Tokyo Heroes Corebook
Tokyo Heroes Corebook
Tokyo Heroes Corebook
Sentai RPG
By Ewen Cluney
Credits
Designed and written by Ewen Cluney
Text Conventions
In the text of this book I’ve taken a cue from Fudge in that players and player
characters are referred to with masculine pronouns and the GM and GM characters
with female pronouns.
Throughout the text, there are examples to illustrate how the game works. All of
these use the same characters that appear starting on page 7, and they are always en-
closed in boxes to indicate their example-ness. Some of these explain things in game
terms, and some illustrate the genre with a piece of prose. You’ll survive.
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Fancy Lala and Minky Momo would be better served by some other RPG (like
HeartQuest, BESM, or OAV).
Sentai is a bit harder to come by in the U.S. There’s Power Rangers of course, but
the feel and style are a bit different from the original Japanese sentai shows. If you’re
super hardcore you can get the Region 2 DVDs (Amazon Japan has plenty of them
and ships to the U.S., even if it’s all really expensive). If you’re amoral you can get the
Hong Kong DVDs with questionable English subtitles. For the rest of us there are
some fansubs, such as from TV-Nihon (www.tvnihon.com).
For both, see the Appendix (p. 81) for some more specific recommendations.
Game Basics
Stuff You’ll Need
Since this is a tabletop RPG, the most important things are a group of friends and
imagination. However, you’ll also want pencil and paper (preferably including a char-
acter sheet for each player and a session sheet for the GM) and lots of six-sided dice.
Rolling Dice
Tokyo Heroes uses pools of dice; when you attempt something where the out-
come is in question, you roll a number of six-sided dice, usually equal to an Attribute,
but frequently modified by other stuff. The dice aren’t added up though. A given roll
has a Target; each die that is equal to or above the Target counts as a Success. The de-
fault Target is 4, which gives each die a 50/50 chance of being a success. The more
Successes you score, the better the result will be. For simple stuff you can get by with
just one Success, but for tougher stuff you’ll need more, and if someone is directly
opposing you you’ll need to get more Successes than them. This is explained in detail
on p. 40.
Measuring Time
In this game time is tracked in a fairly cinematic way; the campaign is divided into
episodes, and episodes are divided up into scenes. These are first and foremost a way
to keep up the pace and concentrate on stuff that’s relevant to the story.
An episode is one incident, carried from beginning to end. There can be a little ex-
tra stuff thrown in, but in this game each episode is basically about a given monster
causing problems and the heroes defeating the monster and solving those problems.
An episode can sometimes take up more than one session of play, but one episode
per session is the norm, and sometimes two if the episodes are short.
For the purposes of this game a scene is a step along the way, where one or more
of the heroes (player characters) are doing something significant in a given place.
The GM usually decides when a scene begins and ends, but the players can give input
too; a scene should get directly into a situation where the heroes have to take action
and make choices, and end before things start to drag. Unimportant stuff can happen
outside of scenes, summarized in a sentence or two. Going to visit a victim’s house
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can be a very important scene, but the drive there can be skipped over more often
than not.
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Example Heroes
Before we jump into things, here are two example hero teams, one sentai team and
one magical girl team. They’re used constantly as examples in this book, both to cre-
ate a semblance of continuity, and to let you go back and check the stats here to bet-
ter understand what the example is all about. Admittedly they’re a bit generic, but
that’s intentional. Their stats are set up to represent where they’ll be at the beginning
of a campaign/series, and in actual play they’d be getting some considerable new toys
over time.
Soundtrack
My dream soundtrack for Dynaranger would be mostly melodramatic power
metal. The opening theme would be “Tyranny of Steel” by Iron Savior.
Dynamic Equipment
Dynamic Metal is a relatively new invention, a semi-sentient liquid metal that
conforms to the user’s thoughts and desires. For this reason, when using a Dynamic
Metal suit willpower is more important than actual combat abilities. Starforge knows
this, and his recruits are not trained soldiers, but people who are exceptional for their
passions and pursuits. The Dynamic Metal is contained inside “Dyna-Gyros” worn
on the wrist; it’s activated with a verbal command (the user’s heroic designation fol-
lowed by “Activate!”), releasing the Dynamic Metal to cover their body.
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Each of them wields their own special Dynamic Arms, a personalized weapon de-
signed to suit their unique strengths. By putting these together, they can form the
Dynamic Bazooka, a powerful weapon that delivers a devastating finishing blow to
enemies. This is a Group Asset Finishing Attack worth 5 Edges; it adds 12 Attack
dice, but costs 6 Hero Dice.
What remains of the Cortana is hidden in a mountainside on the outskirts of To-
kyo. The ship will likely never fly again, but its main reactor is still functioning, as
well as the central computer and some of the weapons, so it makes a good base of op-
erations for the team. While the others live their normal lives in Tokyo and are heroes
in secret, Captain Starforge still lives in his ship, along with Zazu, the chief engineer.
It is here that the team’s Dyna-Machines (Vehicle Defenders) are stored. Starforge
spends much of his time strategizing and trying to locate his other surviving crew
members, while Zazu works on the ship and providing the Dynarangers with the
equipment necessary for their mission. Using the ship’s sensor suite, they can usually
find the approximate location where one of Zalbus’ minions has landed, enabling
them to send the Dynarangers into action when danger strikes.
There are five Dyna-Machines: the Red Racer (a super-fast race car), Blue Flyer (a
supersonic jet with VTOL capabilities), Green Tanker (a heavy tank), Yellow Diver
(an amphibious vehicle), and Pink Heli (a helicopter). These combine to form Dyna-
Robo; in game terms this is a Group Asset Robot worth 5 Edges. It has Resistance 10,
48 Stamina, Basic Attack (hand-to-hand combat), Finishing Attack (Dynamic Spec-
trum Shooter; +4 Attack dice, 2 Hero Dice), Special Attack (Dynamic Lance; +2
Attack dice). This is just the stats for it at the start of the series; it will undoubtedly
be upgraded many times, and also combined with Dynamic Knight’s Dyna-Wing.
In game terms, the group’s Team Edges are Basic Attack (Dynamic Blaster),
Group Asset (Robot: Dyna-Robo), Group Asset (Finishing Attack: Dynamic Ba-
zooka), Special Attack, and Vehicle Defender. Each individual character gets two Per-
sonal Edges.
Dynamic Red
“This stuff about stopping the Space Lord Zalbus from destroying the galaxy is way
too big for me to fit in my head, you know? But protecting innocent people when they’re
in danger, that I can get behind 110%.”
Real Name: Hikaru Inoue (井上光)
Concept: Enthusiastic and dedicated high school P.E. teacher turned hero
Aspect: Red
Keys: Belief (No one is beyond saving), Cause (Protect Earth), Pride
Attributes: Attack 5, Defense 2, Athletics 4 (very fit), Brains 1, Spirit 3
Secondary Values: Initiative 6, Resistance 6, Stamina 24
Edges: Basic Attack (Dynamic Blaster), Group Asset (Dyna-Robo), Group Asset
(Finishing Attack: Dynamic Bazooka), Profession (P.E. Teacher), Special Attack
(Dynamic Blade; +4 Attack dice), Vehicle Defender (Red Racer)
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Heroic Flaw: Hikaru has a hard time really believing people are bad; if someone
shows a hint of humanity he’ll try to save them.
Notes: Hikaru is a P.E. teacher at Juuban High. He loves children and he loves his
job; the only thing he needs to make his life complete is a wife and kids of his own.
His luck with the ladies hasn’t been the greatest, though he’s managed to ask the
school nurse out for coffee once or twice as the story unfolds (being a Dynaranger
and having to run off to secretly save the world won’t help matters though). He’s
nice to a fault, and as a teacher he’s willing to work with anyone to help them suc-
ceed. He can’t get through to everyone, but he’s constantly going above and beyond
the call of duty, especially for students everyone else is convinced are a lost cause.
For Hikaru, becoming Dynamic Red is partly a childhood fantasy and partly a
chance to protect the things he cares about. He jumps into the role without hesita-
tion, and is constantly trying everything he can to become friends with his team-
mates.
Hikaru prefers things to be up close and personal, plus he’s had a good amount of
kendo training, so naturally as Dynamic Red his personal weapon is the Dynamic
Sword.
Dynamic Blue
“Don’t get cocky. Your idiotic stunt may have worked this time, but it put us all in
danger.”
Real Name: Itsuki Murakami (村上樹)
Concept: A famous and driven novelist who is constantly looking for new chal-
lenges and experiences.
Aspect: Blue
Keys: Cause (Protect Earth), Pride, Specialty (Perfectionist)
Attributes: Attack 2, Defense 5 (saw it coming), Athletics 2, Brains 4 (smart and
articulate), Spirit 2
Secondary Values: Initiative 6, Resistance 7, Stamina 27
Edges: Basic Attack (Dynamic Blaster), Group Asset (Dyna-Robo), Group Asset
(Finishing Attack: Dynamic Bazooka), Perk (Fame), Profession (Novelist), Special
Attack (Dynamic Shooter; +2 Attack dice), Vehicle Defender (Blue Flyer)
Heroic Flaw: Itsuki is impossibly hard on himself; he won’t accept anything but
perfection from himself and will work as hard as it takes.
Notes: Itsuki Murakami is recognized nationally and even internationally as one
of Japan’s most important up and coming authors. His first novel debuted to rave re-
views and impressive sales, and his second only expanded his fame. His third is taking
much longer than he expected, and it’s driving him crazy. When Starforge first asks
him to become a Dynaranger he flatly refuses, but he finally decides he can afford to
take some time off from writing and maybe even get some ideas that will help him
work through his writer’s block.
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He is a perfectionist, through and through, and he wields a long-range precision
rifle. Naturally, he’s the polar opposite of Hikaru, and is very harsh on his teammates
when they screw up, especially if they do so by not listening to him.
Dynamic Green
“Look at this! This ship actually creates its own gravitational field so that the crew can
walk around normally! This is incredible!”
Real Name: Keiichi Kobayashi (小林恵一)
Concept: Dedicated genius engineer
Aspect: Green
Keys: Cause (Protect Earth), Pride, Specialty (Technical Guy)
Attributes: Attack 3, Defense 3, Athletics 2, Brains 5 (genius engineer), Spirit 2
Secondary Values: Initiative 8, Resistance 5, Stamina 21
Edges: Basic Attack (Dynamic Blaster), Group Asset (Dyna-Robo), Group Asset
(Finishing Attack: Dynamic Bazooka), Knack (Good With Machines), Perk
(Wealth), Special Attack (Dynamic Knuckles; +2 Attack dice), Vehicle Defender
(Green Tanker)
Heroic Flaw: When it comes to technology, Keiichi is curious to a fault. He’ll
drop everything if he comes across a sufficiently intriguing gadget.
Notes: Keiichi is an extremely talented engineer, and his skills are in high demand
with countless high tech companies. Although he’s doing very well for himself finan-
cially, it’s his passion for machines that drives him. From an early age he was always
taking things apart just to see how they worked, and he was building his own gadgets
by the time he was in middle school.
When Captain Starforge came to him, Keiichi jumped at the chance to become a
Dynaranger. He is completely enamored of alien technology, and quickly gets into
the habit of skipping work just to spend hours and hours hanging around the Cortana
and talking with Zazu.
One of Keiichi’s flaws is that he’s lacking in people skills, and being part of the
Dynaranger team forces him to work hard to get better at such things, lest Captain
Starforge decides that someone else should become Dynamic Green. He’s basically a
good-natured guy, and when he annoys or hurts people it’s almost always by acci-
dent.
Dynamic Yellow
“What’re you doing? The Captain told us not to split up!”
Real Name: Sae Ayanami (彩波冴)
Concept: A reserved, dedicated, cool professional swimmer
Aspect: Yellow
Keys: Bond (Sees Captain Starforge as a mentor), Cause (Protect Earth), Goal
(avenge her coach and move on with her life), Pride
Attributes: Attack 3, Defense 2, Athletics 5 (in peak physical condition), Brains
2, Spirit 3
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Secondary Values: Initiative 5, Resistance 8, Stamina 30
Edges: Basic Attack (Dynamic Blaster), Group Asset (Dyna-Robo), Group Asset
(Finishing Attack: Dynamic Bazooka), Personal Key, Profession (Olympic-caliber
swimmer), Special Attack (Dynamic Wave; +2 Attack dice), Vehicle Defender (Yel-
low Diver)
Heroic Flaw: Sae is afraid of losing people, and thus has a hard time reaching out
to others.
Notes: Outwardly, Sae comes off as a cold, reserved person. She has dedicated her
life to become a professional athlete, and has had little time for anything else. She
originally threw herself into swimming as a way to deal with the death of her parents
in a train accident, and her coach was the one person she could really open up to. He
was one of the first victims of the Zalbus Force’s invasion of Earth.
When Captain Starforge offered her the chance to become a Dynaranger, she re-
fused. She was overcome with grief, and was retreating away from the world again.
Hikaru desperately tried to convince her that there is life beyond grief, and that she
could make a difference, but it was the Captain, who used a more gentle approach,
that got through to her.
Since then, she has come to see Starforge as her mentor, a new coach of sorts.
More than any of the other Dynarangers, she takes his advice and orders very seri-
ously, to the point where she will berate her teammates for deviating from his com-
mands. It takes some time for her to fully understand that he is not infallible, and
that he has placed his trust in Hikaru as the leader of the team in the field.
Dynamic Pink
“Come on guys! We can do this! Remember how we beat that guy with the weird…
thingy… on his head?”
Real Name: Miki Sakuraba (桜庭美樹)
Concept: Cute and charismatic future idol singer
Aspect: Pink
Keys: Cause (Protect Earth), Love, Pride
Attributes: Attack 2, Defense 2, Athletics 3 (in good shape), Brains 3 (surpris-
ingly clever), Spirit 5 (extremely cheerful)
Secondary Values: Initiative 5, Resistance 7, Stamina 30
Edges: Basic Attack (Dynamic Blaster), Group Asset (Dyna-Robo), Group Asset
(Finishing Attack: Dynamic Bazooka), Knack (Attractive), Perk (Fame), Special At-
tack (Dynamic Ribbon; +2 Attack dice), Vehicle Defender (Pink Heli)
Heroic Flaw: Miki has a “talent” for developing hopeless, even dangerous crushes
on guys she meets.
Notes: Miki is an up-and-coming star; she’s already done a handful of television
commercials, and is hoping to hook up with a talent agency that can get her more
work. In fact she was so anxious for her big break that she assumed Captain Starforge
was inviting her to take part in a TV show rather than the real thing.
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Miki is smarter and more calculating than people give her credit for, but still basi-
cally a cute, cheerful young woman. She has an infectious enthusiasm and a knack for
cheering people up even when she isn’t feeling that great herself. Although finding
out that it’s all real is quite a shock to her, Miki decides to stick with being a Dyna-
ranger partly to help others, and partly in the hopes that it’ll give her career a boost.
She’s more than a little disappointed when the captain tells them that they have to
keep their powers a secret, and along the way she’ll learn the hard way why he was so
insistent.
She lives in an apartment with a roommate and former classmate who’s currently
in college named Saori, and works as a waitress to pay the bills. Saori is more than a
little suspicious of Miki’s sudden change—suddenly disappearing all the time and
all—and doesn’t entirely approve of the new crowd she’s hanging out with. This is
partly because even at the age of 19 Miki still develops crushes easily, and she’s sud-
denly started hanging around with three reasonably good-looking guys, two of which
are wealthy and successful, and one of which looks like an ideal family man.
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suit is colored silver and black, with heavy shoulder pads and a long sword sheathed
at his side.
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When the Dark Queen originally took over the magical world, it was a young sor-
ceress named Winter who sacrificed herself to seal that world away from the rest of
the cosmos. Winter has returned, reincarnated as a human girl, and recovered the
Valkyrie Pendants she and her allies once used to fend off the Dark Queen’s hordes.
By recruiting new Magical Girls it might be possible to fend them off, but it will be a
long, difficult fight.
The Valkyrie Pendants let the girls transform; there is a pendant for each of the
four elements, and a Soul Pendant. In order to transform, the girl has to hold the
pendant over her head and shout out, “Vakyrie Change!” Unfortunately, the Earth
Pendant has fallen into the hands of the enemy, and the Soul Pendant is damaged and
unsafe to use. For some reason when transformed, they’re referred to as “Magical
Girl” plus their first name. Rose thinks this is kind of lame, but is too polite to say
anything.
As the story unfolds Faith and April have already been recruited by Winter as
magical girls; the first episode concerns how Rose becomes part of their team.
Soundtrack
My dream soundtrack for Magical Girl Rose would be very much like a typical
magical girl soundtrack, but with more of an epic feel (think Nobuo Uematsu and
John Williams) for the more dramatic parts, plus dramatic J-pop music here and
there, and some heavy metal riffs for some of the especially dark parts. For the open-
ing theme I’d go for “Resolution of Soul” by KOTOKO, or possibly “CHANCE!”
by UVERworld.
Character Creation
For this game the Team Keys are Cause (help those in danger) and Pride. The
Team Edges are a 3-Edge Special Attack (Rose was allowed to trade for a Finishing
Attack and Winter used one of those Edges for a Special Defense) and one Special
Power, but each character gets only one Personal Edge. Magical Girl Destiny is a spe-
cial case, to say the least.
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Edges: Basic Attack (Karate), Finishing Attack (Flame Soul; +8 Attack dice, 4
Hero Dice), Special Power (ignite fires)
Heroic Flaw: Rose is a little too nice; she has a hard time believing that people are
bad, and will take unnecessary risks to try to reach out to people.
