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Vehicle Design System

Welcome to the Cepheus Engine Vehicle Design System (VDS), which outlines the core vehicle design rules for the Cepheus Engine, a Classic Era Science Fiction 2D6-Based Open Gaming Sytem. The first chapter shows you how to create vehicles for your own exciting science fiction adventures, and later chapters provide a series of common vehicles for use in your Cepheus Engine games.

The system is inspired by the design system outlined in Chapter 8: Ship Design and Construction from the Cepheus Engine Core Rules. Hopefully, Referees and players alike will find familiarity with one system helps with creating vessels in the other system.

On Creating a Playable Level of Detail

While no vehicle design system can successfully duplicate every possible Real World™ example, the Cepheus Engine Vehicle Design System (VDS) does make an effort to accommodate as many designs as possible. At the end of the day, however, that the goal of this design system is to create playable game statistics for vehicles, not recreate modern vehicles down to the nuts and bolts of muzzle velocities and surface areas, etc.

As such, some generalizations have to be assumed, as this design system aims to create a playable level of detail while still empowering Referees and players to create interesting vehicles. Weapons are not broken down by caliber or bore size. Instead, armament options for light and heavy weapons allow for designing weapons of differing power levels compared to one another. Drive options for fuel efficiency and agility are other tools to help create differences in similar vehicles from a comparison perspective.

Remember that ultimately, this design system is yours to do with as you will. If you can’t build what you want with it as is, feel free to change it or extend it to meet your own personal needs. If you are a player, however, please be sure to get your Referee’s approval first.

Important Terms

The Cepheus Engine Vehicle Design System uses certain words and abbreviations throughout the rules system. In order properly understand the Cepheus Engine Vehicle Design System rules, both players and Referees should become familiar with these terms. The following words, phrases and abbreviations are commonly used in this supplement:

  • Artillery Gun A high velocity explosive thrower firing chemically propelled rounds (CPR).
  • Autocannon A high velocity slug thrower with a high rate of fire.
  • Chassis The chassis is the shell in which all of the other components of the vehicle design process are placed.
  • Credit (Cr) The primary unit of currency used in the Cepheus Engine. For very large amounts of money, the kilocredit (KCr) represents one thousand credits and the megacredit (MCr) represents one million credits.
  • Disintegrator A weapon that disrupts the strong molecular attraction that holds matter together, causing the target area to disintegrate on a subatomic level.
  • Displacement Ton (or Ton) A measure of volume displacement equivalent to the volume that is displaced by one metric ton of liquid hydrogen, or roughly 14 cubic meters. Tons are commonly used in both Ship Design and Trade & Commerce.
  • Drive General term to describe engines, power plants and propulsion systems.
  • Fusion Gun A very high powered plasma weapon which actually attains fusion of hydrogen in its beam.
  • Howitzer A type of artillery piece characterized by a relatively short barrel and the use of comparatively small propellant charges to propel projectiles over relatively high trajectories, with a steep angle of descent.
  • Machine Gun A fully automatic mounted firearm designed to fire ammunition at a high rate of fire over a sustained period of operation.
  • Mass Driver A high velocity slug thrower that relies on electromagnetic or gravitic forces to impart a very high kinetic energy to clusters of dense matter.
  • Meson Accelerator A particle accelerator that projects a stream of mesons, calculated to decay while within the target, therefore remaining unaffected by traditional armor.
  • Mortar An indirect fire explosive thrower that fires projectiles at low velocities and short ranges. Mortars must be used from a world’s surface.
  • Plasma Gun An energy weapon that fires a high-energy beam of subatomic particles, disrupting the molecular structure of the target on impact.
  • Railgun A smaller variant of a Mass Driver designed for smaller, more maneuverable vehicles.
  • Rocket Artillery A type of artillery equipped with rocket launchers for firing self-propelled munitions.
  • Space Within the vehicle design system, a space is a measure of volume displacement that is approximately equal to 1.167 cubic meters or 1.167 kiloliters. For the sake of simplicity, the vehicle design system assumes that there are 12 spaces to a displacement ton. The rest of the tonnage is used for miscellaneous things, such as wires, ducts, rope, support beams, and other items as appropriate to the tech level and purpose of the vehicle.
  • Vehicle General term for a vessel that displaces 20 tons or less, and generally restricted to operation on a single world. The design system in this supplement is intended to create vessels that meet this description.
  • Vessel General term used to starships, small craft, or vehicles as a general inclusive group. Most commonly, it refers to any vehicle or ship capable of interplanetary or interstellar travel.

New Skill

The Cepheus Engine VDS introduces a new skill, Airship, which is considered part of the Aircraft cascade skill.

Airship

This skill grants the ability to properly maneuver and perform basic, routine maintenance on balloons and airships of any sort. Such vehicles attain lift from a body of gas that is lighter than the surrounding atmosphere.

Vehicle-Mounted Weapon Ranges

Some vehicle-mounted weapons use the range classifications outlined in the Cepheus Engine core rules. However, many do not. The following table combines the standard weapon ranges and the weapon ranges used by the new weapons outlined in the Cepheus Engine Vehicle Design System. The following abbreviations are used to make the table easier to read:

Table: Task Difficulty Abbreviations
Task Difficulty Abbreviation
Average Avg
Difficult Diff
Very Difficult VDiff
Formidable Form
Table: Attack Difficulties by Weapon Type
Weapon Personal Close Short Medium Long Very Long Distant Very Distant Extreme Continental
Close Quarters Avg Diff
Extended Reach Diff Avg
Thrown Avg Diff Diff
Pistol Diff Avg Avg Diff VDiff
Rifle VDiff Diff Avg Avg Avg Diff VDiff
Shotgun Diff Avg Diff Diff VDiff
Assault Weapon Diff Avg Avg Avg Diff VDiff Form
Rocket VDiff Diff Diff Avg Avg Diff VDiff
Very Long Diff Avg Diff VDiff Form
Distant VDiff Diff Avg Diff VDiff Form
Very Distant VDiff Diff Avg Avg Diff VDiff Form
Extreme Form VDiff Diff Avg Avg Diff VDiff Form
Continental Form VDiff Diff Avg Avg Avg Diff VDiff Form

This section describes some of the watercraft that can be commonly encountered in Cepheus Engine campaigns. These are not the only types of vessels that exist, and creative Referees are encouraged to integrate vehicles of their own creation or from other sources as they see fit.

Standard Designs vs. New Designs

An interstellar economy provides an excellent opportunity for the use of standardized and modular vehicle designs, as well as a wide range of markets. Components can be crafted on different worlds, taking advantage of available resources, and then put together to create a final product. Manufacturers take advantage of modular components and standardized designs to reduce costs in production, leading to a 10% discount on vehicles constructed using common designs, such as those described in the other chapters of this supplement. The Referee may designate other vehicle designs as standard designs, as befits their universe. Fuel and weapon ammunition are not covered by the Std Design Discount.

New and unique vehicle designs cannot take advantage of standardized and modular design. These vehicles must be designed by a vehicular design specialist, who creates detailed design plans based on a set of specifications provided by their client. Such plans take a month to create, and costs approximately 1% of the final price of the vehicle, to a minimum of Cr100.

Displacement Tons and Spaces

Chassis and other vehicle components are measured by their displacement volume. For ships and small craft, displacement volume is measured in the volume of space that is displaced by one metric ton of hydrogen, referred to in this design sequence as displacement tons or simply tons.

Because the components for vehicles are often fractions of a ton, the Cepheus Engine Vehicle Design System (VDS) uses an artificial measure of volume to make things a little easier. A space in this design system is equal to one-twelfth of a displacement ton; i.e. there are 12 spaces in one ton.

Design Considerations

When designing a vehicle, it is important to consider two things: the vehicle’s purpose, and the Tech Level at which it will be produced. The design process flows more smoothly when you keep these two factors in mind

The Price Impact of Modifications

Some modifications to a vehicle component, often classified under Options that can be applied to that component, modify the original price of that component. Modifications that decrease the price of a vehicle component cannot lower it below 25% of the original price.

Vehicle Design Checklist

The Cepheus Engine Vehicle Design System (VDS) follows a very methodical process.

