True but that would be an entirely different mechanic. One I am not sure on how to go about.
I don't think the mechanic I put forth is quick and easy. The higher the stat the longer it takes to improve. Similar to the way the rules treat learning new skills. I wouldlove to see a mechanic for improving ones EDU/SOC/INT. While these are somewhat connected they are also not completely similar.
I would imagine EDU might improve as you gain new skill's really. Isn't someone with 20 skills higher educated than someone with 6?
Shouldn't INT have some bearing on how quickly someone could learn new skills? For example, one of my other players failed nearly every survival roll in a 6 term char gen. At the end of 6 terms he wound up with 8 skills at lvl 1. By the rules in the book he could train Medic 1 in 9 weeks. He could then train Medic 2 in an additional 11 weeks. That's a full fledged Doctor in 20 weeks training. What if that character has an INT of 5? Would you want to have a guy working on you after a crash that became a doctor after only 20 weeks training and had less than average intelligence?
One of my other players has suggested that a characters SOC stat might improve simply by living and paying for a higher lifestyle than the one associated with his current SOC rating. Is that completely out of line?
I don't think the mechanic I put forth is quick and easy. The higher the stat the longer it takes to improve. Similar to the way the rules treat learning new skills. I wouldlove to see a mechanic for improving ones EDU/SOC/INT. While these are somewhat connected they are also not completely similar.
I would imagine EDU might improve as you gain new skill's really. Isn't someone with 20 skills higher educated than someone with 6?
Shouldn't INT have some bearing on how quickly someone could learn new skills? For example, one of my other players failed nearly every survival roll in a 6 term char gen. At the end of 6 terms he wound up with 8 skills at lvl 1. By the rules in the book he could train Medic 1 in 9 weeks. He could then train Medic 2 in an additional 11 weeks. That's a full fledged Doctor in 20 weeks training. What if that character has an INT of 5? Would you want to have a guy working on you after a crash that became a doctor after only 20 weeks training and had less than average intelligence?
One of my other players has suggested that a characters SOC stat might improve simply by living and paying for a higher lifestyle than the one associated with his current SOC rating. Is that completely out of line?