Notes: Rose’s family runs a karate dojo, and she has three extremely strong older
brothers (and woe is to any boy who so much as looks at her the wrong way). She
started learning karate when she was very little, and she takes her father’s advice
about only using it for self-defense very seriously. Rose has a very pure heart and at
times a simplistic way of looking at the world. Because of her family she’s used to be-
ing at that weird place where you’re the center of attention without actually being
listened to, so most of the time she tends to go with the flow. When she does decide
to stand up for something she surprises people with her unbending, iron determina-
tion.
Rose is mostly well known and well liked around Lily Glen Academy, and she has
two very close, very good friends, Ventura Ventura (“My real name. Shut up.”) and
Christine Ngyuen (“You say it like ‘win’ but with an N in front.”) How they became
best friends is kind of a long story, and people wonder at how it is that Rose is always
hanging out with a tall, pale, quietly cynical goth girl and a short, pampered Vietnam-
ese-American girl, but they’re inseparable.
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ries of the past and worries about the future. She has begun to regain some of former
her magical power, but her 8-year-old body can only handle so much at a time. She
has succeeded in locating the case with the five Valkyrie Pendants—they were on dis-
play at a local museum—and while the Wood Pendant was stolen and the Soul Pen-
dant is damaged, she began recruiting girls to use the remaining three.
Winter can be a cold person, but spending time with Rose will do a lot to change
that. She will always have a powerful sense of duty though; she has witnessed what
the Dark Queen is capable of and will do anything to keep it from returning. Al-
though the damaged Soul Pendant is unstable and potentially dangerous to whomever
uses it, if she feels the other magical girls are in too much danger she will use it with-
out hesitation, even if she’ll be hospitalized afterwards. Still, she hopes that one day
she’ll have a good reason to use it; it is said that when the five pendants are brought
together the power of miracles will appear. She’s not sure what that means exactly,
except that in the upcoming fight it will make all the difference.
Otherwise her powers are very limited; she can sense magical presences and dis-
cern the nature of magic, but creating actual effects requires her to set up time-
consuming rituals.
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above the rest, even for a student of Lily Glen Academy, and she likes to flaunt this
by wearing designer clothes and getting picked up in her mom’s BMW. While her
parents let her have a lot of the things she wants, they also expect her to work very
hard in return, and become something special through her own efforts. At times she
pushes herself too hard out of the belief that failure is not an option, and as a result
being a magical girl on top of everything else in her life is exhausting. She’s a very
strong girl, but she does have a breaking point.
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Oh, and in typical magical girl fashion, her glasses disappear when she transforms, yet
she can see just fine.
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ble trusting anyone anymore. Whether or not Rose or anyone else can get through to
her could change the fate of the entire world.
As a villain, Destiny has the Edges of Corrupt and Escape. Corrupt lets her put
evil energy into plants, causing them to become animated and attack people. In game
terms, she can cause plants to act like mooks. Escape represents a magical item called
a Returning Stone that lets her teleport back to the magical world at will. When she
leaves the Dark Queen’s service, she loses access to the necessary negative energy and
loses both of these Edges. She also gains the ability to revert to a normal form, and
thus loses Always Transformed, though because of her decade-long exposure to
magical energy, she doesn’t look any different apart from her change of costume.
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Hero Creation
A campaign starts with creating a team of heroes. As a player you might want to
have some inkling of what you want your character to be like, but try not to get too
attached to any particular idea, and absolutely do not make your character ahead of
time. In this game the entire group should meet together to discuss specifics and cre-
ate their various hero characters all at the same time.
By default this game assumes that the group will be meeting and not only making
characters but devising the whole concept of the hero team and the campaign during
the first session. These details can determine a lot of what goes into each character,
and a lot of what they can actually do, so ideally everyone should have some input.
However, it can also be time consuming; if you want to jump into playing the game
quickly, it’s better for the GM to come up with the necessary details (team concept,
Keys, Edges, etc.) ahead of time and have the players make characters to match.
Character as Communication
Before we begin, think about the following:
As a player, how you put your character together is a way to tell the GM what
you want out of the game. (Telling them directly doesn’t hurt though). Your charac-
ter’s Keys and Heroic Flaw in particular show what’s important to your character,
and you get rewarded for playing your character in a way that highlights them. How-
ever, everything on the character sheet is potentially a message to the GM; a character
with has a high Brains attribute needs mental challenges to overcome, a character
with Profession: Doctor as an edge should get opportunities to heal people and
maybe even moral dilemmas stemming from that ability, and so on. This is discussed
further in the GM section (see p. 63), but in general the GM needs to be well aware
of what’s on each player’s character sheet and take those into account when preparing
the game.
The other thing about this game is that a fair number of character traits are pur-
posely a bit vague. To a certain extent it’s up to you to play your character so that the
group has the image of him that you want. One of the five basic attributes is called
Attack; while that’s partly just because this isn’t the kind of genre where a character
can be proficient with swords but not guns (much less swords but not knives), if you
want your character to be a rough and tumble brawler or an elite sniper, the distinc-
tion is more a matter of how you choose to have your character handle himself in a
fight. Similarly, if you have a Special Attack, it’s up to you to describe what it does.
Where a sentai hero might have a special electric sword, a magical girl could have a
water blast attack that comes out of her magic wand. Both are “Special Attack.”
However, all of those differences can matter in the game; if you want to use your
electric sword to short out a computer or use your water blast to put out a fire, go for
it!
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Descriptors
As an aid to all of the above, players can add Descriptors to traits. A descriptor
gives us a little more detail about how the trait is expressed in the character. I highly
recommend these for your character’s attack Edges (we should know what they are!)
and higher attributes, but they’re optional. When a character uses a trait with a de-
scriptor in a situation where it’s highly appropriate you’ll get an extra die or two to
roll, but if you try something that really goes against the descriptor you could be pe-
nalized; see p. 41.
For example, if a character’s Attack attribute has “Elite Sniper” as a descriptor
he’ll get bonuses when he tries precise, targeted shots with guns, but he could be pe-
nalized if he’s getting into an especially down-and-dirty brawl. More often than not,
however, the descriptor won’t come into play unless the player is purposely trying to
make it happen.
Origins
Take some time to figure out what the heroes’ powers are and how they got them.
Magical girls’ powers are nearly always, well, magical. Sentai heroes sometimes use
magic, but their special powers often come from some kind of super-science, or
granted by aliens, or odd combinations of two or even all three. Since Himitsu Sentai
Goranger started in 1975, sentai series in particular have made good use of different
themes for heroes and their powers. Sentai heroes have been ninjas, rescue workers,
police officers, magicians, martial artists, race car drivers, time travelers, and so on.
Others have had mystical powers based on some kind of totem animal, such as dino-
saurs, wildcats, and birds. Just about anything can make be a theme for a hero team,
depending on how silly you’re willing to let things get. One of the funny things
about sentai is that regardless of the source of their powers, their gear always has a
technological look.
How normal people become heroes is another factor to consider. It might be a
job, whether one comes to it deliberately through training or by some weird accident.
The power could be a birthright, either as a result of the character’s lineage or a past
life, a destiny the character can’t hope to avoid. Sometimes there’s a certain poten-
tial—something not everyone has enough of—that’s required in order to become a
hero.
Transformation Item
All of the heroes in Tokyo Heroes have to “transform” (henshin) in order use their
full powers. For sentai heroes this means activating a special device that covers them
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in their jumpsuit and helmet, and for magical girls a similar magical item dresses them
in their special costume and possibly makes some small cosmetic changes to their ap-
pearance. In the TV shows the transformation sequence shows the character in an
elaborate and sometimes time-consuming ritual as a battle outfit forms around his or
her body, but in the actual story the transformation itself is almost instantaneous.
Transformed characters tend to become more athletic, and are capable of superhuman
jumps.
When not transformed, a character loses access to most Edges pertaining to spe-
cial powers, and is also less effective in combat. See p. 46 for more details.
Magical girls have a “protected identity” feature too; although the physical
changes they undergo are usually mostly cosmetic, people never realize that the
magical girl and the normal girl are one and the same unless they happen to witness
the transformation. In fact a magical girl would have a hard time deliberately convinc-
ing someone of this without demonstrating her transformation. Sentai heroes don’t
have this protection generally, but then they wear masks and they’re less likely to be
asked to keep their powers a secret.
Sentai heroes’ transformation items are usually some kind of bracelet or cell
phone, while magical girls favor pendants and makeup compacts. It’s possible for a
character to lose the transformation item, but this should always be temporary.
Costume
Take some time to think about what the team’s costumes are going to be like, and
what they say about the heroes who wear them.
The costume of a sentai hero consists of a spandex jumpsuit and a full-coverage
helmet with a tinted visor. Female rangers frequently have skirts integrated into their
costumes in some way, and rangers with short capes are not unknown. The whole
outfit is one color, with some white or gold highlights. Think about any patterns or
symbols on the outfit, as well as the design of the helmet. Some sentai heroes, espe-
cially the more powerful ones, have some kind of armor that goes over the jumpsuit.
I don’t know about you, but I find magical girl costumes incredibly hard to de-
sign. Sentai heroes have a clearly defined stereotypical outfit, but a “standard” magical
girl outfit is basically a short, girly dress of some kind that’s a bit more ornate than
usual. (And there are those who wear shorts or long dresses). They can be very sim-
ple, like Sailor Moon’s modified school uniforms, deliberately outlandish, like Pretty
Sammy’s kimono top and pleated skirt, or gratuitously accessorized, like Nurse Witch
Komugi-chan. If the character has a strong theme, be sure to express it as much as
possible in the costume. A magical girl team will usually have each member’s costume
be minor variations on a theme, especially in terms of color, but unlike sentai teams
they can sometimes be wildly different from each other.
Step 2: Aspects
An “Aspect” is an archetype of the character’s personality and style of fighting.
Aspects are set up along the lines of the stereotypical rangers of a given color, but
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especially for magical girls the personality doesn’t have to directly correspond to the
actual color of the character’s outfit.
You’ll notice there are a total of ten different aspects here – twice the number of
people in a standard 5-person team. A standard sentai team would consist of Red,
Blue, Yellow, Pink, and either Green or Black, and the other Aspects would be for
“special” rangers that show up later on in the series.
If you’re sticking close to the sentai clichés, female heroes are kind of limited in
what Aspects they can pick. Pink is the only exclusively female Aspect (we’re not
judging or anything), and Yellow is also commonly used for female characters, and
Blue and White on occasion. Naturally, once you go outside of the bounds of sentai
clichés, all bets are off. A magical girl team can (and should) run the gamut of As-
pects.
Regardless, no two heroes on the same team should have the same Aspect. If two
players are dead-set on having the same aspect, you could:
a. Have each player write down a character concept. The GM reads these aloud
and the rest of the group votes on who should get that Aspect.
b. Use a randomizer – roll dice, flip a coin, play Rock-Paper-Scissors, etc.
c. Whoever is willing to start with the most negative Karma (so they have to earn
up to be able to spend any at all) gets that Aspect.
d. Just let them both have it already.
If there’s no Aspect that works for you, the GM can either help you create a new
one (because who says there can’t be Orange or Purple rangers?), or just skip the use
of an Aspect and give the character a Personal Key and one extra Personal Edge.
Each Aspect description lists a Virtue (something good about a typical hero of
that aspect), a Fault (something bad about them), some Example Character Con-
cepts (which will hopefully help with the next step of hero creation), and Keys (your
choices for Aspect Keys if you take this Aspect; see p. 26). Each also includes a
special ability, which lets heroes of that Aspect spend Karma points for some special
benefit during the game.
Red/Fireball Hero
Virtue: You’re self-assured and seldom hesitate.
Fault: You have a way of letting your emotions cloud your judgment.
Example Character Concepts: Blazing Rookie, Brash Kid, Courageous Fire-
fighter, Enthusiastic Chief, Karate Expert, Kind Veterinarian, Single Father
Keys: Belief, Bond
Righteous Fury: When there’s a wrong to the righted, you can spend Karma
points as though they were Hero Dice.
Blue/Calculating Hero
Virtue: You can remain calm under pressure, and are good at devising and stick-
ing to a plan.
Fault: You have a hard time dealing with failure, and you’re overly critical of peo-
ple who won’t do things your way.
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Example Character Concepts: Aspiring Athlete, Ballet Dancer, Dedicated
Priestess, Perfect Elite, Prodigy, Professional Racer, Rich Doctor, Strict Policeman
Keys: Cause, Specialty
Perfect: You can spend 2 Karma to re-roll a failed action. If you spent Hero Dice
on the action the first time around, they don’t count for the re-roll, though you can
spend more Hero Dice if you want. You can only re-roll a given action once.
Green/The Wildcard
Virtue: You have a knack for looking at a situation in a different way and finding
solutions that others might miss.
Fault: Your strong focus and unconventional ways sometimes lead you astray.
Example Character Concepts: Careful Thinker, Dedicated Musician, Expert Pi-
lot, Serious Scholar, Technical Wizard, Timid Genius
Keys: Bond, Specialty
Eureka: You can spend 2 Karma to have your character find a clue or reach some
kind of insight about the problem at hand. The GM doesn’t have to let you do this,
but she may decide to let you (the player) decide what the clue is.
Pink/Cute Heroine
Virtue: Your enthusiasm is inspirational, and you have a warm, caring nature.
Fault: You can be selfish, and sometimes you want to be coddled.
Example Character Concepts: Airhead, Aspiring Idol, Feminine Elite, Kind
Nurse
Keys: Bond, Love
Girl Power: If you’re in a mixed-gender team, you can spend 5 Karma to get a –1
Target modifier for a scene when you and all the other female team members are
working together (you can use this by yourself if you are the only female team mem-
ber). If you’re on an all-female team (magical girls or whatever) you can get the same
effect for yourself when something “feminine” that’s important to you is at stake.
Yellow/The Pillar
Virtue: You’re reliable, and a source of strength to those around you.
Fault: You tend to focus on the things in front of you a little too much, and try
too hard to avoid repeating past mistakes.
Example Character Concepts: Charismatic Friend, Kindergarten Teacher, Ra-
tional Hero, Silly Child, Well-Intentioned Prankster
Keys: Bond, Cause
I Won’t Let You Down: If you’ve made a promise to someone, you can spend
Karma points as Hero Dice for any action related to keeping that promise.
Black/Dutiful Hero
Virtue: You have the drive to accomplish your mission at any cost, letting noth-
ing stand in your way.
Fault: You too readily stand alone, and take on too much by yourself.
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Example Character Concepts: Aloof Celebrity, Expert Loner, Gentle Bear, Oth-
erworld Survivor
Keys: Cause, Goal
Never Give Up: You can use Karma points as Hero Dice for the purpose of re-
storing Stamina.
White/The Paladin
Virtue: Your absolute sense of justice lends you courage to face any adversary.
Fault: Sometimes you’re too quick to criticize the faults in others, and sometimes
you too readily put your principles before everything else.
Example Character Concepts: Arrogant Elite, Avenger, Dedicated Warrior
Keys: Cause, Goal
Righteous Blade: You can use Karma points as Hero Dice for Special or Finish-
ing Attacks.
Master/The Mentor
Virtue: Your long experience has given you wisdom; you know how to choose
your battles, and you know the strengths of your team.
Fault: You can’t or won’t use your full power very often.
Example Character Concepts: The Boss, The Chief, Tired Veteran
Keys: Bond, Specialty
Let Me Handle This: You can spend 4 Karma to get a –1 Target modifier for one
fight scene, but only if you’re fighting by yourself.
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Step 3: Character Concept
With your hero’s Aspect chosen, you should be well on your way towards figur-
ing out what your character is going to be like. Take a moment to think up a more
specific concept. This doesn’t have to be anything fancy – a single sentence at most –
so long as it gives you a starting point for who’s behind the mask (holding the magic
wand, etc.).
Combat Ability?
Even though fighting is a big part of this game, a hero doesn’t need to be an ac-
complished fighter to be an effective character. It’s just as important, if not more so,
to be able to contribute to the group’s pool of Hero Dice with your Keys, not to
mention helping out with the investigation and such that leads up to actually fighting
the bad guys.
Step 4: Keys
A Key is something the hero believes in especially strongly; during the game they
determine how each hero earns Hero Dice for the group. The team will have two
Team Keys, which every member of the team has. Although nearly any Key could be
used as a Team Key, Pride and Cause are particularly appropriate, and Love is good
for magical girls. Each hero also selects an Aspect Key from one of the two listed in
the Aspect description.
Keys are relatively broad, and with the exceptions of Pride and Love, it’s neces-
sary to make them a little bit more specific. If the team has a Cause, you’ll have to
decide what that cause is. The specifics of a Key can be broad or narrow, but they
should be something that stays pertinent during the campaign. Each Key lists Bene-
fits, and those that require further defining have Examples. The benefits of a key are
guidelines; the GM can and should give out Hero Dice for other things that seem ap-
propriate to a hero’s Keys.
Belief
There’s a principle you believe in, and upholding it gives shape and meaning to
your existence.
Examples: Justice will always prevail in the end. No one is beyond saving.
Benefits: Once per episode you can gain 1 Hero Die by stating your belief in con-
text. Gain 2-3 Hero Dice each time you stand up for your belief at a personal risk.
Gain 3 Hero Dice each time you convince someone else to believe as you do.
Bond
You have a strong bond with a particular person, whether a significant other, a
teammate, a friend, an idol, etc. That person is a source of strength to you, and you
would do whatever it takes to protect them or stand up for their beliefs.
Examples: Respected Mentor, Girlfriend/Boyfriend, Beloved Pet, Kid Brother,
Mother
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Benefits: Gain 1 Hero Die every time you’re in a scene with that person. Gain 2
Hero Dice whenever you become closer to them or learn something from them. Gain
3 Hero Dice when you put yourself at risk to protect them or what you believe they
stand for.
Cause
There is a cause you believe in, something that shapes the way you live. A cause is
different from a goal in that it’s something that cannot necessarily be “fixed” on a
permanent basis.
Examples: Protect the innocent. Protect the environment.