  1. Choose Vehicle Chassis
    1. Determine open or closed chassis
    2. Determine chassis configuration
    3. Install armor (optional)
  2. Choose locomotion/propulsion
  3. Choose power supply
  4. Determine fuel requirements
  5. Choose vehicle’s controls
  6. Choose vehicle’s communications system (optional)
  7. Choose vehicle’s sensor package (optional)
  8. Choose vehicle’s computer system (optional)
    1. Choose computer software
  9. Determine number of required crew
    1. Choose accommodations (cockpit, cabin, extended accommodations)
  10. Determine additional components (optional)
  11. Determine turrets, fixed mounts, etc. (optional)
    1. Determine weapons (optional)
  12. Allocate remaining space to cargo
  13. Calculate final price and construction time
    1. Apply Std Design Discount of 10% (optional)

Vehicle Chassis

The vessel’s chassis is the shell in which all other components are placed. An unarmored vehicle’s construction time is based on its chassis size, as outlined on the Vehicle Chassis by Displacement table. To find the construction time for armored vehicles, simply multiply the vehicle’s base construction time by the amount of additional armor the vehicle will possess. For example, a 10-ton Armored Fighting Vehicle (AFV) with a total of 12 Armor would take (base of 90 hours, times 12, equals) 1080 hours, or 45 days, assuming round-the-clock construction.

Custom-Made Vehicles: The construction time listed is for mass production of a standard design. A custommade vehicle takes approximately ten times as long to construct.

Table: Vehicle Chassis by Displacement
Chassis Code Tons Spaces Price (Cr) Construction Time (hours) Size Example
1 0.1 1 1,450 1   8 Standard Moving Boxes
2 0.25 3 1,600 2   Motorcycle
3 0.5 6 1,850 5    
4 0.75 9 2,100 7   Compact Car
5 1 12 2,400 9   Mid-Size Car
6 2 24 3,550 18   Passenger Van
7 3 36 4,850 27 20-ft Standard Freight Shipping Container (1CC)
8 4 48 6,250 36   Air/Raft
9 5 60 7,800 45   Military Tank
A 6 72 9,550 54   Speeder
B 7 84 11,350 63    
C 8 96 13,350 72   Semi Trailer
D 9 108 15,450 81    
E 10 120 17,750 90   ATV
F 11 132 20,150 99    
G 12 144 22,650 108    
H 13 156 23,350 117    
J 14 168 28,150 126    
K 15 180 31,100 135    
L 16 192 34,200 144    
M 17 204 37,400 153    
N 18 216 40,750 162    
P 19 228 44,250 171    
Q 20 240 47,900 180    

Vehicle Configuration

A vehicle may have one of two configurations – Closed or Open.

  • Closed Vehicles: Closed vehicles grant cover to the occupants – unless the description mentions otherwise civilian vehicles grant ½ soft cover and military vehicles full hard cover. Only a few people in a closed vehicle can shoot out, depending on the number of windows or other firing ports and the internal space available. Unless the description mentions otherwise, up to two people can fire into each arc from a civilian vehicle and one person in each arc in a military one. Note that closed vehicles are not sealed or airtight. They are just enclosed, offering some basic protection to the occupants within the vehicle. In order to provide complete atmospheric protection, the appropriate Environmental Protection System(s) must be installed, as provided in under Vehicle Configuration Options.
  • Open Vehicles: Open vehicles possess an open passenger area, which reduces the final price by 10% of the Base Price. Airplanes, jets and hypersonics cannot have an Open configuration. Open vehicles grant no cover to the passengers. Any passenger in an open vehicle can shoot (or otherwise attack) in any direction.
Table: Vehicle Configuration
Configuration Chassis Price Modifier
Closed x1
Open x0.9

Vehicle Configuration Options

The following are options that can be added to a vehicle’s configuration.

  • Corrosive Environmental Protection System (TL 9) The Corrosive Environmental Protection System can be installed in any vehicles with a closed chassis to safeguard the vehicle and its crew in corrosive environments. Corrosive Environmental Protection protects against corrosive environments, very hot or very cold environments, radiation, poisons and bacteriological threats. This system takes up 6 spaces and costs Cr10,000 per Space of chassis. This system requires the purchase of Life Support.
  • Hostile Environmental Protection System (TL 7) The Hostile Environmental Protection System can be installed in any vehicles with a closed chassis to safeguard the vehicle and its crew in hostile environments. Hostile Environmental Protection protects against very hot or very cold environments, radiation, poisons and bacteriological threats. This system takes up 3 spaces and costs Cr5,000 per Space of chassis. This system does not require Basic Life Support, although it can prove highly useful.
  • Hydrofoils Hydrofoils may be applied to any aquatic surface vessel. Hydrofoils increase the chassis price by 300%, and multiply the base speed of the vehicle by 3.
  • Insidious Environmental Protection System (TL 9) The Insidious Environmental Protection System can be installed in any vehicles with a closed chassis to safeguard the vehicle and its crew in insidious environments. Insidious Environmental Protection protects the vehicle and crew from insidious atmospheres for 5 days, before Hull/Structure integrity begins to fail at one point per day, as well as providing protection against very hot or very cold environments, radiation, poisons and bacteriological threats. This system takes up 6 spaces and costs Cr50,000 per Space of chassis. This system requires the purchase of Life Support.
  • Open Cargo Bed Reduces the chassis price by 20%. Airplanes, jets and hypersonics cannot have Open Cargo Beds. Open configuration vehicles with an Open Cargo Bed combined reduce the chassis price by 25%.
  • Open Frame Reduces the chassis price by 20%. Airplanes, jets and hypersonics cannot have Open Cargo Beds. Open configuration vehicles with an Open Cargo Bed combined reduce the chassis price by 25%.
  • Self-Sealing (TL 9) A self-sealing chassis automatically repairs minor breaches, and prevents chassis hits from leading to explosive decompression in vacuum environments (if the Vacuum Environmental Protection System is installed). It costs Cr10,000 per ton of chassis.
  • Streamlined Streamlining a thrust-based vehicle increases the chassis price by 300%. Streamlining multiplies the Base Speed of the vehicle by 5. Streamlining can be applied to any thrust-based vehicle with a closed configuration. Streamlining may not be retrofitted; it must be included at the time of construction.
  • Submersible Submersible may be applied to any aquatic vessel, allowing it to submerge below the ocean’s surface. The Submersible configuration option increase the chassis price by 500%. Base Speed for a submersible reflects the vessel’s speed underwater. The vehicle’s Base Speed is halved when the vehicle is travelling on the ocean’s surface in good weather conditions. Submersibles are rated by their Safe Dive Depth and Crush Depth, as determined by the vessel’s Tech Level. These values are calculated for a Size 8 world. For every point of world size difference, up or down, add or subtract (respectively) 10% from the Safe Dive and Crush Depth values. When increasing Safe Dive/Crush Depth for a submersible, for every doubling of the Safe Dive and Crush Depth, the vehicle loses half of its remains spaces (rounded off) to ballast to bring the vehicle lower into the ocean. Each doubling costs of 100% of the chassis price of the submersible. An open chassis submersible, such as a dive sled, does not protect its drivers or passengers from the pressures of the depths of the ocean. All submersibles get Basic Life Support and Hostile Environment Protection for free.
Table: Submersible Safe Dive Depth and Crush Depth by Tech Level
Tech Level Safe Dive Depth (m) Crush Depth (m)
4-5 50 150
6-8 200 600
9-11 600 1,800
12-14 2,000 6,000
15-16 4,000 12,000
17+ 8,000 24,000
  • Vacuum Environmental Protection System (TL 6) The Vacuum Environmental Protection System can be installed in any vehicles with a closed chassis to safeguard the vehicle and its crew under vacuum conditions. Vacuum Environmental Protection protects against vacuum conditions, very hot or very cold environments, radiation, poisons and bacteriological threats. This system takes up 3 spaces and costs Cr10,000 per Space of chassis. This system requires the purchase of Life Support.
  • Wave-Piercing Hull The Wave-piercing Hull puts the payload of a watercraft on streamlined pillars above the water that connect to power/fuel modules that run underwater. Interface friction is much reduced, allowing the Wave-piercing Hull to be much more efficient and stable. This increases its Base Speed by 10%. The Wavepiercing Hull uses 5% of a vehicle’s Spaces (round up) and costs 200% of the chassis price.

Vehicle Armor

All vehicles start with a base amount of armor, depending on their construction materials, as outlined in the Vehicle Armor by Type table. All additional vehicle armor, regardless of armor type, is added in 5% increments of the vehicle’s volume, in Spaces. A vehicle’s armor decreases ambient radiation exposure by 10 rads per point of armor. (This does not apply to meson attacks and nuclear missiles, which bypass the armor or breach the chassis to deliver their radiation hits.) Note that these armor values are measured on the Personal Combat scale. The maximum armor a vehicle can carry is 20% of the chassis.

