Bit confused how this works: example: I take an investigate action does it mean I can’t take another investigate action or does it mean I can’t now take another investigate action nor a parley or draw action?
Traición. Debilidad Básica
Locura.
Neutral
Revelación - Pon Estupor en juego en tu zona de amenaza.
Estupor se puede curar como si fuera un único punto de horror que tuvieras (si se cura, descártalo).
Obligado - Después de que realices una acción de negociar, robar o investigar: No puedes realizar ninguno de esos tipos de acciones durante el resto del turno.
Tom Garden
Los confines de la Tierra Expansión de investigadores #133.
FAQs
No faqs yet for this card.
Reviews
The latter
—
Nenananas
· 251
not a review but a question:
If I use flashlight to investigate, is it regarded as an activate action or an investigate action?
There are a lot of similar questions, e.g.
If I use Scout Ahead to move, is it regarded as a play action or a move action?
If I use Disguise to evade, is it regarded as an evade action or an activate action?
I think that the answer is both.
—
Jota
· 6
I send the message by error. Wanted to add that, for the card Hasta, it works like that AFAIK
—
Jota
· 6
Haste* Goddammit, sorry for the spam
—
Jota
· 6
This had been asked and answered a lot of time: They are both. Otherwise, if fighting with a weapon was just an activate action, or fighting with a kill spell like "Spectral Razor" just a play action, they would provoke AoO! Also check the FAQ for Ursula Downs, who can use her free investigate on anything with an Investigate designator as well, not just a basic Investigate action. Of course, this also applies to cases like here, where actions are restricted.
—
Susumu
· 362
If I post a rules question on ArkhamDB, it is a review action or an FAQ action?
—
toastsushi
· 74