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Reference Book: Star Wars Saga Edition Scum and Villainy

See also: Equipment Upgrades

You can make a finite number of modifications to a piece of Equipment. There isn't room to add every booster, reinforcement, and modification a fringer might find useful on any piece of Equipment. To represent these limits, every item has a number of Upgrade Slots.

Most upgrades take up a single slot, though a few particularly extensive modifications might take two or even three (and a few don't require any Upgrade Slots, representing relatively minor modifications).

If you don't have enough slots for a given modification, you can't add it to that piece of Equipment. You can't add modifications beyond an item's available Upgrade Slots, but you can gain more Upgrade Slots (see below).

Every stock piece of Equipment has a single unused Upgrade Slot. Unlike most armor, Powered Armor has two free Upgrade Slots. Armor is defined as Powered Armor if it is specifically described as such, or the word power (or some variant thereof) appears in the armor's name.

A few other models of items have also include more Upgrade Slots as stock issue, though this is rare and specifically noted.

Gaining Upgrade Slots[]

You can gain more Upgrade Slots for a piece of Equipment by one of two methods. You can Strip It- removing some existing feature, as detailed below- or you can increase its size.

Unless a method of adding more Upgrade Slots specifies it can be applied more than once to a particular piece of gear, it can't.

Stripping Equipment[]

Stripping must reduce the capacity or utility of the Equipment in a significant way; if it looks like Stripping a piece of Equipment won't downgrade a game mechanical aspect of its function, you also don't gain an Upgrade Slot.

Each element that is Stripped adds one Upgrade Slot to that piece of Equipment. Upgrade Slots can never be used to install enhancements to an area that has been Stripped: if you Strip the damage dice of of a weapon, you can't use any of its Upgrade Slots to gain a modification that improves its damage.

Stripping a piece of Equipment to add one Upgrade Slot takes eight hours of work, requires a DC 20 Mechanics check, and has a cost equal to 50% of the base cost of the item being Stripped.

On a failed check the Stripping goes badly; the item ceases to work until fixed and it doesn't gain the additional Upgrade Slot. It takes 1 additional hour of work and the same cost before another DC 20 Mechanics check can be made to fix the problem.

Once a successful check is made, the Equipment returns to functioning, and the Upgrade Slot is gained.

Stripping Weapons[]

You can Strip a Weapon in one of five ways:

  • Damage: Reduce the damage dice dealt by one step. The number of dice does not change, just their size.
    • Change d12s to d10s, d10s to d8s, d8s to d6s, d6s to d4s, d4s to d3s, and d3s to d2s.
    • For example, a Blaster Cannon Stripped of Damage deals only 3d10 damage rather than 3d12 damage.
  • Range: Reduce a Ranged Weapon's Range by one step.
  • Design: The standardized design of a weapon can be Stripped, making it an Exotic Weapon. (Weapons already in the Exotic Weapon category can't use this option.)
    • By moving things around extensively, more room for modifications are created at the cost of making the weapon difficult to learn to use properly; for example, some gunfighters modify their Blaster Pistols so extensively that no one else can use them comfortably.
  • Stun Setting: A weapon with a Stun setting can have that function Stripped to gain one Upgrade Slot.
  • Autofire: Weapons with both a Single-Shot and Autofire setting can be Stripped to just having a Single-Shot fire mode.

Stripping Armor[]

Armor normally has one to three Upgrade Slots available as stock gear. It can add more by becoming thicker and bulkier (see Increasing Equipment Size, below) or by Stripping either of the two components described below:

  • Defensive Material: Armor can have sections of Defensive Material Stripped, lowering its Armor bonus to Reflex Defense and Equipment bonus to Fortitude Defense by 1 point (to a minimum of +0).
  • Joint Protection: Armor normally uses more fragile, more expensive materials to cover its joints, frequently with extensive bracing to transfer the impact of an attack to stronger sections of the Armor.
    • Armor can be rebuilt to use standard, heavy materials everywhere and remove the bracing to make room for another Upgrade Slot.
    • This doubles the weight and deceases the Maximum Dexterity bonus by 1 (which can even reach negative numbers).

Equipment Size[]

The size of a piece of Equipment is determined slightly differently for General Equipment, Weapons, and Armor.

  • General Equipment: Unless otherwise noted, the size of a piece of General Equipment is determined by its listed weight (see below).
    • If no size or weight is listed, treat it as Diminutive (about the same as a Blaster Pistol or Medpac) for purposes of the Equipment Upgrade rules.
  • Weapons: Weapon Size represents how bulky it is compared to other weapons, so their listed sizes represent how big a character must be to use them in one hand.
    • Weapons are the size of a creature two categories smaller. Thus a Blaster Pistol, a Small weapon, is about the same size as a Diminutive creature.
  • Armor: Armor is the same size as the creature it is designed to protect. For example, Armor built for an Ewok is Small, but Stormtrooper Armor- always built for a Human- is Medium.
EQUIPMENT WEIGHT WEAPON SIZE OBJECT SIZE
Less than 1 kg Tiny or smaller Fine
1.0-1.9 kg Small Diminutive
2.0-4.9 kg Medium Tiny
5.0-49 kg Large Small
50-499 kg Huge Medium
500-4,999 kg - Large
5,000-49,999 kg - Huge
50,000-499,999 kg - Gargantuan
500,000 kg or more - Colossal

Increasing Equipment Size[]

Any piece of Equipment can gain an Upgrade Point by increasing its size by one step and doubling its cost. This has no effect on the Equipment's effectiveness. (For example, an enlarged Blaster Pistol has the same Range and damage despite now being a Medium-sized Weapon.)

This represents both physically making more room within the Equipment for an Upgrade, and using sturdier, larger components to prevent the stress of the new modification from damaging the Equipment.

If Armor undergoes this process, it doesn't change size but instead becomes one step heavier (Light Armor becomes Medium Armor, Medium Armor becomes Heavy Armor). Heavy Armor can't benefit from this option.

No gear can gain more than one Upgrade Slot by increasing its size.

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