Table: Vehicle Armor by Type
Armor Type TL Base Additional Protection Price Max Armor
Wood 1 1 1 per 5% chassis, min. 1 space 10% of base chassis 5
Iron 4 2 2 per 5% chassis, min. 1 space 10% of base chassis 10
Titanium Steel 7 3 3 per 5% chassis, min. 1 space 10% of base chassis 15
Crystaliron 10 4 4 per 5% chassis, min. 1 space 20% of base chassis 20
Superdense 12 5 5 per 5% chassis, min. 1 space 20% of base chassis 25
Bonded Superdense 14 6 6 per 5% chassis, min. 1 space 50% of base chassis 30
Coherent Superdense 17 8 8 per 5% chassis, min. 1 space 50% of base chassis 40

For example, a heavily armored TL14 grav tank might take Bonded Superdense armor twice. This would take up 10% of the chassis volume (in spaces, minimum 2 spaces) and cost 100% of the base price of the chassis, but give 12 additional points of armor.

Vehicle Armor Options

The following are options that can be added to a vehicle’s armor.

  • Electrostatic Armor (TL 9) This armor can be set to generate an electrostatic field that, when triggered by a person or creature, inflicts 6D6 damage. The armor may discharge twice before needing to recharge, and completely recharges after six seconds without a discharge. Electrostatic Armor requires one Space for the supporting capacitor and associated electronics, and costs Cr10,000.
  • Reflec (TL 10) Reflec coating on the chassis increases the vehicle’s armor against lasers by 3. Adding Reflec costs Cr100,000 per ton of chassis and can only be added once.
  • Reinforced Hull A vehicle’s Hull can be reinforced through enhanced structural engineering, increasing its Hull rating in Personal Combat by +1. This costs 20% of the vehicle’s chassis price. This can be selected twice for a total of +2 to the vehicle’s Hull.
  • Reinforced Structure A vehicle’s Structure can be reinforced through enhanced engineering designs, increasing its Structure rating in Personal Combat by +1. This costs 20% of the vehicle’s chassis price. This modification can be selected twice for a total of +2 to the vehicle’s Structure.
  • Stealth (TL 11) A stealth coating absorbs radar and lidar beams, and also disguises heat emissions. This imposes a –4 DM on any Comms rolls to detect or lock onto the vehicle. Adding Stealth costs Cr100,000 per ton of chassis, and can only be added once.

Vehicle Hull and Structure

Initial damage is applied to the Hull value of the chassis; once the chassis has been breached (i.e. the Hull value of the vehicle has reached zero), further damage goes to the Structure. When all Structure Points have been lost, the vehicle has been smashed to pieces. On the Space Combat scale, every vehicle has 0 Hull Points and 1 Structure Point. On the Personal Combat scale, a vehicle has one Hull Point per 5 tons of displacement (rounded down) and one Structure Point per 5 tons of displacement (rounded up). This is summarized in the Vehicle Hull and Structure, Personal Combat Scale table.

Table: Vehicle Hull and Structure, Personal Combat Scale
Tons Hull Structure
0.1-4 0 1
5 1 1
6-9 1 2
10 2 2
11-14 2 3
15 3 3
16-19 3 4
20 4 4

Vehicle Drives

All vehicles are generally built with at least one source of power (commonly referred to as the engine or power plant) and one source of propulsion or locomotion to provide movement for the vehicle. Propulsion is defined as either contact-based (requiring contact with the ground to provide motion) or thrust-based. Within the Cepheus Engine VDS, all engines, power plants and propulsion systems are categorized as drives.

  • Power Plants Within this design system, the values of the Vehicle Drive Costs tables make certain assumptions. Power plant values represent the fusion engine. The Vehicle Power Plant Types table offer adjustments to represent the impact of alternate power sources.
  • Propulsion Systems The contact-based propulsion system values represent the transmission and suspension of wheeled vehicles. The thrust-based propulsion system values represent the suspension of grav vehicles. The Vehicle Propulsion Types table offers adjustments to represent alternate propulsion systems.
  • Base Speed The base speed of a vehicle is determined by its propulsion drive performance and its propulsion type, as outlined in the Vehicle Base Speed by Drive Performance table. Base speed is measured in kilometers per hour (kph), unless otherwise specified. A vehicle with a propulsion system must have a power source with a drive code equal to or greater than that of the vehicle’s propulsion. When determining the drive performance of a power plant or a contact-based propulsion system using the Drive Performance by Chassis Volume tables, treat a zero (0) entry as a ‘—’ entry. For a thrust-based propulsion system, a zero (0) means that the thrust from the propulsion system is capable of supporting the vehicle itself in position, hovering in place, but cannot perform any actual propulsion. This allows vehicle designers to create vehicles that only move down or remain stationary, but can’t move up or forward at any significant speed. This is primarily used for robots and drones that need to remain stationary in turbulent circumstances.
  • Animal-Powered or Wind-Powered Vehicles Vehicles that possess no internal power plant or engine, such as those propelled by wind or pulled by living creatures, do not require a power plant as defined in this section, since their power comes from an external source. In this case, the vehicle must possess a drive capable of achieving a drive performance of at least 1. For more details on wind-powered or animal-powered vehicles, see Non-Powered Vehicles in the Special Rules section of this chapter.
Table: Vehicle Power Plant Types
Power Plant Type TL Space Mod Price Mod Fuel
External Combustion 3 x15 x0.20 Coal or Wood
Internal Combustion 5 x6 x0.05 Hydrocarbons
Fission 6 x2 x2 Radioactives
Fuel Cell (Closed) 7 x1 x1 Hydrogen
Fuel Cell (Open) 7 x2 x0.25 Hydrogen
Gas Turbine 7 x1 x1 Hydrocarbons
Early Fusion 9 x1 x1 Hydrogen
Fusion 12 x0.75 x1 Hydrogen
Advanced Fusion 15 x0.5 x2 Hydrogen
Antimatter 17 x1 x1 Hydrogen
Table: Vehicle Propulsion Types
Propulsion Type TL Type Space Mod Price Mod Examples
Sails, Non-Powered 1 Thrust x1 x0.2 Sailing Ship
Wheels, Non-Powered 1 Contact x1 x0.5 Stagecoach
Rails 3 Contact x2 x1 Train
Screw Propeller 3 Thrust x1 x0.1 Motor Boat, Steamship
Airship 4 Thrust x1 x0.5 Dirigible
Rotor 4 Thrust x2 x0.5 Biplane, Helicopter
Tracks 4 Contact x1 x2 Tank
Wheels 4 Contact x1 x1 Ground Car
Jet 5 Thrust x2 x2 Twin-Engine Jet
Mole 5 Contact x2 x8 Mole
Air Cushion 7 Thrust x1 x0.5 Hovercraft
Hypersonic 8 Thrust x1.5 x4 Passenger Air Liner
Legs 8 Contact x2 x4 Walker
Grav 9 Thrust x1 x1 Air/Raft, Speeder
Advanced Grav 12 Thrust x0.75 x2 Grav Bike
Extreme Grav 15 Thrust x0.5 x4 G/Carrier
Table: Vehicle Drive Costs
Drive Code Power Plant Contact-Based Thrust-Based
  Spaces Price (Cr) Contact-Based Price (Cr) Thrust-Based Price (Cr)
A 0.11 125 0.15 150 0.12 6,000
B 0.26 300 0.4 400 0.3 15,000
C 0.4 450 0.55 550 0.5 25,000
D 0.4 450 0.55 550 0.5 25,000
E 1.25 1,425 1.6 1,575 1.4 70,000
F 1.75 1,975 2.3 2,250 2 100,000
G 2.25 2,550 3 2,925 2.5 125,000
H 2.75 3,100 3.5 3,425 3 150,000
J 3.5 3,950 4.5 4,400 4 200,000
K 4 4,500 5.25 5,125 4.5 225,000
L 4.5 5,075 6 5,850 5.25 262,500
M 5.25 5,925 7 6,825 6.25 312,500
N 6.75 7,600 9 8,775 8 400,000
P 7.5 8,450 10 9,750 8.5 425,000
Q 8.5 9,575 11 10,725 10 500,000
R 9.5 10,700 13 12,675 11.5 575,000
S 10.5 11,825 14 13,650 12 600,000
T 12 13,500 16 15,600 13.5 675,000
U 13.5 15,200 18 17,550 16 800,000
V 15.5 17,450 21 20,475 18 900,000
W 18.5 20,825 25 24,375 22 1,100,000
X 21.5 24,200 29 28,275 26 1,300,000
Y 25.5 28,700 34 33,150 30 1,500,000
Z 31 34,875 41 39,975 36 1,800,000
Table: Drive Performance by Chassis Code, Smaller Chassis
Drive/Chassis 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 A B C
A 4 1 0
B 4 2 1 1 0
C 6 3 2 1 0
D 5 3 2 1 0 0
E 6 4 2 1 1 0 0 0 0
F 6 3 2 1 1 1 0 0
G 4 2 2 1 1 1 1
H 5 3 2 2 1 1 1
J 6 4 3 2 2 1 1
K 5 3 3 2 2 1
L 5 4 3 2 2 2
M 6 5 4 3 2 2
N 6 5 4 3 3
P 5 4 4 3
Q 6 5 4 4
R 6 5 4
S 6 5 5
T 6 5
U 6
V
W
X
Y
Z
Table: Drive Performance by Chassis Code, Larger Chassis
Drive/Chassis D E F G H J K L M N P Q
A
B
C
D
E
F 0 0 0 0
G 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
H 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
J 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
K 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0
L 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0
M 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
N 2 2 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
P 3 2 2 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1
Q 3 3 3 2 2 2 2 2 1 1 1 1
R 4 3 3 3 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 1
S 4 4 3 3 3 2 2 2 2 2 2 2
T 5 4 4 3 3 3 3 2 2 2 2 2
U 5 5 4 4 4 3 3 3 3 2 2 2
V 6 6 5 5 4 4 4 3 3 3 3 3
W 6 6 5 5 4 4 4 4 3 3
X 6 6 5 5 5 4 4 4
Y 6 6 5 5 5 5
Z 6 6 6
Table: Vehicle Base Speed by Drive Performance
Propulsion Type TL 1 2 3 4 5 6
Rails 3 40 80 120 160 200 240
Screw Propeller 3 20 40 60 80 100 120
Airship 4 30 60 90 120 150 180
Rotor (Horizontally Mounted) 4 100 200 300 400 500 600
Rotor (Vertically Mounted) 4 50 100 150 200 250 300
Tracks 4 25 50 75 100 125 150
Wheels 4 50 100 150 200 250 300
Jet 5 150 300 450 600 750 900
Mole (*measured in meters/hour) 5 50* 100* 150* 200* 250* 300*
Air Cushion 7 50 100 150 200 250 300
Hypersonic 8 300 600 900 1200 1500 1800
Legs 8 50 100 150 200 250 300
Grav 9 100 200 300 400 500 600
Advanced Grav 12 200 400 600 800 1000 1200
Extreme Grav 15 400 800 1200 1600 2000 2400

