GURPS Supers: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[Disability Superpower]]: You CAN combine Blindness and vision powers.
* [[Disability Superpower]]: You CAN combine Blindness and vision powers.
* [[Emotion Eater]]: in the 3E supplement ''Wild Cards'', Senator Hartman (AKA Puppet Man) and The Gatekeeper (owner of the Joker's Wild cabaret).
* [[Emotion Eater]]: in the 3E supplement ''Wild Cards'', Senator Hartman (AKA Puppet Man) and The Gatekeeper (owner of the Joker's Wild cabaret).
* [[Expy]]: The templates in GURPS Supers are all to some extent designed to let players play these. For example, the Archetype is most obviously for playing [[Superman]], but also includes "Amphibian" and "Super-Swimming" options if you'd rather play [[Aquaman (Comic Book)|Aquaman]]. The Brick includes a "Man of Steel" option that's basically [[X-Men|Colossus]]. Most blatantly of all, the Man Plus comes with a [[Captain America|choice of "Superalloy Chainmail" or "Superalloy Medium Shield."]]
* [[Expy]]: The templates in GURPS Supers are all to some extent designed to let players play these. For example, the Archetype is most obviously for playing [[Superman]], but also includes "Amphibian" and "Super-Swimming" options if you'd rather play [[Aquaman]]. The Brick includes a "Man of Steel" option that's basically [[X-Men|Colossus]]. Most blatantly of all, the Man Plus comes with a [[Captain America|choice of "Superalloy Chainmail" or "Superalloy Medium Shield."]]
* [[Fantastic Slurs]]: "Crunchies" for nonpowered humans.
* [[Fantastic Slurs]]: "Crunchies" for nonpowered humans.
* [[Friend to All Living Things]]: The superheroine Lynx in the 3E supplement ''Supertemps''.
* [[Friend to All Living Things]]: The superheroine Lynx in the 3E supplement ''Supertemps''.

Revision as of 00:26, 2 May 2014

fourth edition cover

GURPS Supers is the Generic Universal Role Playing System's superhero expansion. It was published in two editions in the 1980s; a new edition was recently published, updated to GURPS' Fourth Edition rules.

The first edition was criticized because it arranged superpowers in sets called "Power Groups" which players felt limited their character creation choices. This was fixed in the second edition, so that powers could be bought individually. (Power Groups were retained as an optional system).

Another criticism of the game was that you couldn't emulate the most powerful heroes from the comics (such as Superman or Green Lantern) because either they would be too expensive to adapt (costing thousands of character points) or their powers were too expansive and there were no exact equivalents for them (though these were problems faced by most superhero RPGs of the time.) On the other hand, GURPS Supers could handle the less absurd superheroes, and it produced many interesting original characters of its own. With the 4th Edition version, even the cosmic-level heroes can now be reproduced, though it required a full separate book (GURPS Powers) to do it.

Another problem the books had was the artwork; it was crude and uncolored, except on the covers. Again, the latest version has overcome this.

There were several Sourcebooks put out for the game, the most famous being an adaptation of the Wild Cards superhero novels. Supers had its own original setting, detailed in Gurps IST (International Super Teams) which featured an Alternate Reality where the United Nations effectively rules the world and uses superhero teams to keep the peace. The IST world was recently reintroduced for the GURPS Infinite Worlds campaign. All of these can be downloaded from Steve Jackson Games' website.

Tropes related to this game: