TOME OF THE ELEMENTS
Page 2: About Abilities
ABILITIES:Abilities are special powers that can activate at random, on the field, in combat or even be entirely passive.
Every character can have
one ability
per element, and every element has up to fifteen possible abilities that can be chosen from.
Abilities activate under certain conditions, but some of them can be activated by the character themselves.
... Yes, that's it. The creator of this Tome felt it to be a waste of time to add more information, but then again, he is an idiot.
Pages 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11 and 12 will have 5 elements each. It is recommended that you study how the abilities work and what the type advantages are.
Abilities that can be activated by the character who has it will be a deep black color, which most people call "bold". People these days can be weird, can they not?
Regarding the effectiveness charts:
Normally effective: All the other elements not stated below.
Strong against: Elements stated here take more damage from the element it's listed under.
Weak against: Elements stated here deal more damage to the element it's listed under.
No effect on: Elements stated here are unaffected by attacks of the element it's listed under.
Immune to: Elements stated here don't affect the element it's listed under at all.
Powers up: Elements stated here get powered up by attacks of the element it's listed under.
Note:If an Element is Super Effective against
all other elements, but has an ability which changes the Super Effectiveness (like Void has
Error), then the ability's Super Effective stuff will be stated instead. An element that is Super Effective against all other elements will always get a penalty of some sort.
Regarding the Element of Hito:The Element of Hito is unique in that, as a single element, it can be split up into three categories:
Hito-Fille,
Hito-Garçon and
Hito-Mystère. If one of those three is mentioned, then the effectiveness applies only to the mentioned one. However, if
Hito is mentioned (without "Fille", "Garçon" or "Mystère"), then it applies to all three.