Vehicle Fuel

Every vehicle carries fuel, unless it derives its power from an external source. All fuel calculations are calculated based on the power plant’s Drive Code and Power Plant Type, as well as the expected period of operation without refueling. The power plant fuel requirements for early fusion engines are outlined in the Vehicle Power Plant Fuel Requirements table. Fuel consumption for other power plant types is detailed in the Vehicle Fuel Consumption by Power Plant Type table.

The amount of fuel required by the power plant depends on the volume of the power plant itself, and is calculated as one-third of the power plant tonnage per week. Vehicles are designed to operate for a variety of durations, ranging from a few hours to days or even weeks. For your convenience, the Vehicle Power Plant Fuel Requirements table provides calculated values for the fuel per week, per day and per hour, by Drive Code. For purposes of describing fuel volume in a vehicle’s description, assume that the number of spaces of fuel is equivalent to the kiloliters of volume it occupies. Divide calculated fuel space by 12 to determine fuel volume in tons.

Range and Cruising Speed: The amount of fuel a vehicle carries determines its Range at its maximum speed. The cruising speed of a vehicle is assumed to be 75% of the vehicle’s maximum speed and if the vehicle maintains this rate of movement, its Range will increase by 50% due to fuel efficiency.

Table: Power Plant Fuel Requirements
Drive Code Spaces Fuel/Wk (Spaces) Fuel/Dy (Spaces) Fuel/Hr (Spaces)
A 0.11 0.03 0.0043 0.00018
B 0.26 0.09 0.012 0.00052
C 0.4 0.13 0.019 0.00077
D 0.75 0.25 0.036 0.0015
E 1.25 0.41 0.059 0.0024
F 1.75 0.58 0.083 0.0035
G 2.25 0.75 0.11 0.0047
H 2.75 0.91 0.13 0.0054
J 3.5 1.16 0.17 0.0069
K 4 1.33 0.19 0.0079
L 4.5 1.50 0.21 0.0089
M 5.25 1.75 0.25 0.010
N 6.75 2.25 0.32 0.013
P 7.5 2.50 0.36 0.015
Q 8.5 2.83 0.40 0.017
R 9.5 3.16 0.45 0.019
S 10.5 3.50 0.50 0.021
T 12 4.00 0.57 0.024
U 13.5 4.50 0.64 0.027
V 15.5 5.16 0.73 0.031
W 18.5 6.16 0.88 0.037
X 21.5 7.16 1.02 0.043
Y 25.5 8.50 1.21 0.051
Z 31 10.33 1.48 0.061
Table: Vehicle Fuel Consumption by Power Plant Type
Power Plant Type TL Fuel Mod Price/Space (Cr) Notes
External Combustion 3 x9 (wood) or x5 (coal) 540  
Internal Combustion 5 x3 830  
Fission 6 x0.04 8,300  
Fuel Cell (Closed) 7 x20 40 Does not require an external source of oxygen
Fuel Cell (Open) 7 x2 40 Requires an external source of oxygen
Gas Turbine 7 x3 830  
Early Fusion 9 x1 40  
Fusion 12 x0.75 40  
Advanced Fusion 15 x0.5 40  
Antimatter 17 x0 Special Must be refueled once a month, at a cost of Cr40 per Space of Antimatter power plant.

Vehicle Drive Options

The following options are available as modifications on Vehicle Drives.

  • Additional Drive Systems A secondary drive system can be installed in a vehicle by purchasing a second propulsion drive. The secondary drive system’s performance is limited to one less than that of the primary drive system. The vehicle’s Agility suffers a–1 penalty due to design accommodations required to support the additional drive system.
  • Decreased Agility Vehicles can be built with lowered Agility, normally done for reasons of cost. Each reduction of –1 Agility reduces the final price of the vehicle by 25% of its chassis price. The maximum decrease to a vehicle’s Agility is -2.
  • Decreased Fuel Efficiency Vehicles can be built with decreased fuel efficiency, relying on cheaper parts or less efficient engines to cut costs. Fuel inefficient vehicles multiply the Fuel Mod on the Vehicle Fuel Consumption by Power Plant Type by 1.25 (increasing the fuel consumed by 25%). This reduces the final price of the vehicle by 10% of its chassis price.
  • Extra Leg(s) Walkers are typically assumed to have two legs. Additional legs can also be added to improve mobility in rough and uneven terrain. Each additional legs costs 25% of the vehicle’s Contact-Based Drive Price and takes up an additional 5% of the vehicle’s Contact-Based Drive Space. Every pair of additional legs reduces any terrain-based maneuver penalties by 1. This cannot be used to provide a bonus, only to negate a penalty. In addition, any walker with four or more legs gains a DM+1 on attack rolls made with the vehicle’s weapons.
  • Extra Pair of Wheels Wheeled vehicles are typically assumed to have four wheels (except for small vehicles of 0.5 tons or less in size, which may have two wheels at the designer’s discretion.) Additional wheels can be added to improve cross-country mobility. Each additional pair of wheels costs 25% of the vehicle’s Contact-Based Drive Price, takes up 25% of the vehicle’s Contact-Based Drive Space, and reduces any terrain-based Agility penalties by 1. This cannot be used to provide a bonus, only to negate a penalty.
  • Increased Agility Each +1 to Agility costs 50% of the chassis price. The maximum increase to a vehicle’s Agility is +3.
  • Increased Fuel Efficiency Vehicles can be built with increased fuel efficiency. Fuel efficient vehicles multiply the Fuel Mod on the Vehicle Fuel Consumption by Power Plant Type by 0.9 (reducing the fuel consumed by 10%). This costs 20% of the chassis price.
  • Jump Jets Any ground vehicle or hovercraft can be built with Jump Jets. These vehicles use jump jets primarily for crossing obstacles, but jump jets can also be used to allow the vehicle to fly, albeit inefficiently and no higher than 100 meters off the surface. To determine the size and cost of the Jump Jets unit, select a Thrust-based Drive that provides a minimum Drive Performance of 1 from the Vehicle Drive Costs table, and multiply both Spaces and Price by 0.75. When flying through the use of jump jets, the vehicles moves at one-quarter of the Base Speed for the Jump Jets unit, and consumes fuel five times faster than normal
  • Off-Road Capability Any ground vehicle can be purposefully designed for off-road use. This modification costs 50% of the vehicle’s Contact-Based Drive Price, and the vehicle’s Base Speed is lowered by 10%. A vehicle that is off-road capable does not suffer the –2 DM to Agility for moving off-road, and its Speed is not reduced. In addition, it can cross rough terrain with a –2 DM to Agility.
  • Tilt Rotors/Jets Aircraft equipped with tilt rotors gain the ability to takeoff vertically and hover like a helicopter. Once the rotors or jets rotate forward, the aircraft flies normally. Adding this component triples the Price of the Thrust-based drive.

