores the ship unless scanned with active, high-energy sensors.
94–96Pre-Shatter ArtifactA perfectly smooth, black geometric obelisk tumbling through space. It emits a low-frequency radio hum that plays an mathematical sequence of prime numbers.
97–98Time-Displaced StarshipA ship matching military designs from three centuries ago. The crew thinks it is still the era of the old stellar empire and treats the players' modern ship with suspicion.
99The Derelict VaultA massive, windowless megastructure drifting in deep space. It has no standard docking ports and appears to be a vault designed to lock something in, rather than out.
100Rogue AI CoreA rogue, self-aware automated defense platform drifting far outside any civilized system. It hails the players, offering advanced technology data in exchange for a physical jump drive.

Referee Tip: When rolling a space encounter, use the ship's current location to modify the results. In high-law corporate space, add -20 to the roll (skewing toward civilian and military encounters). In lawless frontier sectors or unmapped systems, add +20 to the roll (skewing toward hazards, pirates, and anomalies).

 Here is a specialized D100 Space Anomaly Table designed for sci-fi tabletop RPGs (like Cepheus Engine, Traveller, or Stars Without Number).

To help a Referee quickly parse the implications mid-game, each entry includes the Sensor Reading (what the crew sees on screens), the Physical Hazard (the danger to the ship), and a Scientific/Salvage Opportunity (the potential reward for risking a closer look).

D100 Space Anomaly Table

01–20: Gravitational & Spatial Distortions

RollAnomalyDescription & Mechanics
01–04Micro-Singularity

Sensor: A pinprick of absolute zero-emissions surrounded by a violent, localized gravitational lens.


Hazard: Extreme gravity well. Approaching within 1,000 km requires a hard Pilot check to avoid structural hull stress.


Opportunity: Can be used for a gravity-slingshot, cutting 1D6 days off sub-light travel time.

05–08Spatial Compression Ribbon

Sensor: A flat, invisible plane where the stars behind it appear horizontally crushed.


Hazard: Ship geometry physically warps if it crosses the plane, disabling the Jump/FTL drive for 2D6 hours.


Opportunity: Highly condensed dark matter can be harvested with specialized scoops (worth a fortune to researchers).

09–12Transient Wormhole

Sensor: A localized electromagnetic tempest that rapidly expands and contracts.


Hazard: Highly unstable. Staying nearby risks pulling the ship to a random point in the sector.


Opportunity: A successful Astrogation check maps the destination, offering a temporary, instant shortcut across space.

13–16Gravity Sinkhole

Sensor: Sensors indicate a massive object is present, but visual inspection shows entirely empty space.


Hazard: The ship is pulled toward a central point at a geometric rate, draining thruster power.


Opportunity: The anomaly masks an ancient, cloaked orbital installation or a completely invisible planetoid.

17–20Chrono-Dilational Pocket

Sensor: A localized region of space where atomic clocks on the ship begin to desynchronize from galactic standard time.


Hazard: Spending an hour inside this zone causes 1D6 days to pass in the outside world.


Opportunity: Ideal for escaping pursuers or letting ship repairs complete "instantly" relative to the rest of the galaxy.

21–40: Energetic & Radiation Phenomena

RollAnomalyDescription & Mechanics
21–24Cherenkov Flare Cloud

Sensor: A ghostly, luminescent blue fog casting off intense ultraviolet light.


Hazard: Blinds optical sensors and exposes the crew to mild radiation unless interior shields are active.


Opportunity: The cloud is rich in exotic isotopes that can be refined into high-grade power plant fuel.

25–28Hyper-Spatial Lightning

Sensor: Erratic, crackling arcs of purple energy jumping across empty space like static discharge.


Hazard: Striking the ship blows out 1D4 non-essential electronic systems (Sensors, Comms, or Internal Grav).


Opportunity: A skilled Engineer can lower ship shields intentionally to siphon and overload the ship's main batteries (+50% power capacity for 24 hours).

29–32Gamma-Ray Burster Echo

Sensor: A faint, rhythmic pulse of high-energy gamma radiation washing over the system.


Hazard: Degrades long-range communication relays and triggers radiation alarms across the ship.


Opportunity: Triangulating the beam's origin reveals the exact coordinates of a recent supernova or destroyed star system.

33–36Magnetospheric Knot

Sensor: A tangled, invisible web of magnetic field lines strong enough to spin compasses and warp video feeds.


Hazard: Heavily disrupts ship guidance. Thruster navigation feels sluggish and unresponsive.


Opportunity: Iron-heavy hull plating can be "degaussed" here, making the ship virtually invisible to passive sensors for its next journey.

37–40Tachyon Eddy

Sensor: A swirling current of particles that registers on sensors before the ship actually arrives at the location.


Hazard: Causes paradoxical computer glitches; the ship's computer logs events that haven't happened yet.


Opportunity: Can be utilized to bounce a short, text-only sub-space communication into the immediate past (1D6 minutes ago).

41–60: Matter Cloud & Nebula Anomalies

RollAnomalyDescription & Mechanics
41–44Crystalline Dust Nebula

Sensor: A beautiful, glittering cloud composed of billions of microscopic, multi-faceted mineral shards.


Hazard: High-speed travel through the cloud acts as sandblasting, stripping exterior paint and pitting armor plates.