Benefits: Once per session you can gain 1 Hero Die by stating the nature of your
cause in context. Gain 2-3 Hero Dice each time you pursue your cause even though it
puts you at personal risk. Gain 3 or more Hero Dice if you convince someone else to
take up the same cause.
Goal
There’s a specific goal you’re working towards that gives you purpose and drive.
Examples: Take revenge for the death of a friend. Become a successful painter. In-
vent something that will revolutionize people’s lives. Defeat the evil overlord. Re-
store the magical kingdom to prosperity.
Benefits: Gain 1 Hero Die each time you get closer to your goal. Gain 2-3 Hero
Dice each time you pursue your goal even though it puts you at personal risk. Gain 3
or more Hero Dice if you convince someone else to pursue the same goal.
Love
You gain strength from love. What kind of love is up to you, but romantic love is
the most powerful, if the most difficult.
Benefits: Gain 1 Hero Die when you have a scene with someone you love. Gain 2
Hero Dice each time you move closer to finding love. Gain 3 Hero Dice when you
find love for real, or when you put yourself at personal risk to protect the object of
your love.
Pride
You draw strength from pride in your status as a hero and a member of the team,
and you’re invigorated by shows of solidarity and teamwork.
Benefits: Gain 1 Hero Die when your team does a brief pose. Gain 2 Hero Dice
when your whole team shows off with an extended pose. Gain 3 Hero Dice when
your team is recognized for its heroism.
Specialty
There’s something you’re good at, and having the opportunity to display those
skills and be praised for them matters to you. If you have this Key you may wish to
take Profession or Knack as a Personal Edge (see below).
Examples: Perfectionist, Ace Pilot, Skilled Chef, Police Detective
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Benefits: Gain 1-3 Hero Dice every time you successfully use your specialty (for
something that matters to the plot). Gain 2 Hero Dice when you get praised for it by
someone you admire. Gain 3 Hero Dice when you use your specialty and it has a ma-
jor benefit to the team’s goals.
Step 6: Edges
Edges are a character’s other assets—skills, perks, and special powers. Unlike At-
tributes, with Edges you either have them or you don’t, but many can be bought mul-
tiple times for a cumulative effect.
Characters have both Team Edges and Personal Edges. The group needs to agree
on a set of Team Edges that will be possessed by each member of the team (though
they can have different Descriptors on these Edges). The GM has final say on how
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many edges worth of stuff the team gets, but five is plenty for a starting team, or at
most ten for a very powerful group.
For a typical sentai group the Team Edges will be along the lines of Basic Attack,
Special Attack, Vehicle Defender, Group Asset: Finishing Attack, and Group Asset:
Robot.
A typical magical girl group can have just Special Attack as a Team Edge (though
possibly 2 or 3 Edges worth of Special Attack), and Special Power is a definite possi-
bility.
Personal Edges are specific to each individual hero. The GM also decides how
many each hero gets, but one to three is typical. Most of a character’s actual powers
will be covered by Team Edges, so Knack, Perk, and Profession are the most
common Personal Edges. Still, these can be spent on any Edges you want.
You don’t have to use all of your available Edges, but you can’t trade them for At-
tributes or anything like that. You can give them to other players though.
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Vehicles
Sentai heroes are big on special vehicles; how else are they going to deal with gi-
ant-sized monsters? Typically each hero has a Vehicle Defender, a personalized vehi-
cle that has a limited ability to attack. The heroes can then combine all of their vehicle
defenders into a single Giant Robot that can go toe-to-toe with whatever giant mon-
sters might be threatening the city. In sentai shows they love to bring out new ro-
bots; the Sixth Ranger often has a special vehicle defender that can become a robot on
its own, and however many robots and vehicles there are, someone will try to find a
way to combine them into one big robot.
Sentai heroes tend to have these regardless of the theme of their powers, though
they can take other forms. They might be a form of sentient creature or even some-
thing the heroes transform into if it fits the theme of their powers better. Or you can
just not worry about it and let the ninjas have Secret Ninja Robots. In case you
couldn’t tell by now, capturing the feel of sentai is a matter of doing really ridiculous
stuff with conviction.
Edge Descriptions
Tokyo Heroes has a grand total of 18 Edges, and almost all of them require at least
a little bit of explanation/flavor text to show what they do in the game. Dimensional
Arena, Empowered Hero, and Secondary Transformation are for special powers that
tend to be introduced late in a sentai series, while Always Transformed and Giant
Form are pretty atypical for both sentai heroes and magical girls, and are meant for
more unusual characters.
Always Transformed
The majority of Tokyo Heroes characters have to transform to have access to their
special powers, but a hero with this Edge for some reason always has access to his full
abilities. This may have some drawbacks in terms of the character’s appearance or
other oddities.
Basic Attack
This is a simple, commonly used mode of attack. Unlike Special Attack and Fin-
ishing attack it can be used at will, but the character just rolls his base Attack attrib-
ute. A Basic Attack can be a weapon—whether a melee weapon, a firearm, or some-
thing else—or simply the ability to make effective hand-to-hand attacks. Characters
can also have more than one type of basic attack without spending any additional
Edges. Without a Basic Attack edge, the character has to either use a Special Attack
or attack as though not transformed (see p. 46).
Dimensional Arena
Some heroes have the power to draw their enemies into a tiny pocket dimension.
The hero has to make a successful Attack roll, and then spend 3 Hero Dice to trap
the enemy (no dice are spent if the roll fails). Within the Dimensional Arena the hero
gets a –1 Target modifier and the enemy gets a +1 Target modifier and has his Resis-
30
tance reduced by a third. Enemies can attempt to “break” the pocket dimension with
a sufficiently powerful attack; a Special or Finishing Attack against the walls of the
arena that scores as many Successes as the hero’s Resistance will break the arena and
return both of them to normal space.
A Dimensional Arena can be used to bring multiple allies in, in which case it costs
an extra Hero Die per 2 allies. These allies gain the same benefits as the main hero.
Extra enemies cost an extra 2 Hero Dice each to bring into the Dimensional Arena
(for these purposes a crowd of mooks counts as a single enemy), and a separate At-
tack roll (use the same dice as the main roll, including any Hero Dice spent) is re-
quired to bring them in.
Empowered Hero
This Edge has to be bought as a Group Asset, with every member contributing
one Edge. One hero, usually the leader (Red), is designated as the recipient. When
this Edge is used, each team member lends the recipient a portion of their power. The
other team members suffer a +1 Target modifier, but the recipient gets any two of
the following benefits:
• –1 Target modifier to all actions.
• A number of Edges equal to the number of contributing team members. This
can be taken twice for double that amount.
• Hero Dice spent count double; each die adds two dice to a roll, restores 8
Stamina, or provides 2 dice towards using Edges that cost Hero Dice.
The Empowered Hero transformation lasts until the scene ends or the hero de-
cides to cancel it. In either case, his allies immediately get their energy back and no
longer have the +1 Target modifier.
Finishing Attack
A finishing attack is a step above a Special Attack, a hisatsuwaza (killer move)
used to finish off opponents. A basic Finishing Attack adds 4 dice to the attack roll
but costs 2 Hero Dice. Each extra Edge spent on a Finishing Attack adds 2 attack
dice and +1 to the Hero Die cost. A finishing attack can be used just to wear an op-
ponent down (it still takes off Stamina points), though this isn’t necessarily the best
use of it.
Unlike Special Attacks, there’s no penalty for using it to finish off an opponent.
A Finishing Attack that scores at least as many successes as the target’s Resistance
finishes them off, but every point of Stamina the target has counts against those suc-
cesses for that purpose.
Giant Form
Not unlike Ultraman, a hero with this Edge has the power to temporarily become
giant-sized on his own. By spending 4 Hero Dice, the hero effectively becomes able
to use his normal Attributes, Edges, and so forth in Robot scale (see p. XX) for one
scene/battle.
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Group Asset
A Group Asset is an Edge shared by all members of the team. It can only be used
by all of them working together, and often requires them to physically combine stuff
gained from other Edges. A group Finishing Attack could be a result of heroes inter-
locking each of their Special Attack weapons, Robots are almost always a result of
Vehicle Defenders linking up, etc. You don’t get any point bonus/credit for doing it
this way; it just looks cool.
If even one team member is missing, a Group Asset can’t be used, though the GM
can make exceptions, and a Group Assets usually use up an entire turn from each
member to assemble. Group Assets always allow all of the team members to at least
assist in actions requiring that asset; they’re never limited to encouraging (see Coop-
erative Actions, p. 41).
Hard To Kill
Some characters are unusually determined to stay standing. Permanently add +3
to the character’s Resistance. This Edge can only be taken once.
Knack
A Knack is some general thing the character is good at, ranging from legitimate
skills (“Knack: Hacking”) to cinematic fluff (“Knack: Show up in the nick of time
when Kaori is in trouble”). Regardless, a Knack provides 2 Bonus Dice to rolls where
it’s pertinent. You can have more than one Knack, but you can only have one Knack
for a particular thing. Also see Profession, below.
Mentor/Mascot
You have some kind of mentor that’s specific to your hero. That doesn’t necessar-
ily mean she won’t help out your teammates, just that her main job is to help you.
Perk
A perk is some kind of social advantage. Perks don’t have any effect on the rules,
but during the game they can potentially open all kinds of doors.
• Authority: While most heroes have to operate in secret, or are recognized
only unofficially, there are those who have actual government authority, as
police officers, military personnel, or some such. Not everyone will be coop-
erative, but people are legally obliged to recognize the heroes’ authority.
• Fame: Some heroes are famous, whether they’re celebrities in public, famous
for their special skills, or simply known to the world as great heroes. Fame can
be a burden at times too.
• Property: Owning real estate has its benefits. Heroes are always assumed to
have somewhere to live, so Property means the character has either some kind
of establishment (a restaurant or store or something), a base of operations for
the heroes, or a combination thereof. This can be taken as a Group Asset if
the team wants to have a really elaborate base.
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• Wealth: Money makes the world go round and all that. Player characters are
assumed to have an average amount of money available for whatever type of
people they are (an average adult probably has more cash on hand than an av-
erage middle school girl), but with Wealth the character is pretty well off.
Characters can take this one multiple times to be even wealthier, though that
kind of money seldom comes without strings attached.
Profession
A character with this Edge has the skills necessary for a certain profession, such as
a doctor, scientist, detective, chef, etc. In rolls where that profession’s skills are useful
the character gets 2 Bonus Dice. This Edge can be taken multiple times for different
professions, but only once for the same profession.
Robot
Everyone loves giant robots! A robot lets characters function normally in robot-
scale action (see p. 47). By default a robot has 24 Stamina, Resistance 10, and can do a
Basic Attack. Each additional Edge spent on the robot to provide one of the follow-
ing:
• 2 additional Edges; Finishing Attack, Special Attack, Special Defense, and
Special Power (usually stuff like Special Movement) are typical.
• +8 to Stamina
• +2 to Resistance (to a maximum of 16)
Secondary Transformation
Some heroes can transform a second time, usually into a “heavy combat form” of
some kind that gives them enhanced abilities. For each Edge spent on it, a Secondary
Transformation costs 1 Hero Die and provides the character with 2 additional Edges
only available when the transformation is active. For a more powerful secondary
transformation, take the Edge again, increasing the Hero Dice cost by 1, but adding 2
more Edges.
Special Attack
Special Attacks are moderately powerful attacks that heroes can use against ene-
mies. The form that a special attack takes is left up to your imagination, though each
hero should have a different variation. For sentai heroes a Special Attack is usually a
special personalized weapon, while for magical girls it’s a magical attack spell.
Regardless, a Special Attack works like a Basic Attack, but adds +2 dice to the
Attack roll. Additional Edges can be added to a Special Attack to make it more pow-
erful; each Edge adds another 2 dice, or 3 dice if the Special Attack costs a Hero Die
to use.
Special Attacks can be used to try for a finishing attack, but this has to be de-
clared in advance and it has a +1 Target modifier to the roll.
When creating a special attack be sure to think about what exactly it does in the
game world.
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• Combat Technique: A special attack could simply be a way of using an exist-
ing the character’s existing weapons or even his fists.
• Elemental: Lots of special attacks are “elemental,” made up of a certain ele-
ment. Most of the time this doesn’t make too much difference, but every now
and then it’ll be really effective or ineffective against a particular enemy (“Fire
heals it!”), or it’ll come in handy for its elemental properties (using a water at-
tack to put out a fire). Although you can stick to the Western four elements if
you want to, anime often has electricity, ice, and gravity as elements (check
out Tokyo Underground for lots of that kind of stuff), and magical girls have
been known to use Love-elemental attacks too.
• Weapon: Sentai heroes in particular routinely have their special attacks as
weapons. These can be just about anything you can think up, though it should
be at least somewhat consistent with the team’s theme.
Special Defense
A Special Defense gives a hero a way to avoid getting hurt that goes beyond mak-
ing basic Defense rolls. Heroes shouldn’t have access to much in the way of Special
Defenses (especially Passive Defense) early on; Special Defenses are better used as
part of an Empowered Hero or Secondary Transformation.
There are three different kinds of Special Defenses; each can be taken multiple
times to add the same effect on top, and if appropriate multiple types can be com-
bined. Like other character traits, the player should define what the heck a Special
Defense is, from body armor to a special shield to making a force field or a wall of
fire.
• Passive Defense: This represents some kind of armor or some such; each Edge
spent on a Passive Defense provides one die worth of defense that is applied
regardless of whether the character is actively defending.
• Defensive Technique: The character has some means of mounting an active
defense. Add 2 dice to defense rolls where the character specifically uses this
special defensive technique.
• Defensive Power: The hero has some special means of defending himself that
burns up energy (i.e. uses Hero Dice). The hero can spend 1 Hero Die to get
an additional 3 dice of defense on an active defense action. In the story this
usually takes the form of some kind of force field or other unique defense.
Special Power
Characters and teams sometimes have special powers that go beyond the usual
stuff with attacking and defending and having giant robots. If a character wants a spe-
cial power, the GM decides how many Edges it counts as and how many Hero Dice
have to be spent to use it (usually both are the same).
• Esper: The hero can read the emotions and thoughts of others.
34
• Healing: For healing injuries, treat this as the ability to use Hero Dice to re-
store the Stamina of others, at the usual rate. For other kinds of ailments, the
cost depends on the severity of the problems the character can handle.
• Magical Disguise: The character has a way to quickly disguise himself. This
costs 1 for producing different outfits and hairstyles, 2-3 for imitating specific
people.
• Special Movement: The hero can move in a way that would be difficult or im-
possible for a normal human—ice skating, flying, brachiating, water-walking,
etc.
• Special Senses: Sometimes heroes have special ways of detecting things,
whether technological sensors or mystical senses. Not a few magical heroes
can sense the presence of evil, and stuff like thermal imaging can be incredibly
useful.
Vehicle Defender
The character has a “super-vehicle.” It affords extra mobility appropriate to what-
ever kind of vehicle it happens to be, and it can attempt a robot-scale Basic Attack,
albeit with a +1 Target modifier. Vehicle Defenders are almost always combined to
become a Group Asset robot (see above).
Step 7: Attributes
Every character has five attributes: Attack, Defense, Athletics, Brains, and Spirit.
Distribute 15 points among the five; you have to put at least 1 in each, and 5 is the
maximum at the start of the campaign.
• Attack represents a hero’s general ability to dish out the hurt on opponents. It
can represent raw physical strength, accuracy to hit a target where it counts,
spiritual energy, etc. When attacking an opponent, this is what you roll.
• Defense is a hero’s general ability to avoid being hurt, whether by puffing up
his chest and brushing off pain, being quick enough to slip out of the way, etc.
• Athletics is a hero’s overall level of physical ability, good for stuff like climb-
ing, swimming, running, jumping, and so on. It doesn’t necessarily represent
physical strength or agility, but it can incorporate those things, especially with
Descriptors.
• Brains represents the hero’s general mental acuity. A brainy hero probably
gets good grades, can operate a computer, and analyze what the enemy is do-
ing to find patterns and decode puzzles.
• Spirit is a hero’s willpower and enthusiasm. It’s his ability to keep going even
when things look bleak, and to convince his teammates not to give up either.
Derived Values
Each character also has three Derived Values, calculated based on attributes.
Write them down on your character sheet in the spaces provided.
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Initiative is used to determine who acts when in combat (see p. 43). Initiative is
Attack + Brains.
Resistance is the number of successes it takes for a finishing attack to finally
knock the character out: Defense + Spirit.
Stamina is how much damage your character can take; the less Stamina a charac-
ter has left, the more vulnerable to finishing attacks he becomes. Stamina is calculated
as (Defense + Athletics + Spirit) x 3.
Step 8: Profile
For both the team and the heroes it’s time to fill out any other information you
might want.
Names
Stuff should have names. Heroes typically have their own “civilian” name and a
special heroic name. Hero names should follow a general pattern for the team, such as
the Dynarangers having Dynamic + [aspect color]. When a hero is transformed, peo-
ple tend to treat his heroic identity as his main identity and address him by his heroic
name. Attacks, vehicle defenders, and especially robots should likewise have names.
Looks
More so that in real life, and even more so than in anime and manga, in sentai the
way someone or something looks tells you a lot about it. The fiery Red Ranger has
spiky hair, the level-headed Blue Ranger has perfectly straight hair, and the more cool
and elaborate a robot looks, the more powerful it is.
Personality
What kind of guy (or girl) is your hero? Your Aspect can provide a starting point,
but they leave more room for interpretation than you might think. While there are
sentai heroes who are almost wholly defined by their color, others are more subtle.
Vital Statistics
For a particularly manga-style character profile, you could go so far as to list off
your character’s height, weight, birth date/zodiac sign, blood type, likes, dislikes, fa-
vorite food, etc. And measurements, if that’s your thing.