Vehicle Agility

Some vehicles are easier to drive than others. A vehicle’s Agility rating reflects how easy the vehicle is to drive, and is expressed as a DM to the pilot’s skill check. A vehicle’s base Agility is determined by a number of factors, including the size of the vehicle’s chassis and its primary propulsion type. To determine a vehicle’s Agility rating, consult the Vehicle Agility Modifiers table, and sum up all appropriate modifiers.

Table: Vehicle Agility Modifiers
Agility Factor Modifier
Vehicle Type
 Airplane -2
 Airship -4
 Grav Vehicle +0
 Helicopter -1
 Hovercraft +0
 Hypersonic -2
 Jet -1
 Mole -4
 Motorboat +1
 Ocean Ship -2
 Sailing Ship -2
 Submarine -2
 Tracked Ground Vehicle -1
 Train -2
 Walker +1
 Wheeled Ground Vehicle +2
Size and Power Factors
 Animal-Powered -2
 Wind-Powered -1
 Small (2- tons) +1
 Large (10+ tons) -1
 Huge (20+ tons) -2
 Gargantuan (100+ tons) -3

Vehicle Controls

Unlike starships, vehicles do not have bridges. Instead, vehicles require a control system to allow crewmembers to control the vehicle. More advanced systems can be installed. Unmanned vehicles use drone controller systems to allow for remote operation of the vehicle.

  • Primitive Controls (TL 2) Primitive controls reflect the crudest of methods used to direct the motion of a vehicle.
  • Basic Controls (TL 4) This is the default control set-up, usually some form of basic steering mechanism and a throttle for controlling speed.
  • Advanced Controls (TL 8) This is usually advanced drive-by-wire systems with heads-up displays.
  • Exo-skeleton Linkage (TL 10) The exo-link is a system for translating body movements into vehicle actions. No additional special equipment or cybernetic modifications are required.
  • Neural Link (TL 12) The neural link is a true mind-machine linkage and allows an operator to control the vehicle with their mind alone. No additional special equipment or cybernetic modifications are required.
Table: Vehicle Control Systems
Interface TL Spaces Price (Cr) Agility Initiative Notes
Primitive 1 0.5 -20% Chassis price -1 0 DM-2 at speeds over 50 kph.
Basic 4 1 0 0 Included in Chassis price.
Advanced 8 2 Cr10,000 +1 0  
Exo-Skeleton Linkage 10 3 Cr100,000 +1 +1  
Neural-linked 12 4 Cr200,000 +2 +2  
Table: Vehicle Drone Controllers, By Interface
Interface TL Spaces Price (Cr) Control DM Range
Primitive 5 0.5 Cr10,000 -3 Long
Basic 7 1 Cr50,000 -2 Very Long
Advanced 9 2 Cr100,000 -1 Distant
Exo-Skeleton Linkage 11 3 Cr200,000 0 Very Distant
Neural-linked 13 4 Cr500,000 +1 Regional

Robot Brains

Robot Brains can be added to any vehicle with Advanced Controls or better.

Table: Robot Brains
CPU Spaces TL Computer Equivalent Max Skill Level Price
Linear 3 8 Model 1 1 Cr22,500
Parallel 2 10 Model 2 2 Cr40,000
Synaptic 1 12 Model 3 3 Cr90,000

Cyborg Controls

The use of human (or sometimes animal) brains to control a vehicle is possible at TL12 and higher. The organic brain and its support systems take up one Space in the vehicle, and require Neural-linked Controls. The use of an organic core grants a +1 DM to all skill checks performed by the cyborg vehicle, in addition to the benefits of the neural link. An organic brain costs Cr250,000 and otherwise operates as an independent entity. It includes basic life support for the organic components for a period of one month.

  • Organic Core Extended Life Support An Organic Core Extended Life Support provides a year’s worth of nutrients and filtration for the organic brain and its biological support systems. It is available at TL 13, takes up 5 Spaces, and costs Cr250,000.

Vehicle Control Options

The following option is available as a modification on Vehicle Controls.

  • Autopilot Autopilots are available for aircraft and sea vessels starting at TL 5 and ground vehicles at TL 9. Autopilot systems are at skill level 0 at their Tech Level of introduction and increase their skill level by 1 for every two Tech Levels thereafter, to a maximum of 3. Autopilots cost Cr2,000 + Cr5,000 per skill level.

Vehicle Communication Systems

Installing a communication system allows the crew to interact with others. The following systems are assumed to use radio for communications. Alternate approaches to communication are covered in the Alternative Communicator Types table. Vehicle communication systems are optional, but often highly recommended, particularly for military vehicles.

Table: Vehicle Communication Systems
Communication System TL Spaces Price (Cr) Range
Class I 5 0.01 Cr500 Distant (5 km)
Class II 5 0.02 Cr1,000 Very Distant (50 km)
Class III 6 0.05 Cr2,000 Regional (500 km)
Class IV 8 0.10 Cr4,000 Continental (5000 km)
Table: Alternative Communicator Types
Type TL Space Mod Price Mod Notes
Laser 8 x2 x3 Requires clear line of sight between communicators
Maser 10 x4 x6 Works like lasers, but can cut through smoke and aerosols
Meson 11 x10 x50 Cannot be jammed or blocked, but cannot be used while moving

Vehicle Sensors

Vehicle sensors allow the crew to identify, track and jam other vehicles. These sensor systems operate similarly to those installed on a starship or small craft. The type of sensor package installed can impose a DM on Comms skill checks when using the system to perform sensor-related tasks. Vehicle sensor systems are optional, but often highly recommended, particularly for military vehicles.

  • Underwater Sensors Sensor packages intended for use underwater must be purchased separately. Surface sensors cannot be used underwater, and vice versa. Underwater sensors cost the same as standard vehicle sensors, but require an additional 12 Spaces, and the Max Range drops by one category, to a minimum of Very Long (500m).
Table: Standard Vehicle Sensors
Sensors TL Spaces Price (Cr) Comms DM Max Range Includes
Standard 8 3 Cr5,000 -4 Very Long (500 km) Radar, Lidar
Basic Civilian 9 6 Cr10,000 -2 Distant (5 km) Radar, Lidar
Basic Military 10 12 Cr20,000 +0 Very Distant (50 km) Radar, Lidar, Jammers
Advanced 11 18 Cr50,000 +1 Regional (500 km) Radar, Lidar, Densitometer, Jammers
Very Advanced 12 30 Cr100,000 +2 Continental (5000 km) Radar, Lidar, Densitometer, Jammers, Neural Activity Sensor
  • Radar/Lidar detects physical objects. It can be active or passive. If a ship is using active sensors, it is easier to detect (+2 DM to Comms checks) but detects more about its surroundings.
  • Jammers can jam or counter-jam radio communications and sensor locks.
  • Densitometers can determine the internal structure and makeup of an object.
  • Neural Activity Sensor detects neural activity and intelligence.

Vehicle Computer

The vehicle computer is identified by its model number; the Vehicle Computer Models table indicates details of price, rating, and tech level available. The Model number is the computer rating, which determines the power of a computer. Rating measures the complexity of the programs a computer can run. (Storage space is effectively unlimited at TL 9 and above.) Programs are rated by the computer rating they require. A system can run a number of programs up to its rating, minimum of one (for Model 0 computers). Vehicle computers are optional, but often highly recommended at higher tech levels.

Table: Vehicle Computer Models
Computer TL Space Price (Cr)
Model 0 7 0.02 Cr100
Model 1 8 0.01 Cr500
Model 2 10 0 Cr1,000
Model 3 12 0 Cr2,000
Model 4 13 0 Cr3,000
Model 5 14 0 Cr10,000

Vehicle Computer Options

The following option is available for vehicle computers.

  • Hardened Systems (fib) A computer and its connections can be hardened against attack by electromagnetic pulse weapons. A hardened system is immune to EMP, but costs 50% more.

