I would argue Han's Force Sensativity. But I think you might be right, as it would probably make more sense to drop the Sense feat. Ignoring completely anything having to do with Midiclorines(however you spell the cosmic junk) I think it's different for some people. The force exists in all things everywhere etc etc. It could be strongly argued that anyone cool enough to get hero credit will have some connection to the force on some level. Since I haven't read the books much, I'm just going to point to the movies. Look at how he communicates with the Falcon. (Anyone who's played White-Wolf's Changeling will see a knocker at work). This isn't the Jedi's Trained Mastery or even blatant uncontrolled power. It is the force at it's subtle best: subconscious inspiration and natural instinct.
|-----Original Message-----
|From: lizard [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
|Sent: Wednesday, January 24, 2001 11:59 AM
|To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
|Subject: Re: [ogf-d20-l] Craft, Repair, and Salvage in d20
|
|
|> William Olander wrote:
|
|> I have to say this, I don't think the game needs a Tech-Class. As has
|> been often hinted at in the movies, Technical know-how is often a
|> side-effect of the force. I don't have the book on me at the
|moment to
|> remember if there was anything referenced there about Tech in either
|> Alter or Control.
|
|But Han is about as force-sensitive as a rock. Yet he's the best techie
|in the original trilogy, esp. if you take the books as canon.
|