Ally Characters
Ally Characters (“ACs”) are a midpoint between player characters and GM char-
acters. They’re assumed to be friends and allies of the heroes, and while the GM con-
trols them most of the time, players can invest Karma to take on the role of an AC
for a scene (see p. 49). The group should discuss which ally characters will be a part
of the campaign. ACs should be capable at what they do, but also relatively passive
most of the time, so the GM doesn’t have to roll dice for them that often.
36
One use for Ally Characters is to fill out a roster of heroes if you happen to have
less than five players in your group, not to mention allowing for the introduction of
new heroes later on. Mentors, assistants, and mascots can all be considered Ally
Characters as well, and if a player is unable to attend a session he can consent to allow
his hero to be considered an AC for that session. Also, if you have a guest player who
wants to jump in for a session or two, taking control of an AC can be a great way for
them to participate.
Players can volunteer to generate stats for Ally Characters—especially if they’re
going to be regular team members—or it can be left up to the GM. Depending on
their nature, ACs can sometimes go outside of the usual parameters for character
creation, especially in the case of a Sixth Ranger or Master Ranger. They can ignore
the Team Keys and Edges, and for that matter have more points for Attributes and
more Edges, if the GM feels it appropriate. For examples of such characters, see Dy-
namic Knight (p. 12) and Dynamic Captain (p. 13).
Connected People
In addition to Ally Characters, each hero probably has a bunch of other people
connected to them—relatives, friends, co-workers, etc. If you want, note down any
your character has that you think might be interesting. If the GM is paying attention
at all, these characters will make their way into the campaign at some point.
Base of Operations
Heroes will usually have some kind of headquarters, or at least a place to meet up.
This could be a place where they all live, a base where they all work, or even a restau-
rant or some such where they meet to hang out and talk.
For sentai heroes in particular, a “base of operations” doesn’t have to be a mere
inert building. Sentai bases can be equipped with all sorts of equipment, or even take
the form of a special giant-sized vehicle. A few can even become a robot! Of course,
the full power of the base doesn’t have to be revealed at the start of the series.
Magical girls are more likely to have a place to hang out, such as a restaurant or
cafe, a karaoke place, someone’s house, etc., where they can meet up to talk about
what’s going on, and maybe do some detective work on the internet. They could all
go to the same school, but in actual magical girl anime they usually don’t, and have to
take extra time to meet up and do hero stuff.
Enemies
Although coming up with bad guys is mostly the GM’s job, players are welcome
to contribute ideas too. The bad guys usually have some kind of connection or at
least commonality with the heroes. If the good guys are heroic magic users it’s pretty
much a given that the bad guys are evil magic users. It doesn’t have to be that simple
though; maybe the heroes were created specifically to fight the enemy (or vice versa),
or maybe they’re two forms of the same thing that have split off in different direc-
tions.
37
Adventures
Episodes and Scenes
A Tokyo Heroes campaign is like a TV series in that it’s broken up into episodes,
which are in turn divided into scenes.
Episodes
An episode is one incident and its resolution, so most of the time you’ll be play-
ing through one episode per session. Sometimes you might wind up doing multiple
short episodes in a session, or having a long episode take multiple sessions to finish.
That’s fine; episodes end when the GM says they do.
At the beginning of each episode the team’s Hero Dice are reset, and at the end of
the episode the characters regain any lost Stamina and are awarded Karma.
Scenes
Episodes are broken up into scenes. Like episodes, there aren’t any hard and fast
rules for when they begin and end, but the end of a scene can matter in game terms—
because there are certain things that last “until the end of the scene.” Thinking in
terms of scenes is also a tool to help keep the right pace for the game. When you take
a typical sentai episode and subtract the commercials you wind up with about 24
minutes of footage, but if you cut out the opening and ending themes and the pre-
view of the next episode it’s more like 20 minutes, and that 20 minutes has to keep
the attention of an audience of hyperactive little kids. In contrast, when playing a ro-
leplaying game it’s entirely too easy to get lost in pointless minutiae. By playing out
only the scenes that actually matter, the game can become faster and more focused.
New scenes can be initiated by the GM or requested by the players. For maxi-
mum effectiveness, the framing of a scene should be mentioned explicitly, and stuff
that happens in an actual scene should be important and move the plot forward.
Events that aren’t sufficiently important are considered “off-camera,” and these can
be summarized and/or handled with a quick dice roll. The start of a scene should
dump the heroes into a situation where they need take action—it should have an ob-
jective and give the players opportunities to make choices—and end once that objec-
tive is completed, before it has a chance to drag. A scene will definitely end with the
passage of time, a change of location, or the departure of all of the heroes. The end of
a battle usually means the scene is going to end soon, but the heroes often spend
some time investigating the aftermath of the location of a battle. A battle can also
shift location or scale without a scene ending.
A typical session might begin with a scene of the Dynarangers meeting on board
the Cortana. There’s a little time for them to chatter, but things get down to business
when Captain Starforge tells them they’ve detected a Zalbus Force spacecraft landing
in the city. They nod to each other and move out. Bam. End of scene. Off-camera, he
gives them the coordinates, they get into their cars, and they drive there. Scene 2 of
38
this episode begins when they’ve arrived at a construction site and are looking at a
crashed shuttle that’s sending a plume of smoke into the sky.
Appearance Rolls
It should be fairly obvious what PCs are going to be in the scene, but when it’s in
doubt the player can make an “appearance roll” to see if the character can reach the
scene. What Attribute is rolled on varies; stuff like Athletics to see if the character
can run/drive there in time, Brains to navigate, clear red tape, etc. For battle scenes
any character can spend 1 Karma or 1 Hero Die to automatically pop up at the scene
of a battle, but only after other teammates have arrived and been hit with at least one
attack.
Set Pieces
It pays to think in terms of sets and locations. Where is the action taking place,
and what’s there that could potentially make scenes more interesting? This could be
as simple as the magical girls’ favorite hangout having a karaoke machine, or as gran-
diose as an evil overlord’s giant skull-shaped space fortress.
Battles can benefit immensely from having things around for the combatants to
interact with. They can take cover, try for ambushes, throw things, get thrown into
things, blow things up, and general blend cleverness and property damage into a
smooth mixture of badassitude. While there is that cliché sentai rock quarry fight
scene, an epic battle taking place in a steel refinery among catwalks and machines that
are constantly shooting sparks and pouring molten metal could be pretty damn cool.
Cut Scenes
This is sort of an advanced technique. In the TV shows the audience is always getting
glimpses of what the bad guys are up to. Sometimes this is just to let us know what’s go-
ing on, and if done well it’s entertaining too. Using this in the game requires that the
players be able to keep from acting on information that their characters shouldn’t know.
To take it a step further, the GM can even go so far as to let players play out a scene con-
trolling enemy characters as though they were Ally Characters (see p. 49).
Preview
At the end of each episode, it’s time for the “preview.” In a TV show, the creators
give us a small snippet of what’s coming up for next time. In Tokyo Heroes the preview
is everything that comes after the episode’s final scene and before the group either fin-
ishes with the gaming session or moves onto another episode.
First, it’s time for some paperwork. The GM assigns the players Karma points (see p.
48), and if they players want to spend those on improving Attributes or buying new
Edges, this is the time.
Second, it’s time to deal just a little bit with what will be coming up in the next epi-
sode. The GM can give as much or as little information about as she wishes, but a sen-
tence or so is sufficient. Naturally, this requires the GM to have some inkling of what the
following episode is going to be about (which would mean your GM is a lot better organ-
39
ized than me). This is a way to get the players primed for what kind of stuff their heroes
will be facing next episode, and to get them thinking about neat stuff for their characters
to do.
The players don’t have to be passive here, however. They can make suggestions, give
feedback, and also ask the GM to let them invest Karma in a spotlight episode (see p. 49).
Not a few TV episodes have a plot that’s basically instigated by the protagonists anyway;
this way you can have your cake and eat it too. The adventure is player-led, but it can
benefit from some extra planning on the GM’s part.
Seasons
If a campaign/series is long enough it can go into multiple seasons. For Tokyo
Heroes, a season is going to cover a conflict between the heroes and a particular group
of villains. Your average sentai series does just fine with a single group of baddies for
a whole 51 episodes or so, but you can do whatever you want with your game. Sailor
Moon got through over 200 episodes by periodically introducing new story arcs and
new villains, and for that matter Buffy The Vampire Slayer’s seven seasons took a
similar approach. Sometimes these differing groups of bad guys were connected to
each other, and other times they had absolutely nothing in common. New seasons are
also an opportunity to introduce new allies and new toys for the heroes.
Action Resolution
If a hero wants to do something and the outcome is (1) important and (2) in
question, it’s time to break out the dice. For Tokyo Heroes we use nothing but six-
sided dice. First, the player explains what it is his character wants to do. The GM de-
cides what attribute the action should be based on; that attribute is how many dice
you roll for the action. You can get Bonus Dice (see below) from certain Edges, from
doing stuff that’s really cool, and sometimes from doing stuff that works with a De-
scriptor (see p. 21) your character has. Sometimes you can get a penalty too.
Anyway, whatever the action is, it has a Target; this is the number you have to
match or exceed on a six-sided die in order for that die to count as a Success. The
more successes you get the better the action turns out. Most of the time the Target is
4 (so each die counts as a Success 50% of the time). In a given action the Target is
always the same for all the dice rolled for a given character, regardless of where they
come from.
If your action is in direct opposition to someone—this happens constantly in
combat—whoever gets the most successes wins, and a tie is a tie. If you don’t have
another character opposing you, you’ll need to achieve a number of successes set by
the GM, depending on how hard the action is.
Particularly in combat, the GM is encouraged to let the player explain how his
hero’s action turns out based on the dice. Say something like, “You hit him; how?”
and the player gets to come up with a result that’s consistent with the game mechan-
ics.
If everyone is at a loss for what attribute to use for an action, the GM can make
up an attribute level appropriate to the character’s concept.
40
Bonus Dice (And Penalties)
An Attribute rank is the starting point for how many dice a player gets to roll, but
a lot of things can change it. When something adds to the number of dice, these are
called Bonus Dice. When something impairs the character and makes them roll fewer
dice, they’re Penalties. No matter how many penalties a hero gets, he always gets to
roll at least one die for an action.
GMs should feel free to award one or two bonus dice whenever a player describes
an action in a particularly cool or inventive way. It’s possible to penalize players for
particularly bland, uninspiring actions, but try to keep this to a minimum.
When a Descriptor is attached to a character trait, the hero gets one Bonus Die
for actions that epitomize the descriptor, and a one die penalty for actions that totally
go against it.
Finally, some Edges can add Bonus Dice to actions. There are some that add a
bonus to any action where certain skills come into play (like Profession and Knack),
and also special powers that add bonus dice when they’re used.
Hero Dice also work very much like Bonus Dice when they’re used; see below.
Cooperative Actions
When multiple characters work together on an action, first designate one of them
as the “leader.” The leader rolls his dice normally, while everyone else gets Target
modifiers, reducing the chances of getting Successes. If it’s not clear who should be
the leader, it defaults to the character who is rolling the most dice for the action.
If a character is able to tangibly help out they get to assist. Rolls made for assist-
ing have +1 to the Target (so the basic Target becomes 5). If a hero can’t directly
help his teammate out, he can still encourage them, by offering moral support, cheer-
ing them on, or otherwise showing solidarity. Rolls for encouragement have +2 to
the Target (base 6), and are usually a Spirit roll.
Regardless, everyone’s Successes are added together.
Hero Dice
Hero Dice are one of the most important, central game mechanics in Tokyo He-
roes, so pay close attention. Hero Dice are a pool of extra dice that all of the heroes
on the team can use, and all of them contribute to. When playing the game, ideally
the Hero Dice should be a physical pile of dice in the middle of the table, where eve-
ryone playing can reach. All of the player characters have the responsibility of doing
stuff in during the game that contributes to the group’s available Hero Dice, and this
lets every character contribute to the group’s success, even if they aren’t necessarily
all that useful in a fight.
Hero Dice do not carry over from one episode to the next, so you should try to
get the most out of them during the episode.
41
Earning Hero Dice
Characters earn Hero Dice using Keys. A Key is something the character strongly
believes in, that makes them feel more alive. By default, a team has two Team Keys,
and each character has an additional Aspect Key.
There are also some “universal keys” that apply to all heroes:
• Being There: At the start of the session the pool is always empty; when the
first scene begins, each hero automatically contributes one Hero Die.
• Being Heroic: This should go without saying, but doing heroic things is
worth Hero Dice. Gain 1 Hero Die for helping someone out. Gain 2-3 Hero
Dice for helping someone at a substantial personal risk.
• Fun Factor: Having fun is important, so players are rewarded for doing stuff
that makes the game more fun to play.
• Cool Factor: Finally, players can earn Hero Dice for doing stuff that’s just
plain cool.
When a character does something that fulfills one of his Keys the GM awards 1-3
Hero Dice to the pool. It’s not necessary to announce what it’s for or even from
whom, but go for it if you’re so inclined. The GM should have a list of each hero’s
Keys on hand.
Team Keys are slightly different from Aspect and Personal Keys in that if the
whole team gets a benefit from the Key the reward in Hero Dice isn’t multiplied by
the number of heroes. Instead it’s just doubled. If the whole team with Pride does a
big pose you’ll usually get 4 Hero Dice total (which is nothing to sneeze at) rather
than 2 per member.
42
Temporary Edges
If the GM allows, players can sometimes use Hero Dice or Karma points to gain a
single use of an Edge they don’t normally have. This can happen for any number of
reasons, but it’s especially appropriate for heroes that have some kind of flexible
power at their disposal, such as magic.
A temporary Edge costs 3 Hero Dice/Karma per Edge selection. However, if the
character has some kind of character trait (an Edge, Descriptor, etc.) that relates to
the temporary Edge, the cost should be reduced to 2 or even 1. For example, if a
character wants to fly for some reason, ordinarily it would cost 3 Hero Dice, but if he
had Special Power: Wind Sorcery, a discount could be in order.
Going Solo
Sometimes a hero will split off from the team—not merely splitting up to cover
more ground, but legitimately breaking from them. When this happens, regardless of
the solo hero’s motivations or how long this separation lasts, he loses access to the
team’s Hero Dice. However, he can still earn Hero Dice of his own, and he can spend
Karma points in place of Hero Dice. If/when he rejoins the group, he gets access to
their Hero Dice again, and any personal Hero Dice he has become part of the team’s
pool.
Battles
In sentai and magical girl anime alike the situation inevitably comes down to a
battle. In Tokyo Heroes battles are big and flashy and a really big deal, but tactics
aren’t all that important.
Initiative
Things start off with rolling initiative. Rather than rolling a bunch of dice, roll
one, and take the actual number on the die and add it to the character’s Initiative
Value. Characters can spend one and only one Hero Die on initiative and add that
number to the total, on top of the first die. During rounds after the first, players have
the option of rolling initiative again to see if they can get a higher result, but they can
only roll once each round, and have to stick with the new result.
Declaring Actions
Battles are divided into rounds; this is the amount of time it takes for everyone
involved in the battle to take one turn. How long this takes in actual seconds in the
game world is deliberately ambiguous; no one is penalized for taking time to banter
with enemies. The round begins with declaring actions for each participating charac-
ter; this is done in reverse initiative order, from lowest to highest, giving the charac-
ters that rolled higher an advantage planning out what they want to do.
If a character wants to attempt a normal action—running, climbing, shouting,
driving, carrying, decoding, etc.—just use the normal Action Resolution rules (as-
43
suming it’s something where dice even need to be rolled). If the character is trying a
combat action, things get a little more complicated.
Attacking
To attack, the player names who or what he’s attacking and with what kind of at-
tack during the Declaring Actions step. From there we get the number of dice to be
rolled, and in turn the number of successes. Most attacks take off an amount of Stam-
ina points (see below) equal to the number of Successes they score.
If two characters are attacking each other in the same round, the one with the
most successes lands his attack so quickly and so hard that the opponent’s attack
misses or doesn’t even come out! The guy who rolled higher does full damage and
takes none himself.
If a character is attacking a character who is attacking someone else, the effects
depend on initiative order. If the new attacker can go first, he can prevent his target
from attacking if he gets more Successes, but otherwise his attack hits after.
Chained Attacks
Magical girls in particular like to assail an opponent with their special attacks one
after the other, often in a single turn. In game terms the advantage to be had here is
that it can temporarily lower an enemy’s Resistance, making them that much easier to
finish off.
The heroes need to declare that they’re chaining attacks before attacking; a suc-
cessfully chained attack against an opponent with no Stamina left will lower the tar-
get’s Resistance by 1 (or 2 if it’s a Finishing Attack), but characters regain Resistance
lost in this way at a rate of 1 per round. An opponent’s Resistance cannot be reduced
below half (rounded up) its base in this fashion.
Worrying
“Worrying” (transitive verb) an opponent means giving chase and throwing out
attacks that are more threats and harassment than actual damage. Bad guys love to do
this to magical girls, but since it’s a good way to keep someone busy without hurting
them too much it can be a handy tool for the good guys every now and then. You can
worry an opponent with any non-finishing attack. Worrying works just like an ordi-
nary attack (and to the target is initially indistinguishable from such), but no matter
how many successes are scored it only knocks of 1 point of Stamina if it hits.
44
Defending
Defending takes up a character’s entire turn, and the player needs to explain how
the character is defending. Is he weaving and dodging? Ducking for cover? Or just
being really, really tough? Regardless, the number of successes scored on the attack is
actually directly subtracted from the successes (damage) scored by the opponent, so
defending will always reduce damage as long as the character has managed to get one
or more successes. Defenders do not have to declare who or what they’re defending
against, but they may get penalties trying to defend against attacks they can’t see. De-
fending lets a character resist damage from multiple attacks, but you use the number
of successes rolled for the first one, and subtract one from the effective number of
successes for each attack after the first.