Vehicle Crew and Passengers

All vehicles require a crew to operate and maintain the vehicle. For civilian vehicles, that is typically one operator or driver. Military vehicles also require one gunner per weapon and one commander if three or more crew members are required. Every vehicle requires at least a basic cockpit or a basic control cabin to interface with the vehicle’s control, communication and sensor systems.

For vehicles intended for only a few waking hours, short-term accommodations are suggested for crew and passengers. If a vehicle is intended for use over several days or longer, long-term accommodations would be a better design implementation.

  • Sailing Vessels Sailing vessels calculate vehicle crew differently. Subtract the Tech Level of the sailboat from 10 (minimum 1) to determine the number of crew needed to work the sails for every four tons of sailing vessel or portion thereof. Sailing vessels of two tons or less require half this amount.
Table: Vehicle Accommodations
Accommodation Duration Spaces Price (Cr) Notes
Bunk, Military Long 24 Cr100,000 Supports one non-crew cramped (military only)
Control Cabin, Basic Long 36 Cr10,000 Supports one crew
Control Cabin, Extended Long 18 Cr5,000 Supports one additional person
Control Cabin, Standard Long 72 Cr20,000 Supports two crew plus one additional person
Low Berth Long 6 Cr50,000 Holds one person
Stateroom, Economy Long 24 Cr250,000 Supports one person cramped
Stateroom, Elite Long 72 Cr750,000 Supports two people comfortably
Stateroom, Standard Long 48 Cr500,000 Supports two people cramped, one comfortably
Cockpit, Basic Short 2 Cr1,000 Supports one crew
Cockpit, Extended Short 4 Cr2,000 Supports two crew
Seat, Cramped Short 4 Cr2,000 Supports three people cramped
Seat, Standard Short 2 Cr1,000 Supports one person

Life Support

Some vehicles provide differing levels of life support. Basic life support is free for submersibles and vehicles with Hostile Environmental Protection.

Table: Life Support
Life Support Type TL Spaces Price/Space (Cr) Notes
Basic 4 3 per 20 people Cr3,500 Good for 10 days
Extended 7 3 per 5 people Cr17,500 Good for 90 days

Additional Vehicle Components

The following are examples of additional vehicle components that might prove useful for certain vehicle designs.

Table: Cargo Trailer by Size
Trailer Size Price (Cr) Capacity (Spaces) Description
0.25-Ton 1,450 3 Light
0.5-Ton 1,700 6 Moving, Standard
1-Ton 2,200 12 Moving, Large
2-Ton 3,200 24 Light Duty, Standard
4-Ton 5,700 48 Light Duty, Large
8-Ton 12,000 96 Commercial, Standard
  • Airlock (TL 6) Airlocks take up 12 Spaces each and cost Cr200,000. If a craft does not have an airlock, then the crew cannot leave the craft without opening the vehicle up to the outside environment, which can be dangerous in a vacuum or underwater.
  • Autodoc (TL 12) The Autodoc is a whole-body automated treatment system that is detailed in the Cepheus Engine core rules. The Autodoc takes up 6 Spaces and costs Cr40,000.
  • Cargo Arm (TL 8) This is a heavy-duty manipulator arm used for lifting cargo in confined spaces. Cargo Arms have a base Strength score of 30 and a Dexterity of 0, occupy 1 space and cost Cr50,000.
  • Cargo Hold (TL 1) The design plan must indicate cargo capacity. There is no price but cargo carried may not exceed cargo capacity. Any Spaces left over after all systems have been installed may be allocated to cargo space. Divide the remaining Spaces by 12 to determine the volume of the cargo hold in displacement tons.
  • Cargo Trailer (TL 1) Ground vehicles can be equipped to tow a cargo trailer. Vehicles pulling a cargo trailer suffer a -1 penalty to Agility; vehicles of two displacement tons or smaller suffer an additional -1 penalty to Agility. The Cargo Trailer by Size table describes the price and capacity (in Spaces) for each trailer type. A vehicle’s Towing Speed is equal to their Base Speed without the trailer attached, multiplied by the ratio of the vehicle’s chassis (in Spaces) divided by the sum of the vehicle’s chassis and the cargo trailer’s capacity (both in Spaces). Towing Speeds are rounded down to the nearest multiple of 10kph.
  • Crane (TL 4) Cranes are machines generally equipped with a hoist rope, wire ropes or chains, and sheaves, that can be used both to lift and lower materials and to move them horizontally.
    • Light Crane Light Cranes can lift up to 400 kg and can be used as rescue equipment. Light cranes cost Cr2,500 and take up 3 Spaces.
    • Medium Crane Medium Cranes can lift up to 2,000 kg. They cost Cr40,000, and take up 12 Spaces.
    • Heavy Crane Heavy Cranes can lift up to 10,000 kg. They cost Cr100,000 and take up 24 Spaces.
  • Cutting Equipment (TL 5) Cutting equipment includes external heavy duty saws, water knives or plasma cutters, depending on Tech Level. The equipment costs Cr10,000 and takes up 15 Spaces.
  • Detention Cells (TL 3) Found primarily on military and government vessels, a detention cell is used to keep prisoners. A detention cell holds one prisoner in extremely cramped conditions, displaces 12 Spaces and costs Cr125,000.
  • Digging Equipment (TL 5) Digging equipment includes external digging and scooping equipment. This equipment costs Cr25,000 and takes up 30 Spaces.
  • Ejection Seat (TL 5) The ejection seat takes up 2 Spaces and is designed to blast the occupant clear of the moving vehicle. At lower Tech Level this means a suitable height to open a parachute but at higher Tech Levels it is merely sufficient to get clear of the vehicle until a grav chute can deploy. An ejection seat costs Cr5,000.
  • Emergency Low Berth (TL 12) A conventional Low Berth takes several minutes to induce hibernation and lower core temperature. The Emergency Low Berth can do a ‘crash’ induction, plunging a person into deep hibernation in a fraction of the time. It can hold people, takes up 12 Spaces, and costs Cr100,000.
  • Entertainment System (TL 5) Supporting both audio and visual entertainment, this system takes up no Space, and costs at least Cr200. Players intending to impress may want to spend more. Much more.
  • Fire Extinguishers (TL 4) Fire Extinguishers are designed to put out fires internal to the vehicle. They take up no Space and cost Cr500. Starting at TL8, worlds with a Law Level of 6 or higher may require that these be installed on every civilian vehicle.
  • Floats/Pontoons (TL 3) This allows the aircraft the ability to land and take-off from water. This is a removable component and can be added at any time. It costs Cr250 and one Space per 12 Spaces (one displacement ton) of the aircraft’s chassis, reduces Base Speed by 10% and reduces Agility by 1.
  • Folding Wings/Rotors (TL 3) Aircraft can be designed with folding wings and/or rotors to allow them to be stored more efficiently. It costs Cr600 per 12 Spaces (one displacement ton) of the aircraft’s chassis, and reduces the size of the aircraft by 25% when storing the vessel.
  • Fresher (TL 7) A Fresher, complete with toilet, sink and shower, takes up 6 Spaces and costs Cr1,500. Freshers are automatically included as part of any stateroom.
  • Galley (TL 3) A Mini-galley takes up 6 Spaces, serves up to five people and costs Cr1,000. A Full Galley take up 18 Spaces, plus 3 Spaces per 10 people served. It costs Cr2,000 plus Cr500 per person served.
  • General Purpose Lab (TL 7) A General Purpose Lab provides no bonuses but allows tasks to be performed with no penalty for missing tools/equipment. General Purpose Lab units consume 6 Spaces per researcher using the lab and cost Cr10,000 per lab unit.
  • Holding Tank (TL 8) Holding tanks can be built to any size, at the price of Cr1,500 per Space. Holding tanks can be designed to carry liquids or gases, which is determined at the time of installation.
  • Holo-Suite (TL10) This is advanced holographic projection suite. Often used on exploration vehicles as a large display unit, it has other, less wholesome, uses. It takes up 3 Spaces and costs Cr15,000.
  • Hot Tub/Pool (TL 6) This takes up a minimum of one Space per person capacity and costs Cr3,000 per Space.
  • Liquid Cannon (TL 4) Liquid Cannons are used for fire suppression, riot control and dispersal of chemicals. A liquid cannon costs Cr2,000, takes up 3 Spaces and requires 3 Spaces per minute’s firing duration of liquid carried. A liquid cannon has a maximum range of Medium.
  • Manipulator Arms (TL 5) Manipulator Arms are remote appendages with claws or hands. Manipulator arms vary in Strength and Dexterity. Arms have a Strength of 2 and a Dexterity of 1, with a price of Cr10,000. Increasing Strength or Dexterity costs Cr5,000 per point, to the maximum indicated in the table below. Manipulator arms do not take up space in the chassis.
  • Nuclear Damper (TL 12) The nuclear damper projects a wave that modifies the strong nuclear force and can thus either prevent nuclear weapons from operating or else detonate them prematurely. They cannot detonate weapons stored in damper boxes, however. It takes up 12 Spaces and costs Cr500,000.
  • Operating Theater (TL 5) An Operating Theater is a room equipped for use as an emergency medical clinic. Until TL 10, the vehicle must remain stationary in order for the Operating Theatre to be used. After that, the theatre can be built on a stabilized bed that allows it to be used while the vehicle is in motion. An operating theater consumes 12 Spaces plus 9 Spaces per patient. It costs Cr1,500 per Space used. An operating theater can serve as a mobile sickbay or hospital for surgery and medical care, as detailed under Medical Treatment in Chapter 5: Personal Combat in the Cepheus Engine SRD.
  • Refrigeration (TL 5) Refrigeration units take up one Space for every 10 Spaces that are to be refrigerated. This costs Cr250 per Space. This is typically applied to Cargo Holds or Cargo Trailers, when needed.
  • Refueling Station (TL 9) The refueling station is designed to turn water into hydrogen fuel, using the sun as a power source. It requires a significant amount of space, and access to both water and sun. At TL 9, it requires one hour per 3 Spaces of the vehicle’s chassis to crack sufficient fuel to completely refuel the vehicle (assuming it uses hydrogen). At TL 12 this is reduced to one hour per 12 Spaces of the vehicle’s chassis. Refueling stations require 12 Spaces plus 1 Space per 50 tons of vessel to be refueled. They cost Cr15,000 per space.
  • Research Lab Space (TL 9) Lab Space includes analytic equipment, computer workstations and equipment appropriate to the discipline it is focused on, defined during construction. Lab Space grants a skill DM equal to +1, +2 or +3 and take up 3 Spaces per bonus per researcher using it. A +3 DM lab, used by 3 researchers, would take up 27 Spaces. Price is Cr10,000 per 3 Spaces used. Types of lab include: Physics, chemistry, biology, psychology, structures and materials. Other types are possible.
  • Survey Sampling Equipment (TL 5) This covers several different types of equipment that act to sample atmosphere, ground and any water or other fluids.
  • Atmosphere Sampler A system of collectors, pipes and filters for atmosphere sampling, including any particulates, taints and organic matter. It takes up 9 Spaces and costs Cr10,000.
  • Geology Sampler An array of scooping devices for shallow ground testing along with a hollow-core drills capable of drilling down one kilometer. It takes up 45 Spaces and costs Cr100,000. Geology Samplers add a +1 DM to all geology-based checks at TL 10 and a +2 DM at TL 14.
  • Hydrology Sampler This is a set of liquid sampling equipment, holding tanks and testing equipment. It costs Cr10,000, and takes up 15 Spaces. Hydrology Samplers add a +1 DM to all hydology-based checks at TL 10 and a +2 DM at TL 14.
  • Wet Bar (TL 2) A basic wet bar, usually species-specific. It takes up 1.5 Spaces and costs Cr2,000.
Table: Manipulator Arm Maximums, By Tech Level
TL Max Str Max Dex
5 6 4
8 12 8
11 18 12
14 24 16
Table: Additional Vehicle Components
Component TL Spaces Price (Cr)
Cargo Hold 1
Cargo Trailer 1 See description See description
Wet Bar 2 1 5 Cr2,000
Detention Cells 3 12 Cr125,000
Floats/Pontoons 3 See description See description
Galley 3 6 Cr1,000
Galley, Full 3 See description See description
Crane, Heavy 4 24 Cr100,000
Crane, Light 4 3 Cr2,500
Crane, Medium 4 12 Cr40,000
Fire Extinguishers 4 0 Cr500
Liquid Cannon 4 3 Cr2,000
Cutting Equipment 5 15 Cr10,000
Digging Equipment 5 30 Cr25,000
Ejection Seat 5 2 Cr5,000
Entertainment System 5 0 Cr200
Manipulator Arms 5 See description See description
Operating Theater 5 See description See description
Refrigeration 5 1 per 10 Spaces refrigerated Cr250 per Space
Survey Sampling Equipment, Atmosphere Sampler 5 9 Cr10,000
Survey Sampling Equipment, Geology Sampler 5 45 Cr100,000
Survey Sampling Equipment, Hydrology Sampler 5 15 Cr10,000
Airlock 6 12 Cr200,000
Hot Tub/Pool 6 1 per person Cr3,000 per Space
Fresher 7 6 Cr1,500
General Purpose Lab 7 6 Cr10,000
Cargo Arm 8 1 Cr50,000
Holding Tank 8 By size Cr1,500 per Space
Refueling Station 9 See description See description
Research Lab Space 9 See description See description
Holo-Suite 10 3 Cr15,000
Autodoc 12 6 Cr40,000
Emergency Low Berth 12 12 Cr100,000
Nuclear Damper 12 12 Cr500,000