Opportunity: Slow, careful skimming allows the crew to collect rare industrial-grade diamond dust.

45–48Organic Amino Fog

Sensor: A dense, murky soup of complex hydrocarbons, rich in organic molecules.


Hazard: The fog acts as a sticky, translucent residue that clogs external vents, thruster nozzles, and heat sinks.


Opportunity: Biologists can harvest pristine biological precursors, highly valuable to medical conglomerates.

49–52Corrosive Plasma Reef

Sensor: A jagged, burning cloud of ionized gas that glows with a dim, sickly green light.


Hazard: Chemically eats away at exposed metal hulls; requires continuous shields or rapid navigation to survive.


Opportunity: Contains pockets of highly compressed, stable plasma plasma that can be weaponized or sold.

53–56Cryo-Particulate Field

Sensor: A freezing zone where the ambient temperature drops to near absolute zero, turning all gases into frozen snow.


Hazard: The ship's heat dissipation loops freeze solid, threatening a catastrophic internal heat backup.


Opportunity: Pure, unpolluted interstellar ice can be melted down for completely sterile, pure water supplies.

57–60Anti-Matter Pocket

Sensor: A pocket of vacuum surrounded by a perfectly ringed halo of micro-explosions.


Hazard: Any physical matter (including a ship) touching the pocket triggers a violent kinetic shockwave.


Opportunity: Can be carefully harvested using magnetic containment fields to yield raw anti-matter fuel.

61–80: Sensor & Electronic Phantoms

RollAnomalyDescription & Mechanics
61–64Ghost Echo Field

Sensor: The sensor screen suddenly fills with dozens of hostile contacts matching the players' exact ship signature.


Hazard: Comms are flooded with distorted audio loops of the crew's own voices from 10 minutes ago.


Opportunity: Clears up after leaving the zone; analysis of the distortion yields advanced radar-jamming algorithms.

65–68Cybernetic Null Zone

Sensor: All digital displays flicker, lose resolution, and revert to low-power text-only interfaces.


Hazard: Autonomous droids and shipboard AI lose consciousness or malfunction wildly while inside the zone.


Opportunity: The field acts as a natural dampener against remote hacking or external tracking signals.

69–72The Whispering Static

Sensor: Long-range audio receivers catch a faint, melodic, sweeping frequency that sounds like choral singing.


Hazard: Prolonged listening causes crew fatigue, mild paranoia, and obsessive behavior.


Opportunity: Hidden within the mathematical rhythm of the "song" is a highly encrypted, dead-drop data file.

73–76Thermal inversion Void

Sensor: A region where hot things show up on sensors as ice-cold, and cold vacuum registers as scorching hot.


Hazard: Automated targeting computers are completely fooled, making weapons fire impossible without manual targeting.


Opportunity: Hiding inside this void makes it impossible for thermal-seeking missiles or trackers to locate the ship.

77–80Resonance Lattice

Sensor: Geometric grid lines appear across sensor readouts, though nothing is visually present.


Hazard: Kinetic energy (like firing a weapon or accelerating hard) causes the ship's hull to violently vibrate.


Opportunity: Tuning the ship's shields to match the lattice frequency boosts shield efficiency by 100% while inside the zone.

81–00: Exotic & Unclassified Rarities

RollAnomalyDescription & Mechanics
81–84Living Nebula Patch

Sensor: A small, shifting nebula cloud that actively contracts and pulls away from the ship's engine exhaust.


Hazard: If cornered, the cloud emits an EMP pulse to disable the ship's engines so it can escape.


Opportunity: Can be communicated with using primitive light arrays or binary pulses; may reveal sector secrets.

85–88Spatial Fracture Line

Sensor: A razor-thin, perfectly black line slicing across the starfield. It has zero width.


Hazard: Passing directly through the line will physically cut through anything, ignoring shields and armor.


Opportunity: Scanning the edge of the fracture grants unprecedented data on the nature of space-time physics.

89–92Psionic Resonator

Sensor: Sensors register nothing unusual, but any psionically sensitive crew members suffer a blinding headache.


Hazard: Non-psionic crew experience vivid waking hallucinations of past regrets or alternate lives.


Opportunity: Psionic characters gain double their normal power pool while within 1 AU of the phenomenon.

93–96Pre-Shatter Sensor Buoy

Sensor: An ancient, metallic needle covered in micro-etched circuitry, broadcasting an encrypted signal.


Hazard: Approaching triggers an automated, high-frequency data-bleed that attempts to wipe the ship's navigation computer.


Opportunity: Successfully hacking the buoy yields pristine, unmapped hyper-lanes to long-forgotten star systems.

97–99Vacuum Fluctuator

Sensor: Space inside this 10,000 km bubble appears to ripple like the surface of a pond.


Hazard: Physics laws fluctuate. Ship lasers might fire at half power, while missiles accelerate at double speed.


Opportunity: Bizarre, temporary compounds form in this bubble that can be harvested before they decay into normal matter.

100The Mirror Threshold

Sensor: A perfectly reflective, liquid-like silver sphere hanging in the void, roughly the size of a capital ship.


Hazard: Ships that touch the surface are instantly pulled inside, swapping places with a duplicate from an alternate reality.


Opportunity: Entering intentionally offers a gateway to a parallel universe where the history of the sector took a vastly different turn.