Another option for defending is to try for a counterattack. Whether this can be
pulled off depends on the nature of the attacks being used, but it usually takes some-
thing that can somehow clash with the enemy’s attack. Using an energy blast against
another energy blast is the simplest kind of counterattack. The defender has to de-
clare a counterattack after the opponent has declared an attack (and thus the defender
must have gotten a better initiative roll). If one of the two attacks has double the suc-
cesses of the other, it goes through and does full damage. Otherwise they clash and
fizzle out, but it looks really cool.
Heroes also occasionally have to defend someone else. If the hero is just putting
himself in the way of an attack (and thus taking full damage himself), he can pull it
off automatically, unless there’s too much distance to clear or some such (make an
Athletics roll). Pulling the victim out of the way or doing something fancy to knock
the attack out of the air works as a normal defense or counterattack.
Splitting Actions
If a character is really determined to do two (or more) things in one turn, he can.
The catch is that every action gets a penalty equal to the number of actions being per-
formed (two actions gets a –2 penalty, 3 gets a –3 penalty, etc.). This can be used to
attack and defend, make two attacks, attack and assist a teammate, etc.
Taking Damage
When an attack hits successfully it knocks off as many points of Stamina as it gets
Successes. A character can never go below zero Stamina, and for heroes and villains
getting down there means the character is a bit beat up and winded, but not defeated
or even slowed down much. However, being at zero stamina makes a character much
more vulnerable to being knocked out or destroyed by a finishing attack.
When an attack hits, the player should narrate a result that’s consistent with the
in-game effects of the attack (how many Stamina points are lost, whether it was a fin-
ishing attack, etc.) as well as the “flavor text” of the attack. In sentai shows any half-
way decent hit makes “sentai sparks” (pyrotechnics) fly out of the target, while magi-
cal girls tend to take light injuries and get constricted or winded by attacks.
45
Finishing Attacks
Taking an opponent down requires attempting an extra-forceful attack that
knocks them out or destroys them. An attack bought with the Finishing Attack edge
is the optimum way to do this, but a Special Attack can be used in a pinch. This has
to be declared in advance, and suffers a +1 Target modifier.
If an attack being used as a finisher hits, it finishes the target off if it gets at least
as many successes as their Resistance. If the target has any Stamina left, the Finishing
Attack takes the Stamina off, but every point of Stamina removed counts against the
Successes of the Finishing Attack for the purpose of determining whether it scores a
KO. If a character is knocked out while they still have Stamina left, his Stamina is
automatically brought down to 0.
Bad guys who are finished are usually outright destroyed. If it’s appropriate to the
campaign, it’s possible that certain special attacks can purify things that have been
corrupted into monsters and return them to normal. In sentai, generals often have
ways of making their monsters become giant-sized after being defeated (see p. 54).
Heroes who are “finished” are knocked clean out of their transformations and are
usually too beat up and winded to do more than crawl on the ground until they have
time to rest.
Death
As you can see, Tokyo Heroes is not a deadly game at all. In fact, even though
monsters can cause suffering to thousands of people, those effects magically vanish
when the monster is defeated. In Kamen Rider the extras don’t have it so easy; people
hurt by monsters stay hurt, and often die from it.
Heroes are even less likely to die. A hero can only die if at least one of the follow-
ing conditions is met:
1. The player wants the hero to die because it’ll make the game more interesting.
2. The series is ending within a couple of scenes.
3. The hero is definitely going to come back within an episode or two (even if in-
game it doesn’t look that way at the time).
If you want to make the game more deadly, simply have finishing attacks finish
characters off. Heroes who are successfully finished are put into critical condition
and require immediate medical attention to survive, or (if the attack scores 5 or more
successes above the hero’s Resistance) killed outright.
If a player voluntarily had his hero die and wants to make a new one, the new guy
gets the original hero’s total Attribute points to distribute however desired, keeps the
same number of open Personal Edges, and gets 10 Karma.
Transforming
The city is in trouble; an evil monster is blowing shit up, the police are totally power-
less, and everyone else is just running around screaming. Except you. You coolly pull up
your sleeve to reveal the special bracelet on your right wrist. This bracelet is proof of who
you are; you shout and wave your arms, and suddenly you become someone else. You be-
46
come a hero, a hero dressed in red. And you go in there and kick some ass, because at the
end of the day justice has to win.
In this game heroes have to transform in order to use their full powers. Without
transforming, a character is just an unusually good-looking and competent human
being. That’s great and all, but when it comes time to fend off armor-plated killing
machines from outer space you’ll be at a bit of a disadvantage. Non-transformed he-
roes (not to mention normal people—they still have those) get a +1 Target modifier
for all combat-related actions, take double damage to Stamina, and do half damage
themselves (halve/double after the dice are rolled).
Edges relating to the hero’s powers also become unavailable, although the actual
Special Power Edge is often an exception, and occasionally Basic Attack (in the form
of a sidearm). Sentai heroes are never seen piloting their robots without transforming
first. It might be that the robot is too dangerous to pilot otherwise.
Transforming typically requires the use of some kind of item—a bracelet, a magic
wand, a pendant, a cell phone, etc. Some of these amplify the hero’s natural power,
while others are a source of power unto themselves. A hero would probably be unable
to transform without this item, but it should never get lost for any length of time.
Especially when it comes to magical girl anime, the infamous transformation se-
quence is specifically meant to take up time and save on production costs. However
in the actual story the transformation is almost instantaneous; heroes can literally
transform so fast that they can interrupt an attack with it.
Transforming Defense
When an attack is flying towards a non-transformed hero, he can spend a Hero
Die to transform a split-second before the attack hits and emerge from it completely
unscathed. This can only be used once per episode.
Robots
In Tokyo Heroes the action happens at one of two different scales. Most of the
time things are at human scale, but occasionally there’s a need to shift to robot scale.
Any action that takes place using Vehicle Defenders (but not with mundane vehicles)
or Giant Robots is considered to be at robot scale.
Truth be told the two scales seldom interact; sentai heroes traditionally only bring
out their robots when they’re presented with a robot scale opponent, and they’re
good at doing so before the enemy has a chance to attack them. When robot scale
things fight other robot scale things, the rules work normally, even though the action
is assumed to be big enough that the combatants are tall enough to stand above the
buildings of downtown Tokyo.
Between Scales
When robot scale things interact with human scale things, there’s a 1:5 damage ra-
tio; if a robot scores 4 successes on an attack, it takes 20 Stamina off of a human scale
target, while a human scale attacker would have to get 5 successes just to take 1 Stam-
47
ina off of a robot. However, human scale things get a –1 Target modifier for trying to
dodge stuff thrown at them by robots.
Ignoring Scale
Every now and then a hero operating at human scale manages to do some serious
damage to a robot. Instead of requiring astronomical numbers of successes, the GM
can let a hero do this by spending Hero Dice or Karma (3 total, in any combination).
This is good for one action only, so it pays to pick your opening very carefully, but it
looks damn impressive.
Piloting Robots
When piloting a robot, a hero uses his usual attributes for everything; robots first
are foremost serve to bring a hero’s natural abilities into a bigger scale. A robot has
its own Stamina and Resistance ratings, and it needs its own Edges to do attacks;
characters can’t use their own attack Edges through a robot.
If a robot is a Group Asset everyone in the team works together to pilot the
thing. Most of the time whoever is taking the lead rolls normally and everyone else is
assisting him; no one ever has to merely encourage if they’re helping pilot. If two he-
roes should disagree on what they want the robot to do, they roll and whoever gets
more successes wins, but his opponent’s successes subtract from his own.
Karma Points
While Hero Dice represent the group’s overall performance and the individual he-
roes’ contributions to it, Karma is a character’s individual achievements.
There are two general ways in which Karma can be used; it can be spent or in-
vested. When you spend Karma, you give it up and get some benefit in return, such as
improving a character trait or using your Aspect’s special ability. When you invest
Karma, what you’re doing is temporarily surrendering a certain amount of Karma
points while you do something, and getting back some of it, all of it, or all of it plus a
bonus, depending on how well that panned out, as per the following table:
Performance Return
Crap 0-25%
Mediocre 50%
Fair 100%
Good 125%
Great 150%
Excellent 200%
Legendary! 300%
Gaining Karma
There are a few different ways to gain Karma points. Starting characters get 5
Karma of course, and the amount they have can be increased by investing it, but char-
48
acters get additional Karma mainly when the GM hands it out at the end of each epi-
sode. Karma point awards should be specific; don’t give everyone the same amount!
The characters gets 1 Karma just for the player showing up to the game. He also
gets 1-3 Karma each time his Heroic Flaw comes into play. Additional Karma should
be awarded for roleplaying, for taking the initiative in succeeding at whatever the epi-
sode is about, and for generally making the game more fun.
Unlike Hero Dice, Karma can be saved up between episodes, but a character can’t
have more than 40 Karma stored at a time; anything more has to be either spent at
the end of the session or lost.
Aspect Abilities
Each Aspect includes a special ability that lets the character use Karma for a spe-
cial effect. See the Aspect descriptions (p. Error! Bookmark not defined.) for more
details.
Spotlight Episodes
During the Preview phase of an episode (see p. 39) a player can invest Karma
(minimum 8) to give his character a “spotlight episode” next time. For that episode,
that character is going to be at the center of the story; he gets a –1 Target modifier,
and any time that character earns Hero Dice he nets one extra Hero Die. Players
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should announce their desire for a spotlight episode during the session before to give
the GM time to plan. The GM has final say on whether or not to grant a spotlight
episode, and a given character can never have two in a row.
Normally only one player can get a spotlight episode at a time; if more than one
player wants one, whoever is willing to invest more Karma gets their way. However,
there can occasionally be spotlight episodes about a pairing of heroes, meant to show
and develop their relationship. Both players must invest the same amount of Karma
and will get the same return, and both get the usual benefits.
If a new character is being introduced, that character gets a spotlight episode for
free, though if it’s an Ally Character, he should be controlled by players for the ma-
jority of the episode’s scenes. New robots also get the effects of a spotlight episode
applied to everyone piloting them during their debut battle—just the one battle
though, not the whole episode.
Also, keep in mind that a character doesn’t have to have paid for a Spotlight Epi-
sode for a given episode to be about them, especially if it was the GM’s idea.
New Toys
“I’ve finished the modifications; Dyna-Robo will now be able to combine with
Dyna-Wing. The new Dyna-Wing Robo will be five times as strong!”
Especially in the more toyetic sentai series, heroes will be getting new gear all the
time. Their robots seem to get upgrades—new weapons, transformations, combina-
tions, etc.—all the time. If the players had to spend Karma on these it’d be too ex-
pensive, but they don’t. While players can spend Karma on new Edges for their char-
acters, the big new toys simply come when the GM decides to play Santa Claus. This
can be a result of the heroes completing some task, or simply some kind of random
windfall or development.
Robots!
In sentai this is especially important for robots. Sentai heroes are constantly ac-
quiring completely new robots, new ways to combine more of their existing robots,
and occasionally finding out that there was yet another robot under their noses the
whole time. When the sixth ranger shows up with his one-man robot, it’s just a mat-
ter of time before they work out a way to combine it with the team’s original robot.
Newly acquired robots (including ones that are actually new combinations of ex-
isting robots) act as though everyone piloting them is having a spotlight episode for
the robot’s first battle scene.
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boost he needs to take out a bad guy that seemed unbeatable before. In game terms
this is represented by the Empowered Hero Edge (see p. 31).
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Bad Guys
Naturally, the good guys need bad guys to fight. When it comes to creating and
fielding bad guys, this is the section you need. Before we begin in earnest, there are
some things we need to make clear about how bad guys are handled in this game:
First of all, in this game bad guys don’t roll dice. Instead, their Attributes are
used as a stat number of Successes. This is partly just so the GM has a lot less die-
rolling and paperwork to do, and partly a thematic/genre thing. The heroes are the
waves and the enemies are the mountain; the good guys are passionate and chaotic in
an otherwise coldly ordered universe. There’s also no villainous equivalent of Hero
Dice. If you really want you can have bad guys that use dice and have a Villain Dice
pool—and it would be especially appropriate for enemy rangers/magical girls—but
it’s not the default for the game. To make this clearer in the text, when a GM charac-
ter has this kind of Attribute the number is written in square brackets (e.g., “Fighting
[7]”), and if you want to have that enemy roll dice instead the number should be in-
creased by a third. There are two exceptions to this rule: bad guys still roll for initia-
tive, and Mooks work totally differently and do use dice.
Also, bad guys are strong. It’s a practical concern, really. Old-school Kamen
Rider villains only had to fight the one hero, but sentai villains in particular need to
be able to stand up to a team of heroes working together like a well-oiled machine.
This isn’t as true of magical girl villains, but that’s mainly because magical girls
mostly use Special Attacks and don’t mix it up with Basic Attack that knock off lots
of Stamina.
And finally, bad guys’ Stamina and Resistance aren’t balanced the same way as for
heroes. Stamina in particular is based on how long the battle is supposed to last.
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Resistance: For villains, Resistance is a measure of how much power the heroes
need to bring to bear all at once to take them out. A weak villain could have as little
as 5, but 8-12 is typical, and anything over 16 is insanely powerful.
Stamina: For villains, Stamina is basically a measure of how long the GM wants
the battle to last, and can range anywhere from as low as 20 or so, into the hundreds
for ludicrously powerful major villains.
Villain Edges
Bad guys have Edges just like heroes do; they can use normal hero Edges and/or
the special villain-only Edges below in any combination. Bad guys really have all
kinds of different powers, and you should feel free to make up new Edges if it suits
your game.
Influencing Powers
Bad guys have access to a lot of Edges that transform or control people, notably
Corrupt, Drain, Enslave, and Reduce. These can generally only be used on one per-
son at a time, unless the villain has some special means of spreading them to multiple
people over time. So for example a villain with Enslave could control people one at a
time by touching his tentacle sucker to their foreheads, or he could get dozens by
running an evil cram school, or thousands by selling a popular evil card game.
Normal people are pretty much defenseless against this kind of power; a monster
runs around town using it, and leaves behind screwed-up people wherever he goes.
Heroes fare a little better; they can defend against such as though they were a Special
Attacks. However, if a player thinks it would make the game more interesting, he can
opt to have his character automatically be affected, in exchange for some Karma
points.
Regardless, in most sentai genres the effects of these kinds of powers magically
disappear when the villain that caused them is defeated. People who were mind con-
trolled snap out of it, people who were turned into gemstones change back to normal,
etc.
Blast Attack
Because life isn’t fair, unlike heroes bad guys can have area effect attacks, allowing
them to repel an entire team with one shot. A blast works like a Basic Attack, but can
hit up to a ten-foot area (so a sentai team standing too close together is easy to hit all
at once) and costs one point of Energy. Each target can defend separately.
For a more powerful Blast Attack, you can spend an extra Edge to add either +2
dice to the Attack roll, or +3 for a cost of 1 additional Energy.
Corrupt
This is the power to put negative energy into things, making them turn bad in
some way. A given villain usually only has one particular way in which to corrupt
things, and this should be specified when the villain is created. Particularly when it
can affect people, Corrupt often has to do with a monster’s theme; a money-monster
53
might make people greedy, for example. Corrupt is pretty flexible, and the GM
should decide whether a given monster needs to touch someone, shoot them with a
beam, sprinkle them with spores, etc. in order to cause the effect.
Dark Dimension
Dark Dimension is a power similar to Dimensional Arena (see p. 30). It draws
targets into a small pocket dimension, where the villain has the advantage. The villain
has to make a successful Attack roll and spend 2 Energy per target being drawn in
(no Energy is spent if the roll fails). The effects of a Dark Dimension are otherwise
the same as a Dimensional Arena.
Drain
Drain lets a villain pull energy out of people; victims are weakened, and the villain
grows stronger and can use the energy for nefarious purposes. Treat this like a Special
Attack or Blast Attack (pick one), but each Success over the target takes a point of
“energy” from them. Normal people have 6 points of energy, and when they lose all
of these they fall unconscious. Heroes can choose to have the drain come from their
Hero Dice or Stamina. A villain who has successfully drained people can use the en-
ergy as though it were his own Energy points, or hold onto it and take it back to his
superiors.
Enlarge
This is the power to change oneself or a monster into a giant size (robot scale)
version. A general with this Edge usually has some power that lets him turn fallen
monsters into giants, while a monster with this Edge automatically changes into a gi-
ant when defeated. If this is a power that can be used on other creatures, or if it can
be switched on and off at will, it costs 6 Energy.
Enslave
Enslave is a powerful Edge that lets the villain control someone’s mind. He can
usually only put his mind control onto one person at a time, but can accumulate any
number of mind-controlled drones. How people act when mind-controlled varies de-
pending on the nature of the mind control. Some become completely mindless, while
others remain themselves apart from being eager (at times a little too eager) to serve
their new master. Regardless, a mind-controlled character can sometimes be made to
snap out of it—or at least hesitate—if they’re forced to do something that goes too
strongly against their own nature.
Entangling Attack
Many bad guys have the ability to launch tentacles, nets, etc. to bind a hero. This
acts like a typical Special Attack (and adds +2 Attack dice per Edge spent on it), ex-
cept that instead of inflicting damage it restricts the victim’s movement. For each
Success scored on an Entangling Attack above the target’s defense roll (if any), the
victim suffers a penalty of one die to all physical actions. The entanglement can be
54
destroyed by inflicting as many damage points as it originally scored Successes, but
this does not damage the attacker.
Escape
Certain bad guys have a unique knack for leaving the scene before the heroes can
mess them up too much. Escape costs 4 Energy, and unless extraordinary means are
brought to bear, the villain will escape, and for the moment the heroes will be unable
to follow. This could take the form of teleporting, digging into the ground, or just
about anything else.
Human Form
A bad guy with this Edge has the ability to take on a convincing human form.
Most use this to infiltrate human society to wreak havoc or just lie in wait, but there
are those who want to live peacefully too.