Vehicle Armaments

Military vehicles, as well as civilian vehicles in certain star systems, often carry weapons. Vehicles carry weapons in one of four ways: gun ports, weapon mounts, vehicular turrets, and ordinance bays.

Gun Ports

Gun ports are mounts for small arms. Gun ports cost Cr250 each, and require no Spaces. Gun Ports are used at Personal Weapon Ranges only, and do not benefit from stabilization or fire control. Gun Ports do not require a vehicle weapon point (see Weapon Mount, below). A gun port allows the gunner to benefit from the vehicle’s armor, except when the attacker is adjacent to the gun port itself.

Table: Gun Port Weapons
Weapon TL Price (Cr) Spaces RoF Range Dmg Recoil LL
Revolver 4 Cr150 0.01 1 ranged (pistol) 2D6 Yes 6
Auto Pistol 5 Cr200 0.01 1 ranged (pistol) 2D6 Yes 6
Carbine 5 Cr200 0.04 1 ranged (shotgun) 2D6 Yes 6
Rifle 5 Cr200 0.05 1 ranged (rifle) 3D6 Yes 6
Shotgun 5 Cr150 0.05 1 ranged (shotgun) 4D6 Yes 7
Submachinegun 5 Cr500 0.03 0/4 ranged (assault wpn) 2D6 Yes 4
Auto Rifle 6 Cr1,000 0.06 1/4 ranged (rifle) 3D6 Yes 6
Assault Rifle 7 Cr300 0.04 1/4 ranged (assault wpn) 3D6 Yes 4
Body Pistol 7 Cr500 0.01 1 ranged (pistol) 2D6 Yes 1
Grenade Launcher 7 Cr400 0.07 1 ranged (shotgun) By grenade Yes 3
Rocket Launcher 7 Cr2,000 0.07 1 ranged (rocket) 4D6 No 3
Laser Carbine 8 Cr2,500 0.06 1 ranged (pistol) 4D6 No 2
RAM Grenade Launcher 8 Cr800 0.07 1/3 ranged (assault wpn) By grenade Yes 3
Snub Pistol 8 Cr150 0.01 1 ranged (pistol) 2D6 No 6
Accelerator Rifle 9 Cr900 0.03 1/3 ranged (rifle) 3D6 No 6
Laser Rifle 9 Cr3,500 0.07 1 ranged (rifle) 5D6 No 2
Advanced Combat Rifle 10 Cr1,000 0.04 1/4 ranged (rifle) 3D6 Yes 6
Armor Rifle, Man Portable (ARMP) 10 Cr10,000 0.18 1/4 ranged (rocket) 10D6 Yes 3
Gauss Rifle 12 Cr1,500 0.04 1/4/10 ranged (rifle) 4D6 No 6
Laser Pistol 12 Cr1,000 0.02 1 ranged (pistol) 4D6 No 2
Plasma Gun, Man Portable (PGMP) 12 Cr20,000 0.12 1/4 ranged (rifle) 10D6 Yes 2
Stagger Laser 12 Cr7,500 0.11 1/4 ranged (assault wpn) 5D6 No 2
Magrail Rifle 13 Cr2,200 0.05 1/4 ranged (rifle) 5D6 No 6
Fusion Gun, Man Portable (FGMP) 14 Cr100,000 0.14 1/4 ranged (rifle) 16D6 Yes 2

Weapon Mounts

weapon point is a location on a vessel or vehicle designed to carry an external or internal load. A vehicle’s chassis or a vessel’s hull can support one weapon point per 5 tons, with a minimum of one. For example, a twoton vehicle has one weapon point, while a ten-ton vehicle would have two weapon points, and an 800-ton naval destroyer has 160 weapon points.