Hyper-Speed
Every now and then, heroes encounter a villain who is a speed demon. He moves
so damn fast that they can scarcely see the sucker, much less defeat him. A villain
with Hyper-Speed can spend 2 Energy to get a –1 Target modifier and one extra ac-
tion for one round. This can only be done once per round, but a villain can purchase
Hyper-Speed multiple times to use it more than once in a single round.
Mimic
Mimics can be particularly obnoxious and dangerous villains. In addition to what-
ever powers he might have on his own, a villain with this Edge can copy the abilities
of others, friend or foe. For every Edge spent on Mimic, the villain can copy one
Edge worth of special abilities.
Minions
A villain with this Edge has some minions he can call at a moment’s notice,
whether they’re guys standing by to be teleported, or a part of the villain’s body, or
something else. Buying this Edge once nets the villain either 8 mooks or one mon-
ster.
Reduce
Reduce is the power to turn people into something less than people. They could
be dehydrated and turned into powder, transformed into trees, or whatever. Usually
this requires a direct attack against a single target.
Regeneration
Some particularly dangerous bad guys can automatically heal damage done to
them. For each Edge spent on Regeneration, the villain can either automatically re-
gain 4 Stamina per round, or spend 1 Energy to regain 8 Stamina in one round (select
one of these when the Edge is taken).
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Villainous Flaws
Like heroes, villains too are imperfect, and as such each villain should have a
Villainous Flaw. Most of the Heroic Flaws described on p. Error! Bookmark not
defined. can be used as Villainous Flaws, but below are a few that are largely specific
to bad guys.
• Cold Logic: Some villains are too calculating for their own good; they always
do what they believe will net them the biggest advantage. No sacrifice is too
great for the ultimate cause, and if allies must fall by the wayside along the
way, so be it.
• Egotism: Some villains are just too caught up in their self-perceived awesome-
ness. They detest being questioned by those they consider beneath them, and
tend to assume that they’ve done things perfectly, only to blame others when
things inevitably go wrong.
• Gloating: Quite a few villains just can’t keep their big toothy maws shut. Left
to their own devices they’ll talk to themselves about their villainous plans, and
if they think they’ve got the heroes incapacitated, they’re twice as likely to
gloat, spilling everything to their enemies.
• Obsession: Some villains, especially monsters with a strong theme, are ob-
sessed with something to the point where it defines their whole existence.
• Sniveling Coward: There are those bad guys who got into the villainy busi-
ness in spite of having a strong aversion to pain. If a Sniveling Coward thinks
he’s going to lose, he’ll do whatever he can to escape the situation, and isn’t
above sucking up, begging for his life, or betraying his allies (unless they scare
him more).
• Twisted Infatuation: This villain is in love with one of the heroes, but it’s a
dark, twisted kind of love. He could be completely willing to kill her, but will
do anything to make sure that he gets to do it when and how he chooses. Re-
gardless, for one particular hero, he will sometimes hesitate or have his judg-
ment clouded.
56
Mooks do get to attack, though they’re not exactly effective at it. For every two
mooks that are attacking, a group of mooks rolls one die for a Basic Attack, or one
die per mook against non-transformed heroes and others without special powers.
Monsters
As in, “monster of the week.” These are creatures sent by the more powerful bad
guys to wreak havoc. At this level there’s usually some special term used for the mon-
sters, either a relatively generic Japanese word like youma or mamono, or some special
made-up word specific to the type of bad guy in that series (Alienizer, Jakanja, etc.).
The generals (see below) usually have either a stock of various monsters to call on, or
a special power that lets them create a new one for each episode.
Attributes: A typical monster is on par with an individual hero in terms of attrib-
utes, even if their attributes are likely skewed more towards fighting (Attack and De-
fense). 15 points worth of Attributes should be sufficient.
Energy: A typical monster’s Energy should be about half of its Stamina.
Resistance: A typical monster has a Resistance of 6-8.
Stamina: A typical monster has 20-40 Stamina, though it could have more if the
battle is meant to be especially protracted.
Edges: A monster’s Edges are the main thing that lets him really make himself a
nuisance to the heroes, especially if he can use area effect attacks to knock all of them
down at once. 3-5 Edges should be sufficient for a typical monster.
Generals
The “generals” are the main boss bad guy’s right-hand men, and they’re usually
spearheading the organization’s efforts to wreak havoc on Earth. At the start of the
series, generals will be much too powerful for the heroes to take on themselves, but,
conveniently, something or other keeps them from engaging the heroes directly very
often. Instead, they have some means of sending monsters down to do their bidding.
Some generals just have a “staff” of monsters that’s waiting to be called on, while
others have some special power that lets them create monsters.
Generals usually don’t get along with each other. Even though they ostensibly are
serving the same master in pursuit of the same goals, evil overlords tend to create a
high-pressure, competitive work environment where failure is severely punished.
Sometimes generals just don’t like each other, and once in a while there’s a schemer
who wants to become the next big boss. All kinds of crazy situations can pop up
through their scheming and politicking, but remember that this all needs to take a
back seat to the heroes.
Attributes: Generals are much stronger than starting heroes, and should have
20+ points worth of attributes.
Energy: This depends on how the particular general operates, but half of his
Stamina is a good figure here as well.
Resistance: A typical general has a Resistance of 12 or more.
Stamina: Generals usually have 50 or more Stamina.
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Edges: A typical general can have as many as 10 Edges, though unlike the mon-
sters that serve them they’re less likely to bother with stuff like Corrupt or Reduce.
The Boss
The boss is the main bad guy in charge of the whole operation. Bosses are exceed-
ingly powerful, and heroes inevitably can’t fight them until the very end of the series
(or season). Fortunately, even more so than their generals, bosses can’t or won’t get
into the action directly.
Attributes: A boss’ attributes are nuts. 30 points worth isn’t out of the question.
Energy: For a final boss villain, don’t even bother with Energy. He can use any of
his Edges are much as he wants, unless the heroes figure out some way of stopping
him.
Resistance: Taking out a boss usually requires extreme measures, and possibly
doing something crazy to make him weaker. Otherwise he’ll be a tough cookie, with
a Resistance of 15 or more.
Stamina: Taking out a boss can also be time-consuming, and Stamina of 100 or
more isn’t out of the question.
Edges: Defeating a boss villain takes really extraordinary effort, and his over-
whelming strength is reflected in his potent Edges as well as elsewhere. Heavily
stacked Special Attacks and Special Defenses are typical, though some dangerous spe-
cial powers will help too.
Evil Rangers
In manga and other Japanese media there’s a cliché that pops up every now and
then where a team of heroes encountered a team of villains where each of them is
meant to be a sort of evil reflection of one of the good guys. While in, say, martial
arts anime the connections between the two rivals tends to be more subtle, in sentai
there are occasionally teams of “evil rangers,” monsters deliberately created as dark
parodies of the heroes. These creatures are color coded and have their own special
attacks and such, but they’re not anywhere near human, and usually lack vehicles.
Apart from rival magical girls (see The Fractured Team, p. 68), it’s rare (but not un-
known) for similar monster teams to show up in magical girl anime.
Bad guy rangers should generally have the same stats as their heroic counterparts.
Having a villain’s static Attributes should give them enough of an advantage to be a
challenge while lacking Hero Dice.
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power or allow a dying tyrant to become immortal. Plenty of bad guys also need to
harvest something – energy or fear – from the people of Earth, which is a good way
to give their monsters something to do.
You might be wondering why it is that if the heroes are operating out of Tokyo,
the villains don’t just go about their evil business in some part of the world that isn’t
Tokyo. A bunch of magical girls who are still in middle school would have a hard
time getting to Kyoto on short notice, much less London or San Francisco, and even
sentai heroes usually don’t have a supersonic jet just sitting around. But really, if
you’re asking that kind of question you’re probably thinking too hard. This is a genre
where “just because” is a good enough answer sometimes. If there is a reason, it
probably has to do with the bad guys either not being able to operate outside of a cer-
tain area (they have a base to operate out of too, or they can only go a certain dis-
tance from a dimensional portal). Or better yet, for some contrived reason they actu-
ally need something from the good guys that they can’t just charge in and take.
Monster as Metaphor
Villains—especially the monster of the week—are often metaphors for whatever a
hero is going through. This can be “coincidental,” or there could be a villain watching
the hero and creating monsters specifically to torment them, or anything between.
The “DJ Neos” monster included below as an example would be great for a magical
girl episode about fitting in and conformity, for example. The Buffy the Vampire
Slayer TV series, while usually a bit more subtle about it, did this kind of thing all the
time.
Monster as Puzzle
Some monsters can’t be beaten with brute force, and the task before the heroes
becomes solving the puzzle of how to beat him.
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And then there’s Magical Girl Destiny. She should be fighting with us. I think she
knows it too, but it’s not like we can just become friends all of a sudden. Even if she
was being tricked by the Dark Queen, Destiny has been our most dangerous enemy.
Blaze is an evil bastard, but Destiny understands humanity just well enough to use it
against us. However much I want to trust her, now that she’s broken off from the
Dark Queen, as soon as I remember that my brother Mick is still in the hospital…
Winter keeps saying that we might need her to survive—“when the five come to-
gether the Power of Miracles will appear”—but the idea of fighting alongside some-
one like that scares me. April says, “Rose isn’t scared of anything,” but she’s wrong.
Destiny scares me, because she knows how to hurt us in ways General Blaze could
never imagine.
Sample Villains
Below are a handful of examples of different types of villains: a monster, a general,
and a boss. There isn’t any real need to have examples or stats of mooks per se, since
they always function pretty much the same. Also, see p. 18 for Magical Girl Destiny,
an example of a heroic character type turned to evil.
DJ Neos
“This is my kind of party! The deadly kind!”
Concept: Mind-controlling DJ monster
Motivation: Control people, play music, break stuff
Attributes: Attack [4], Defense [3], Athletics [3], Brains [3], Spirit [2]
Energy: 20
Initiative: 7
Resistance: 8
Stamina: 40
Edges: Blast Attack (Bass Boom), Enslave (Musical Hypnotism), Special Attack
(Vinyl Shoot)
Villainous Flaw: Neos is obsessed with music to a fault, and can easily be dis-
tracted by interesting songs.
Notes: There’s a new DJ in town who’s really heating up the scene. Every time he
goes to an event and spins, people are entranced, and they go home and try to get all
of their friends to attend his next event. So far no one suspects the truth, that “DJ
Neos” is actually a monster sent to gather an army of mind-controlled humans. When
the heroes do finally manage to corner him, they’re confronted by a throng of people,
all dancing in unison to the music of this DJ monster. He can disguise himself as a
cool DJ guy with a leather jacket and sunglasses, but when he reveals himself he’s a 7-
foot-tall creature made of black leather and metal, with speakers on either side of his
head, in his stomach, and a few more all over this body, plus a cannon on his right
arm that shoots vinyl records.
People who listen to his music for more than 30 minutes or so will fall under his
spell. Outwardly they seem perfectly normal, apart from their insistence that his mu-
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sic is the greatest thing ever and hey, we should totally go to his next show on Wed-
nesday. However, people who have been thus affected can be commanded by his
music to do his bidding, provided they can still heat the music. His enslaved minions
always dance while they’re under his direct control.
General Cross
“Go away! I… I have to paint! She told me I have to paint!”
Concept: Tortured artist forced to create monsters
Motivation: Art. Everything is art!
Attributes: Attack [6], Defense [3], Athletics [3], Brains [6], Spirit [4]
Energy: 25
Initiative: 12
Resistance: 9
Stamina: 50
Edges: Blast Attack (Art Blast; +8 Attack dice), Dark Dimension (Painter’s
Imagination), Minions (Painting Monsters), Special Power (Magical Painting)
Villainous Flaw: Cross is emotionally unstable, and his grasp of reality is a little
tenuous.
Notes: Cross is the youngest of the Dark Queen’s generals, and the most pitiful.
In spite of having grown up under the Dark Queen’s savage rule, he was born with an
eye for beauty that blossomed into a passion for painting. He would have been con-
tent to sit in his room and paint for the rest of his life, but the Queen, seeing the la-
tent magical power in him, took him from his home and imprisoned him in her castle.
Forced to paint monsters that come to life, he is in effect a general in name only, and
being faced with these horrors on a regular basis has eroded his sanity.
He is a young man, about 17 years old, with short, wild white hair. He wears the
uniform of the Dark Queen’s generals, but his is worn and splattered with paint. He
is never without a paintbrush.
When Cross does visit the human world—the Queen hoped he would find some
inspiration at an art gallery showing of the macabre—he is caught off guard by April’s
beauty, and this is the beginning of an infatuation that could be his salvation, or bring
about his end.
Cross hates to fight, but if he feels cornered or threatened he will fight back,
bringing the full force of his painting magic to bear. While he detests being forced to
work quickly, he can produce weapons, monsters, or even small worlds on the fly, or
simply blast opponents with the full force of his tortured imagination.
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Energy: Unlimited
Initiative: 14
Resistance: 15
Stamina: 90
Villainous Flaw: Zalbus enjoys a good challenge a little too much; he’ll throw
caution to the wind if he thinks there’s an interesting fight to be had.
Edges: Basic Attack (weapons arsenal), Blast Attack (Missile Blaster; +4 Attack
dice), Enlarge (can grow to Robot Scale), Finishing Attack (Supernova Blitz; +10
Attack dice, 5 Energy), Minions (lots), Special Attack (Lance of Despair; +6 Attack
dice), Special Defense (Force Field; +6 Defense dice, 2 Energy)
Notes: The Space Lord Zalbus is the leader of the Zalbus Force, a marauding
army that has thus far crushed everyone who stands in their way, and conquered
every world that in their path. No one is quite sure what race he once was, because
Zalbus has replaced much of his body with machine parts. This is his greatest
strength and his only weakness; he has no capacity for mercy, none of the frailties of
biological creatures, but he needs to spend time each day connected to a massive gen-
erator.
While Zalbus lets his minions do most of the work, he loves a good fight. He
typically fights with a mixture of the various weapons integrated into his body (mis-
sile launchers, lasers, etc.), and swinging around his “Lance of Despair,” a pole arm
with a blade made of glowing blue energy. He is capable of using all of his weapons at
once, an attack he calls “Supernova Blitz,” but he will only use it when he’s satisfied
that he’s utterly defeated his opponents.
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Campaigns and Adventures
This chapter is full of squishy flavor text details. It’s mainly for the GM, but
you’re more than welcome to read it even if you’re not the GM.
63
ting a full team onto one sheet of paper isn’t too hard) on hand both while planning
out the plot and during the game. Especially for Keys and Heroic Flaws, you’ll need
to both look at ways for character traits to come into play while preparing the game
and be on the lookout for when to award Hero Dice and Karma during play.
Anatomy of an Episode
In the West there are three- and five-act structures for putting stories together. In
Japan there is a four-act structure, called kishoutenketsu (起承転結), and for some
gratuitous authenticity I’m going to outline a typical sentai episode in terms of this
structure. Just like the other models, it’s really nothing more than training wheels.
The four acts don’t correspond to scenes particularly, though each one should defi-
nitely get at least one scene.
Introduction (Ki): This is where we set up the situation, establishing the setting
and characters. In a typical sentai episode, this means introducing whatever new char-
acters or widgets might be important to the plot. If the thing that leads the heroes
into the story is one of them auditioning for a part in a TV show, this is the time to
introduce the auditions. This part usually takes only one or two scenes, though some-
times is can be as short as the teaser before the opening credits.
Development (Shou): Here the story starts moving, taking the elements brought
to light in the introduction and setting them up somewhat. The heroes may catch
sight of the monster of the week, but mostly they’re investigating, either to find the
bugger in the first place, or to figure out how they can beat him.
Turning Point (Ten): This is the climax of the story, where everything comes to
a head and something has to happen. The monster of the week is confronted head-on,
and ultimately defeated. If he’s going to become giant-sized and require a second ro-
bot-scale battle, that fits in here too.
Resolution (Ketsu): Once the climax is done, it’s time to release tension. With
the bad guys dealt with for that episode, you can have a scene or so for the heroes to
discuss what they found out, or enjoy whatever reward they’ve earned. If one of the
heroes rescued a beautiful woman (or a handsome guy for that matter) and was hop-
ing for a date, this is where the date starts… or where the hero gets turned down.
Themes
“Justice will prevail. As a Dynaranger I believe that, because every day I make it hap-
pen. See, the world can be an unfair place sometimes, so it’s our job to help fix it.”
– Dynamic Red
The genres covered by Tokyo Heroes are grounded in passionate melodrama. You
aren’t going to get much literary depth out of a sentai show, but that isn’t the point.
This game is about stuff that’s fun, about enjoying the ride. Still, there are a few other
things it’s about.
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Teamwork
Teamwork is really important in this game. In RPG design you’re supposed to
have a clear answer of to the question “What do you do?” In Tokyo Heroes the an-
swer to that is, “Teams of heroes work together to stop monsters from hurting peo-
ple.” Teamwork is very much ingrained into this game, and frankly without it the he-
roes are screwed.
Of course, for teamwork to be a theme it can’t be as simple as that. In most sentai
series, there’s at least some time devoted to the heroes quarreling and learning how to
work together. If it was easy it wouldn’t be nearly as cool when the team finally
emerges as a well-oiled implement of justice. In sentai the conflict between the Red
and Blue rangers is all but built-in, and plenty of magical girl teams have had a
“teammate” who starts off as aloof, convinced that the other heroines would merely
be a burden to her.
Duty
Being a hero is not an easy thing. Even though sentai is not a genre where heroes
get killed off very often, there are still risks. It can put a wedge between you and the
people you care about, it can take you away from other things you might want out of
life, and it involves such responsibility that failure can break your heart. Different he-
roes have different reasons for doing what they do, but all are eventually bound by a
sense of duty. When the enemy acts, lives are in danger, and nothing is more impor-
65
tant than protecting the lives of the innocent. Sometimes heroes want to get away
from this duty, but they are trapped by it.
Hope
Dynamic Red put the Dynamic Sword back into its sheath and let out a long
breath.
Touji looked up, and pointed his camera at the scene: After a long battle, the
hero, silhouetted by the setting sun, looking out across the city he had just protected.
Today the city could’ve been destroyed by Zalbus’ Neocore Bombs, and instead it
was silence that had exploded through the streets. Every one of the millions of Tokyo
could’ve been snuffed out, millions of hopes and dreams extinguished in an instant by
the terrible fist of God—or the Devil. Instead they were alive and well. Dreams
would continue on, shaping the world.
When the hero spoke, Touji jumped.
“It all matters. All of it. That’s why I keep doing this. If these people lose hope,
then it’ll all be for nothing.”
He turned around, and gave Touji a thumbs-up. There was no way to know, but
Touji was sure he must’ve been grinning under that black visor.
66
Friends and Allies
Heroes also have friends, we hope, ordinary people who highlight their connec-
tion to the world around them, the place they have to defend from evil. Friends of
the heroes are a routine source of plot hooks too. There are also any number of other
allies who could be a part of the campaign.
Allies
While heroes may have to keep their powers a secret from close friends, they can
also have other allies who are a part of the fight against evil, in a supporting role.
They often have some kind of mentor that helps them with information about
themselves and their enemies. A mentor could also be an older, more experienced
hero (a retiree?) or a mysterious representative of the higher powers of good, or
something else entirely. Mentors tend to avoid taking a direct hand in things if they
can help it; they’re more valuable to the team as advisors anyway.
Magical girls usually have mascots, adorable talking animals (or animated plushies,
or whatever) that give them their powers and provide much-needed advice. Mascots
are virtually powerless by themselves, though they may be able to get places where a
normal human could not.
Sentai heroes sometimes have an “assistant,” an older woman who generally helps
out by providing maintenance and occasional upgrades to their gadgets and robots.
It isn’t inconceivable for there to be mooks (see p. 56) on the side of good too. In
old-school sentai shows the heroes’ organization would sometimes have lots of hu-
man foot soldiers who’d wind up being cannon fodder if they ever went against any
serious opposition.
New Teammates
Teams often find themselves getting new members. In sentai it’s become a stan-
dard cliché for a “sixth ranger” to show up partway through the series. In magical girl
series it’s more typical for the heroines to be introduced one at a time over the course
of a dozen episodes, which might not be practical for roleplaying.
In sentai and magical girl anime alike newly introduced heroes always get to really
show off for an episode, letting them make a deeper impression on everyone. If a
hero is being introduced, that character gets the effects of a spotlight episode (see p.
49) for free. If the new hero is an Ally Character, players should be investing Karma
to control that character for most of his major scenes.
Trusting a new “teammate” isn’t necessarily easy though. Just because someone
has the same powers and the same mission doesn’t mean they’ll work as a part of the
team. Usually everyone comes around and becomes friends in the end, but not with-
out some grief and struggle along the way.
67
“No time to explain. DYNAMIC KNIGHT! ACTIVATE!”
Sentai series often feature the arrival of a “sixth ranger,” a new and powerful ally
who comes in later in the series. The sixth ranger is usually very powerful on his own,
and shows up just in time to pull the heroes out of a jam with his devastating special
attacks and his own robot. Sixth rangers usually have white, gold, or silver as their
Aspect. He’s often in some way isolated from his allies, such as by being the only
alien in the group, or having a secret he has to keep from them.
Genre Variations
Even though Tokyo Heroes is mainly aimed at sentai and fighting magical girls, it
can potentially be used for most any genre where the overall feel of the game fits rea-
sonably well. This can range from subtle variations like having what amounts to sen-
tai heroes without robots (like in Goranger and Ronin Warriors) or sentai heroes with
nothing but robots (Voltron), to more drastic changes in style and scenery. For ex-
ample, sometimes the heroes only have their powers in a specific realm—dreams, vir-
tual reality, the astral plane, etc.—and otherwise they’re just normal people (Correc-
tor Yui did this). The game’s emphasis on teamwork and its finishing blow-based bat-
tles mean it could work well for many combat-oriented anime, or even pro wrestling.
Working with characters who don’t operate in close-knit teams is a little trickier,
but doable. If you have either a group of more individualistic heroes or just one hero
(because sometimes you can’t get five friends together), the game’s default notions of
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teamwork kind of go out the window, which means fewer characters working to-
gether and no big group pool of Hero Dice. A solo hero in particular needs to have
either really powerful special/finishing attacks, or relatively weak enemies. Team
Keys, naturally, would go out the window entirely, so heroes would get two Personal
Keys. Aspects could be useful as archetypes, but it’s easier to just give the hero an-
other Personal Key and a free Edge.
The Toybox
Especially with a genre like sentai it can be fun to bring in elements other than the
usual paper and dice.
Mini-Games
The idea with “mini-games” is to give the players a small game challenge thingy
that goes outside of the normal rules of the game for some specific task.
• Combining Robots: In some of the older sentai series, getting the vehicle de-
fenders to combine into a giant robot takes some practice to get right. Get an
oversized six-sided die, and the first few times the heroes try to combine their
robot, it’s time to bust out this monster d6. Each player has to roll it until it
comes up with a 6, then pass it on to the next player, until everyone has done
it once.
Music
If used right, music can add a lot to an RPG session. The music should be care-
fully chosen and not too recognizable (unless your campaign is directly based off of
something and you want to evoke that), and played with a minimum of fuss on the
GM’s part. I like to bring a laptop and play mp3s in WinAmp, but do whatever works
for you.
A typical sentai soundtrack is a weird mix of bright, melodramatic J-rock and bits
of gratuitous power chords and jazz. Using songs from actual sentai series is a little
tricky since the lyrics are usually constantly mentioning the name of the hero team in
case you forgot. Power metal (I’m partial to Iron Savior and Blind Guardian myself)
could be a good fit for this general style.
Magical girl series have standard anime soundtracks: bouncy J-pop songs for
opening and ending themes (and the occasional insert song during an episode) and a
smattering of melodramatic background music, mostly done with synthesizers.
Power Words
The heroes in this game have a lot of things where they need to shout out the
name of whatever it is they’re doing/using/piloting. So, do that shouting at the table.
If you feel stupid saying “DYNA-CHANGE GO!” it just means that your group has
come up with good power words.
Be considerate of people around where you’re playing though.
69
Props
Let’s face it, one of the major purposes of sentai is merchandising. For recent sen-
tai series there are zillions of toys being made, something you could take advantage
of. If you’re being practical they can be a visual aid, or if you’re being goofy they can
be something for the players to mess with.
Game Seeds
If you’re really desperately strapped for ideas, or you just want to read even more
of my brain drool, this section might be for you. It has brief summaries of possible
Tokyo Heroes campaigns, a mixture of sentai and magical girl stuff, plus some other
weirdness here and there.
70
many the Emperor himself slays the family’s youngest child, and finally goes too far.
The remaining family members vow revenge, but until they can gain the trust of the
Rangers they’ll still have enemies on all sides. Xenorach has survived through the
endless centuries partly because he’s always maintained a healthy suspicion of his
subordinates, and he has Grandfather Dark available to deal with any hint of betrayal.
Dynaranger: Hanagumi
The original Dynarangers were the greatest heroes the world has ever known, but
in the final defeat of the Space Lord Zalbus they fell. The power contained in the
Dyna-Gyros was broken apart and scattered across the world, planting the seeds for
new teams of Dynarangers to be born. The American Dynaranger Neo team is by far
the most famous, but in Japan a new legend is about to be born. The fragments of the
gyro belonging to the original Dynamic Pink are found on the grounds of an all-girls
high school in Tokyo, and the first all-female sentai team is formed. These girls only
want to do what’s right, but they’re hampered not only by trying to keep up with
school, but the Dynaranger Firebrand team looking at the Hanagumi team as ama-
teurs infringing on their territory.
Dynaranger: Hyperforce
No one could have guessed that the Space Lord Zalbus was but a pale shadow of
his own master, the Space Emperor Omnus. If Earth is to have a future, Omnus and
his minions will have to be stopped, but the sheer power of these new foes is over-
whelming. None of the new generation of Dynarangers seems to be able to stand up
to this threat. After endless defeats, the five teams – Firebrand, Thunderbolt, Hana-
gumi, Neo, and Technoforce – come together and try to devise some kind of plan be-
fore it’s too late. Zazu, the woman who was responsible for designing the original
Dyna-Machines, comes to them with a plan. It’s risky and audacious, but it could be
Earth’s only hope.
The original Dynarangers once used a technique called Dynamic Fusion that al-
lowed each member of the team to give some of his or her power to the team leader.
If each team were to use this technique and send their leader to battle Omnus, victory
might just be possible. Zazu had a plan to modify their Dyna-Machines so that each
of the leaders’ Machines can combine into a single Ultimate Dyna-Robo. The biggest
risk is that while this new team, “Dynaranger Hyperforce,” is fighting Omnus,
Earth’s protectors would be severely weakened. It’s a big gamble, and the survival of
mankind is what’s at stake.
One question remains though; what became of the other two original Dynarang-
ers? No one ever learned the fate of Dynamic Captain or Dynamic Knight. The an-
swer to that question could change everything.
71
much about whether or not the METF is short of funds. The director decides to take
desperate measures; he pulls in some favors from the self-defense forces and obtains a
set of five skimpy power armor suits and holds auditions for girls to become a team
of “magical girls” to protect the public. Still, the operating costs remain high, and
they’ll have to find some way to get more money coming in. The director decides to
try something crazy, and arranges for the team to debut as an idol group.
What started out as a fun (if kind of dangerous) job is about to get a lot more
stressful, as the girls’ schedules get more and more filled up with recording sessions,
TV spots, and interviews. As they start getting noticed, it becomes clear that the
METF’s mixed reputation in the government is going to be a big problem, and fur-
thermore there’s something fishy about the talent agency they’ve signed on with.
Sentai Ikkoku
Keiichi was not only given the power to use the Dragon Medal to become Dragon
Red, but charged with the mission of recruiting four other Dragon Rangers to pro-
tect Earth from the evil Space Wyrms. This whole thing presents a dilemma for Kei-
ichi, since he’s busy studying to take en Tokyo University entrance exam (for the
third time) and he doesn’t really have the time go to searching everywhere. Add to
that the fact that the other tenants of the boarding house here he lives are really
amazingly nosy and meddlesome, and before long there’s a full team of Dragon
Rangers. In fact there are a couple of extra people who want to become Dragon
Rangers, but their mentor insists that there aren’t any more Dragon Medals to be
had. The Dragon Rangers are probably one of the least cohesive sentai teams the
world has ever seen.
72
ferred in a new Ranger—a female, Silver Ranger—invaded his daydreams all of a sud-
den.
Notes: The sentai stuff only works in Keisuke’s imagination, but somehow this
new girl is encroaching on it. The two of them are player characters, while the four
rangers are Ally Characters.
Xeo-Rangers
Earth is well-protected by the Hyper-Rangers, so when a new sentai called the
Xeo-Rangers comes along they get a rather mixed reception. The evil Kalindurya’s
Zyanoids fall easily before the Xeo-Rangers, but they have a way of causing unin-
tended collateral damage as they fight. What they themselves don’t know is that
they’re actually Zyanoids, intended to serve as undercover agents of chaos. Their re-
programming was too thorough though, and they fully believe themselves to be hu-
man heroes. Learning the truth could break them…
Or is there another layer of deception to Kalindurya’s schemes?
73
Sentai Shorts
• Densha Sentai Trainman: In a sparkling metropolis where a massive network of
supertrains has replaced all fossil fuel burning vehicles, a special team of heroes
(a train-themed sentai) keeps order.
• Karyuu Sentai Dracoranger: In a fantasy setting, a select few humans are cho-
sen by dragons as partners and granted the power to become Dracorangers and
protect the land. Now the evil king has trapped all of the dragons and rangers in a
magical prison. Five hatchling dragons must find five suitable humans and to-
gether they must turn the tide and liberate the land.
• Garou Sentai Wolfenranger: A specially selected team is injected with a modi-
fied form of lycanthropy that lets them use their new werewolf abilities for good.
• Ishin Sentai Esperanger: A psychic-themed sentai team. Everyone on the team
has a different esper ability, and has been given a Psy-Amp to transform and a
Psycho Machine (vehicle defender). The five Psycho Machines can combine into
a robot called Psi-1, with a powerful “esper lens” that combines and magnifies the
heroes’ psychic energy to create extremely powerful effects.
• Misses Five: A team of twenty-something single women take up the fight against
evil while working and staying on the lookout for potential husbands. So far
they’re not having much luck, but occasionally they get to team up with an all-
male sentai team from Kyoto. Yes, I realize this is really tasteless.
• Ongaku Sentai Rockin’ Rangers: They’re not just heroes; they’re a kickass rock
band! And their guitars and stuff double as weapons! Cheese by the ton!
74
Random Tables
This section has some random tables you can use to figure out stuff if you’re to-
tally stumped. All of these use two six-sided dice, one for the ones digit and one for
the tens. Hence, if your dice come up 2 and 4, the result is 24. On the Hero Team
Themes table that would mean you got “Espers/Psychics.”
Hero Team Themes: This table provides some ideas for themes for hero teams to
base their powers and whatnot on. These days most hero teams use a combination of
two different themes; having only one makes them a little too generic, and it’s hard to
blend together three. And four or more is just getting silly.
Heroic Flaws: The flaws listed here are roughly organized by Aspect/color; 1 is
Red, 2 is Blue, 3 is Green, 4 is Yellow, 5 is Pink, and 6 is everything else.
Episode Ideas: This table gives a range of possible outlines for individual epi-
sodes, though those listen in 11-15 cover entirely too many sentai episodes. Another
fun way to come up with episodes is to simply take a story from another medium and
make the sentai/magical girl version of it. Dekaranger actually had a Fight Club epi-
sode—so much so that the main villain was called Tyler Seijin Durden. (I swear I am
not making this up).
Monster Concepts: Some monster concepts will be more suitable than others for
a given campaign, depending on what the monsters are actually supposed to be. Evil
aliens can be just about anything, but if they’re all Space Ninjas your options will be
somewhat more limited.
75
Hero Team Themes
1 1 Aliens
1 2 Angels
1 3 Animals
1 4 Cards
1 5 Cars
1 6 Circus
2 1 Cosmic
2 2 Cyborgs
2 3 Elements
2 4 Espers/Psychics
2 5 Gaia
2 6 Gods
3 1 Gunslingers
3 2 High Tech
3 3 Holy
3 4 Knights
3 5 Magic
3 6 Martial Arts
4 1 Metal
4 2 Military
4 3 Music
4 4 Mythical Creatures
4 5 Ninjas
4 6 Planets/Stars
5 1 Police
5 2 Rescue Workers
5 3 Samurai
5 4 School
5 5 Science
5 6 Space
6 1 Time Travel
6 2 Treasure Hunters
6 3 TV
6 4 VR
6 5 Wuxia
6 6 Zodiac Signs
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Heroic Flaws
1 1 Blinded by love
1 2 Can never back down from a challenge
1 3 Hotheaded
1 4 Too heroic; wants to save everyone
1 5 Overconfident
1 6 Has many enemies
2 1 Bossy
2 2 Flashbacks
2 3 Cold and uncompromising
2 4 Absolutely can’t stand own failures
2 5 Hates killing, wants to redeem everyone
2 6 Consumed by vengeance
3 1 Sickly
3 2 Obsessed with a hobby
3 3 Very shy
3 4 “Real life” that interferes with being a hero
3 5 Has a severe phobia
3 6 Can’t see the flaws in your own teammates
4 1 Feral/chaotic
4 2 Dedicated to duty at the expense of personal affairs
4 3 Overly dependent on teammates for self-worth
4 4 Has a dangerous, devastating secret
4 5 Aloof, can’t connect with most other people.
4 6 Overprotective of loved ones
5 1 Lazy
5 2 Childish
5 3 Obsessed with the opposite sex
5 4 Too passive
5 5 Unrequited love
5 6 Forbidden love
6 1 Powers are dangerous to your health
6 2 Needlessly cruel
6 3 Doesn’t trust anyone
6 4 Outcast from society
6 5 Poor at working with others
6 6 Stranger from another world
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Episode Ideas
1 1 A hero gets a great opportunity that’s spoiled by bad guys.
1 2 A hero gets a great opportunity that’s actually a trap.
1 3 A hero makes a new friend that gets targeted.
1 4 A hero makes a new friend who is actually a villain in disguise.
1 5 One of the heroes’ friends is captured.
1 6 A new craze is sweeping the town, and the bad guys are behind it.
The heroes’ robot (or other important weapon) gets stolen and used for
2 1
evil.
2 2 One of the heroes is tricked or mind-controlled to hurt his friends.
A powerful weapon is hidden somewhere; the heroes need to get to it be-
2 3
fore the bad guys do.
A new hero comes to town; is he really a friend, or is he an enemy in dis-
2 4
guise? Or just a nuisance?
People everywhere are becoming sick; there heroes have to find out why
2 5
and put a stop to it before time runs out.
2 6 A doomsday weapon is ready to go off!
To be able to stop an extremely powerful enemy the heroes must undergo
3 1
a grueling training regimen.
3 2 A villain falls hopelessly in love with one of the heroes.
3 3 A close friend learns the hero’s secret identity.
3 4 A villain learns the hero’s secret identity.
3 5 Someone’s potential love interest is in trouble – or could be the trouble.
A former comrade of one of the heroes comes for a visit, but it turns out
3 6
he’s gone bad.
One of the heroes is forced to pose as someone else in order to protect the
4 1
original from harm.
One or more of the heroes lose their memories, and have to figure out
4 2
who they are before the bad guys get away with their scheme.
What seems to be a villain is actually a monstrous-looking innocent who’s
4 3
being manipulated by someone else.
The heroes face a villain with connections and even fans; they have to fig-
4 4 ure out a way to meet him face-to-face before they can get a chance to
fight him.
The heroes learn the location of a dangerous villain, except that he himself
4 5
thinks he’s human and that the heroes must be crazy.
One of the heroes accidentally gains a new special power that turns out to
4 6
be more curse than blessing.
The villains are turning people into mooks. Surrounded by enemies they
5 1
can’t attack, the heroes have to stop the main villain behind it.
5 2 A well-meaning loser wants to be like the heroes; he follows them around,
78
wears out his welcome, and gets annoying. And all the while, the enemy is
moving.
5 3 A villain’s scheme backfires and he winds up trapped with a hero.
5 4 A villain copies or replaces one of the heroes.
A villain forces the heroes to play a game… with lethal consequences for
5 5
the losers.
One of the heroes’ friends knows someone who has started acting strange.
5 6
Is it part of a villainous plot, or is there something else going on here?
The heroes encounter a troubled child with a unique power that the bad
6 1
guys want to use for their own nefarious purposes.
The bad guys figure out where the heroes’ base is and how to get in and do
6 2 bad stuff. The heroes are caught off-guard, and their own weapons are
suddenly being used to terrorize innocent people.
One of the heroes is recognized for his exceptional bravery, and is given an
6 3 opportunity for a promotion. The only problem? He’d have to leave the
rest of the team behind.
A high-ranking member of the heroes’ organization comes to evaluate
6 4 them, and he seems oddly determined to give them poor marks. Is there
something wrong with him, or is he just a jerk?
A villain switches bodies with one of the heroes. He has to find a way back
6 5
into his own body while his friends think he’s a bad guy.
The heroes lose most or all of their powers, and they’re forced to find a
6 6
way to fight back as themselves.
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Monster Concepts
1 1 Berserker Athlete
1 2 Black Knight
1 3 Brash Gangster
1 4 Burrowing Menace
1 5 Coma Flower
1 6 Constricting Plant
2 1 Crazy Samurai
2 2 Creepy Undertaker
2 3 Cult Leader
2 4 Cunning Shapeshifter
2 5 Deadly Martial Artist
2 6 Digital Demon
3 1 Doll Master
3 2 Draining Vampire
3 3 Elite Assassin
3 4 Fake Hero
3 5 Ghost
3 6 Goddess of Death
4 1 Hypersonic Ninja
4 2 Hypnotic Musician
4 3 Impossibly Armored
4 4 Induced Berserker
4 5 Killer Toy
4 6 Mad Artist
5 1 Mad Bomber
5 2 Mind Control Teacher
5 3 Mischievous Comedian
5 4 Obnoxious Elitist
5 5 Ocean Peril
5 6 Seductive Siren
6 1 Shooting Porcupine
6 2 Spore Monster
6 3 Torturing Doctor
6 4 Vengeful Cyborg
6 5 Viral Menace
6 6 Werewolf
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Appendix
Design Notes
For a while I kept trying to create a universal anime RPG, but for one reason or
another it never really came together. Now that there are no less than three of them
on the market (BESM, OVA, and RandomAnime) it seems kind of pointless to re-
tread that route. Instead, I decided it would be a better use of my time to have my
anime RPG stuff directed towards either genre/setting stuff for existing systems, or
to do systems that deal with a narrowly focused genre within the range of otaku
media. Tokyo Heroes is actually my third such RPG (after Thrash and Mascot-tan),
though it was also the one with this design philosophy most closely in mind.
Tokyo Heroes shows a lot of the influence of the “indie” RPG scene (The Forge
and whatnot) on my design sensibilities. It’s a game with a pretty clear answer to the
“What do you do?” question, and it strives to support that style of play mechanically.
Among the specific games that influenced Tokyo Heroes are (in alphabetical order)
Beast Bind: New Testament, The Burning Wheel, Dogs In The Vineyard, Enemy Gods,
Hong Kong Action Theater! (first edition), InSpectres, OVA, Primetime Adventures,
The Shadow of Yesterday, Unisystem, and WWE: Know Your Role. I bet you thought
Sorcerer was going to be on the list, didn’t you?
Sentai is kind of a weird niche genre. While there is a cult following, mostly you
have to say that it’s “stuff like Power Rangers” and then people think you’re not
merely geeky but retarded. But over the past few years I keep getting into things that
people would never expect – sentai, pro-wrestling, goth comics, poetry, etc.
Dekaranger was the gateway drug, but I’ve since watched every sentai series I could
get my hands on. The further I got into it, the more I realized just how closely “fight-
ing” magical girl anime series like Sailor Moon resemble sentai, and in RPG terms it
seemed ever more natural to combine them in one system (even though conventional
magical girls as seen in Minky Momo and whatnot are nothing like that).
The main reason I decided to do a sentai RPG is because I thought it’d be fun, but
it doesn’t hurt that there isn’t anything like it. I’ve only been able to find out about a
single Japanese TRPG dealing with sentai, a short parody game called Eiyuu Sentai
Seigiranger (Hero Sentai Justice Ranger), part of a 175-page RPG anthology called
TRPG Super Session: Daikyouen. By the time I finally got a copy (well worth picking
up if you can read Japanese BTW) I’d already figured out most of the system, and the
stuff I’d done differently was just different and neither better nor worse. If you want
to know more about it, I posted about it in my RPG blog.
Anyway, the system you see here is my second stab at writing Tokyo Heroes. The
first time didn’t quite come together, though there were a lot of salvageable ideas. In
the original version attributes were pools of points similar to TSOY, except that the
benefit of spending them varied with the situation. Skills were then rated in die types,
albeit without exploding dice. Running a DeadLands adventure a while back trauma-
tized me and convinced me that exploding dice are stupid, though that’s partly be-
81
cause with my group the laws of probability tend to be pretty whacked. I’ve seen my
friends roll three –4s in a row with Fudge dice, for example; in DeadLands punches
that practically vaporized bad guys were common. The major problem was the four
or so point pools that each character had to keep track of, and Hero Dice are kind of
a result of taking the pools to the opposite extreme—instead of four per character,
one per group—and using Keys flowed from that.
• Beast Bind, my first Japanese TRPG purchase, was important to the develop-
ment of Tokyo Heroes in terms of how it structures game sessions and splits
things into scenes. Advice from the folks on the Story Games forum was ex-
ceedingly helpful though.
• Keys, which became a very central concept, came directly from The Shadow of
Yesterday, albeit with some changes to suit the genre.
• Cinematic Unisystem, as seen in the Angel RPG, was a big influence on how
bad guys are handled in the game.
• I first heard of kishoutenketsu from a panel that Hiroyuki Yamaga gave at
FanimeCon (my local anime convention), but I didn’t catch the name at the
time. It was in a scanlation of the NHK ni Youkoso manga that I found the ac-
tual name and was able to actually research it a little more. Like a lot of old
Japanese things, it originally came from China—Chinese kanshi poetry to be
specific. One place you can find examples of kishoutenketsu in action is Japa-
nese 4-panel (yon-koma) manga, of which Azumanga Daioh is a solid and
widely available example. Each strip has four panels, arranged vertically, and
more often than not they correspond, on a micro-scale, to the four steps of
kishoutenketsu.
• Rose Valentine from Magical Girl Rose is sort of recycled. I had a silly bit of
original anime fiction I was working on that never went anywhere, called
“L.G.I.R.L.S.: Lily Glen Investigation and Rescue Lovelies Service.” (Love
that Engrish!) There was also a mad scientist girl and a hyperactive girl who
got turned into an insect hybrid. I liked the character of Rose enough to bring
her back, though I feel sorry for her for what’ll happen when she faces Magical
Girl Destiny…
• The idea for the mechanic of “worrying an opponent” in combat came directly
from Tokyo Mew Mew. The “twisted infatuation” Villainous Flaw is likewise
from Kisshu/Quiche’s thing for Ichigo.
• The “Master” Aspect is, needless to say, all about Doggie Kruger/DekaMaster
from Dekaranger. I kept it in because I figured it would work well for mentor
characters in general.
• Tokyo Heroes is by no means the only RPG you could use for a sentai game; it
really depends on what it is about sentai that you want to play. Wushu could
work wonders for making it a fast-paced action game, while something like
BESM would be a good choice for a more traditional RPG approach. octaNe,
while framed around post-apocalyptic kitsch, is basically a system for distrib-
uting narrative control, and using it for other genres would be exceedingly
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simple. There’s also a gentleman on RPG.net who mentioned he was creating
an RPG called HENSHIN! that’ll cover tokusatsu heroes in general, not just
sentai.
• I do have a few ideas for sourcebooks for this game, though that’s something
for a ways in the future, especially since I have some whole other games I want
to work on. Tokyo Menaces would be a big collection of monsters, and Tokyo
Powers would have stuff for running the game for other kinds of heroes be-
sides magical girls and sentai heroes. Anime and other kinds of tokusatsu
would be prime candidates, but I am curious as to what other kinds of things
they game could be contorted to cover.
Suggested Viewing
Here are some suggestions for stuff to check out to get ideas. I’ve listed off stuff
without much regard to whether or not there’s an English version (did I mention I
really like knowing Japanese?). In some cases (like a lot of tokusatsu shows) the only
English version available is a fan translation (which means BitTorrent is probably
your best hope of getting it), but especially for magical girl anime and manga more
stuff is being licensed all the time.
Magical Girls
Where Tokyo Heroes covers magical girls, it mainly deals with the kind that fight
monsters and stuff. This is actually only a certain cross-section of the genre, so if
you’re wondering why titles like St. Tail and Minky Momo aren’t on the list, now you
know.
Sailor Moon (1992): Sailor Moon is almost solely responsible for “sentai” type
fighting becoming a part of magical girl anime and manga, not to mention a massive
success. Not only that, but more recently Sailor Moon became a successful live-action
series, pushing the sentai elements even further than before.
Tokyo Mew Mew (2002): One of the newer magical girl series, Tokyo Mew Mew’s
magical girls each draw their power from a sort of “totem” animal as they use their
powers to fight a mysterious supernatural force and also to protect the planet’s biodi-
versity. Thus this is both a typical fighting magical girl series, and one of the first to
follow in the footsteps of live-action sentai in giving the heroines a strong theme. The
story heavily emphasizes the main character Ichigo, but it has a surprising amount of
moral ambiguity and depth for a magical girl show. The TV series had a brief life as
Mew Mew Power in the U.S., and the manga is being released in English by To-
kyopop.
Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha (2005): The first half of this cute and lavishly ani-
mated series is like an homage to the entire magical girl genre, while in the second
half it becomes very different. Although it’s not the main point of the series, Nanoha
actually confronts the responsibility of protecting people and telling the truth to
those she cares about.
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Magic Knight Rayearth (1994): Even though it mostly takes place in the fantastic
world of Cephiro, CLAMP’s Magic Knight Rayearth is in many ways a typical fighting
magical girl series, and one of the most sentai-like of its kind, especially since the
Magic Knights actually have giant robots.
Mermaid Melody Pichi Pichi Pitch: Cross Tokyo Mew Mew with The Little
Mermaid. Very, very fluffy. ADV picked up the rights for this series, but has since
dropped it for lack of a TV deal. The manga is being put out by Del Rey, however.
Nurse Angel Ririka SOS (1995)
Pretear: In a definite twist on the genre, Shin Shiroyuki-hime Densetsu Pretear
(“New Snow White Legend Pretear”) has only one magical girl, but she finds herself
with a cadre of “Leife Knights,” each of whom can meld with her and thereby grant
her a magnified version of his own powers.
Pretty Cure
Pretty Sammy (1995): Originally a Tenchi Muyo! spinoff, Magical Girl Pretty
Sammy has since been made into a full-length TV series (called Magical Project S in its
American release), a lighthearted romp where Sammy faces a different “Love-Love
Monster” created by her nemesis Pixy Misa each week. More recently (2006), AIC
has released a new TV series called Sasami: Magical Girl Club, which tells a wholly
new story (in a new art style) where Sasami becomes part of a team of five magical
girls.
Wedding Peach (1995): If the Sailor Moon anime is too weird and fluffy for you,
stay away from Wedding Peach.
Sentai
Super Sentai Series (1975-Present): The first Super Sentai Series, Himitsu Sentai
Goranger, came out in 1975, and since then nearly every year as seen a new series
aired in Japan. Although a bit hard to come by in the U.S., the Super Sentai Series is
the main inspiration for Tokyo Heroes and a must if you can manage it.
Power Rangers (1993-Present): America has been experiencing the sentai genre
for years without knowing it, in the form of Power Rangers. This long-running series
was created by adapting different shows from the Super Sentai Series and adding ex-
tensive new footage.
Chouseishin Series (2003-Present): Toei recently launched its own tokusatsu
team franchise, the “Super Star Gods” series. Sazer-X is painful and overly kiddified,
but JustiRisers and GranSazer are surprisingly good. Chouseishin shows usually in-
volve space or aliens in some way or other and deal a little more with the theme of a
normal person becoming a chosen hero.
Ronin Warriors (1989): Known as Yoroiden Samurai Trooper in Japan, this series
very much an anime sentai show. The heroes are samurai-themed and don’t have ro-
bots, but pretty much every sentai cliché is well-represented.
Shinesman (1996): Shinesman is an anime parody of sentai, an extremely silly 2-
part OAV (there’s also 9 volumes of manga in Japan) in which Shinesmen Red, Gray,
Olive Green, Salmon Pink, and Sepia fight for what’s right, and pull down a decent
salary in the process.
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Tangential Stuff
Tokusatsu (live-action Japanese shows with special effects) in general can be a
good source of inspiration too. Kamen Rider in particular was a major influence on
sentai shows. The mooks and the heroes’ style of fighting, especially in the earlier se-
ries, give the impression that Himitsu Sentai Goranger was originally conceived as
“Kamen Rider but with a team of five heroes.” (Especially since the heroes always had
motorcycles in the early sentai series). The two franchises have since evolved in dif-
ferent directions, with Kamen Rider being the darker of the two. Not only Kamen
Rider, but Ultraman and other tokusatsu shows can all offer plenty of ideas, espe-
cially when it comes to monsters.
Buffy The Vampire Slayer: Say what you will, Buffy could be a great place to
look for inspiration for a Tokyo Heroes campaign. Throughout the series (and the
spinoff, Angel) there are a number of episodes that take a totally whacked-out, cliché
Saturday morning cartoon plot and turn it into something at once fun and compel-
ling. It also manages to find just the right middle ground between cheesy supernatu-
ral battles and very human soap opera. Eden Studios’ RPG version is worth checking
out too.
Gatchaman
Hyper-Doll
Magical Girl Parodies: The magical girl genre has inspired not a few parodies.
They’re usually fun though not necessarily useful for inspiration. Planet Guardian is a
weird manga by Kohsaka Rito that not too many other people seem to like besides
me. Puni Puni Poemi is by the director of Excel Saga and potentially mentally scar-
ring. Nurse Witch Komugi-chan is light and nonsensical.
Nanaka 6/17: This cute little high school anime and manga is about two child-
hood friends; one has become a tough delinquent, and one has become obsessed with
studying to the point where she neglects even her best friend. Being rejected is so
hard on Nanaka that she mentally reverts to how she was as a six-year-old. Aside
from being a really fun series in itself, Nanaka 6/17 also brings fandom of magical girl
anime and (in the manga) tokusatsu into the story. The anime only covers about half
of the 12-volume manga’s storyline.
Websites
Emily’s Magical Girls Page (niko-niko.net/mg/)
GrnRngr.com (www.grnrngr.com)
Henshin: The Magical Girl Genre (henshin.anime-myth.com)
Japan Hero (www.japanhero.com): This site has info on not only sentai but
countless other tokusatsu shows, as well as a fairly active forum.
RangerCentral (www.rangercentral.com)
Super Sentai (www.supersentai.com): This site is the single best English-
language resource for sentai. It has a database of every Super Sentai Series with details
on heroes, toys, bad guys, episodes, etc.
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Art Specs:
• Cover: The cover art is split down the middle by crackling blue-white energy.
On one side are Dynamic Green and Dynamic Pink from Kidou Sentai Dyna-
ranger, and on the other side are Faith and April from Magical Girl Rose.
Front and center we see half of Dynamic Red’s mask and half of Rose’s face.
On the magical girls’ side the background is of an American school, while on
the sentai side it’s a Tokyo street. There needs to be space along the top for
the logo (which should be the title in Japanese – 東京ヒーローズ – and the
English title superimposed, both in a metallic semi-3D font reminiscent of
Super Robot Wars).
• Hero Creation: Another “split-screen” illo; one side shows Dynamic Captain
holding open a case containing the five Dyna-Gyros to the bewildered soon-
to-be-Dynarangers, while the other shows Winter holding up the Fire Pendant
to a shocked Rose.
• Sample Heroes: A portrait for each of the 12 characters presented. For the
Dynarangers, take a cue from the Dekaranger manga, and show half mask and
half face.
• Adventures: Dyna-Robo stands ready for battle, with its Dynamic Lance at
the ready. Possibly have views of the Dyna-Machines in small boxes to put
somewhere on the page.
• Bad Guys: An illustration of a small crowd of mooks, and portraits of the
three sample villains (DJ Neos, General Cross, and Space Lord Zalbus).
• A poignant scene of Magical Girl Rose facing off with Magical Girl Destiny.
Rose is conflicted (she knows that the team needs Destiny’s help, but has a
hard time forgetting how cruel Destiny has been to them), and though Des-
tiny is still reeling from the realization that the Dark Queen is not her mother
and does not love her, she still hates Rose, and enjoys the fact that she is
needed.
• Campaigns and Adventures: (A 4-koma comic, to illustrate kishoutenketsu)
• Game Seeds: One illustration each for 2 or 3 of the sample campaign ideas,
whichever ones the artist happens to find interesting.
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