Weapon mounts come in three varieties: fixed, ring and pintle. A fixed mount is permanently affixed to the chassis, and cannot move or be removed. A pintle mount is effectively a post upon which the weapon is affixed, and the weapon pivots on the point of attachment to aim and fire. A ring mount is effectively a ring of metal that serves as the track upon which the weapon traverses as the weapon is aimed and fired.

A weapon mount may be attached to an open weapon point on the vehicle, and a weapon point may only support one weapon mount. Weapon mounts do not offer any sort of fire control. Weapon mounts do not take up any Spaces themselves, nor do they add any extra Spaces to a vehicle. Weapons in a weapon mount still count against the available Spaces in a vehicle.

  • Fixed Mount weapons cannot move, and so are limited to firing in one direction (normally straight ahead). A fixed mount has no price and must simply be noted at time of construction.
  • Gun Shields Both pintle and ring mounts can be equipped with gun shields, which provide the gunner with Armor equal to half the tech level of the vehicle rounded down, minimum of one, in the direction the weapon is facing.

The Weapon Mounts table describes the various weapon mounts and modifications available in the Vehicle Design System. Each column is described as follows:

  • TL The minimum tech level required to manufacture such an item.
  • Price Price of this weapon mount in Credits (Cr).
  • Max Spaces The maximum size of a weapon, in Spaces, that this weapon mount can carry.
  • Stabilized Indicates if the mount is stabilized and so does not suffer a penalty to fire while moving.
Table: Weapon Mounts
Mount Type TL Price (Cr) Max Spaces Stabilized
Fixed 1 0
Pintle 4 500 1.5 N
Ring 4 750 1.5 N
Pintle, Powered 7 1,500 3 Y
Ring, Powered 7 2,150 3 Y
Gun Shield 200 per point of Armor granted

Vehicle Turrets

Vehicle turrets come in two varieties: small and large. A vehicle turret takes up one weapon point per 60 Spaces in size, or fraction thereof, of the turret itself. A small turret is only big enough to fit the weapon installed, and is remotely controlled from within the vehicle, while a large turret holds both the installed weapon and its operator. Vehicle turrets can also represent gun pods and other housing for larger weapons on vehicles.

  • Coaxial (or Paraxial) Mounts Multiple weapons can be mounted in the same turret. All weapons mounted in the same turret have the same firing arc. Such turrets consume an additional weapon point per additional weapon beyond the first. This is in addition to the standard allocation of one weapon point per 60 Spaces in size, or fraction thereof, of the turret itself.
  • Pop-Up is a quality that can be applied to any type of turret – the turret is concealed in a pod or recess on the hull, and is detectable only when deployed. A ship with all its weapons in pop-up turrets looks unarmed to a casual sensor scan.
Table: Vehicle Turrets
Turret Type Spaces Price (Cr)
Small 0.5, plus weapon volume in Spaces Cr8,000 per Space
Large 3, plus weapon volume in Spaces Cr16,000 per Space
Pop-Up Base x2 As base, plus additional Cr4,000 per Space

Vehicular Weapons

The following are common vehicular weapons, primarily those used for vehicular turrets. Each column is described as follows:

  • TL The minimum tech level required to manufacture such an item.
  • Price Price of this weapon in Credits (Cr).
  • Spaces Number of Spaces this weapon occupies.
  • RoF Rate of Fire. The number of rounds that may be fired during a significant action in the format: Single Shot / Burst Shot / Automatic Fire.
  • Range The range category for this weapon.
  • Dmg The damage a weapon inflicts.
  • Radius The distance from the target point that damage is still dealt.
  • Recoil Lists if the weapon has recoil when fired.
  • LL The Law Level where the weapon first becomes illegal.

Special Weapon Rules

Several types of weapons have their own rules.

  • Disintegrators The Effect used with a disintegrator is not determined by the attack roll; instead it is equal to the Armor rating of the target – meaning that the weapon will always inflict damage if it hits.
  • Meson Weapons Meson weapons are unaffected by armor, as the blast only becomes harmful after it has already passed through the hull. Meson guns also inflict an automatic radiation hit on the crew of any target struck.
  • Pulse Weapons Energy weapons, such as lasers, with the pulse designation fire short, rapid bursts of intense energy. Pulse weapons are notoriously inaccurate and suffer a DM -2 on all attack rolls.
Table: Vehicular Turret Weapons
Weapon TL Price (Cr) Spaces RoF Range Dmg Radius Recoil LL
Ballista/Catapult-TL 1 1 Cr1,500 6 1 ranged (very long) 3D6 Yes 3
Mortar-TL 2 2 Cr6,000 6 1 ranged (distant) 3D6 10m (7 sq.) Yes 3
Rocket Artillery-TL 2 2 Cr4,000 15 1 ranged (v long) 2D6 5m (3 squares) No 3
Artillery Gun-TL 3 3 Cr120,000 24 1 ranged (v distant) 7D6 10m (7 sq.) Yes 3
Howitzer-TL 3 3 Cr60,000 12 1 ranged (distant) 5D6 10m (7 sq.) Yes 3
Artillery Gun-TL 4 4 Cr160,000 24 1 ranged (v distant) 8D6 10m (7 sq.) Yes 3
Howitzer-TL 4 4 Cr80,000 12 1 ranged (distant) 6D6 10m (7 sq.) Yes 3
Machine Gun-TL 5 5 Cr6,000 3 0/20 ranged (rifle) 4D6 Yes 3
Mortar-TL 5 5 Cr8,000 6 1 ranged (distant) 4D6 10m (7 sq.) Yes 3
Rocket Artillery-TL 5 5 Cr6,000 15 1/3 ranged (distant) 3D6 5m (3 squares) No 3
Autocannon-TL 6 6 Cr200,000 24 1/4 ranged (distant) 6D6 1.5m (1 sq.) Yes 3
Missile Rack 6 Cr48,000 12 1/3 By missile Special Special Yes 3
Artillery Gun-TL 7 7 Cr240,000 24 1 ranged (v distant) 10D6 20m (13 sq.) Yes 3
Howitzer-TL 7 7 Cr120,000 12 1 ranged (distant) 8D6 20m (13 sq.) Yes 3
Mortar-TL 7 7 Cr12,000 6 1/2 ranged (distant) 6D6 20m (13 sq.) Yes 3
Pulse Laser-TL 7 7 Cr80,000 3 1/6 ranged (v distant) 6D6 10m (7 sq.) No 2
Rocket Artillery-TL 7 7 Cr10,000 15 1/6 ranged (distant) 5D6 10m (7 squares) No 3
Autocannon-TL 8 8 Cr300,000 24 1/6 ranged (distant) 8D6 3m (2 sq.) Yes 3
Machine Gun-TL 8 8 Cr9,000 3 0/100 ranged (rifle) 6D6 Yes 3
Mass Driver-TL 8 8 Cr250,000 180 1 ranged (v distant) 10D6 3m (2 sq.) Yes 3
Railgun-TL 8 8 Cr150,000 18 1/3 ranged (v distant) 6D6 3m (2 sq.) Yes 3
Beam Laser-TL 9 9 Cr100,000 3 1/3 ranged (v distant) 6D6 10m (7 sq.) No 2
Artillery Gun-TL 10 10 Cr280,000 24 1 ranged (v distant) 11D6 30m (20 sq.) Yes 3
Autocannon-TL 10 10 Cr350,000 24 1/6 ranged (distant) 9D6 4.5m (3 sq.) Yes 3
Howitzer-TL 10 10 Cr140,000 12 1/2 ranged (distant) 9D6 30m (20 sq.) Yes 3
Mass Driver-TL 10 10 Cr275,000 180 1 ranged (v distant) 11D6 4.5m (3 sq.) Yes 3
Mortar-TL 10 10 Cr14,000 6 1/3 ranged (distant) 7D6 30m (20 sq.) Yes 3
Plasma Gun-TL 10 10 Cr70,000 3 1/6 ranged (v distant) 9D6 15m (10 sq.) No 2
Pulse Laser-TL 10 10 Cr90,000 3 1/6 ranged (v distant) 7D6 15m (10 sq.) No 2
Railgun-TL 10 10 Cr175,000 18 1/6 ranged (v distant) 7D6 4.5m (3 sq.) Yes 3
Rocket Artillery-TL 10 10 Cr12,000 15 1/12 ranged (distant) 6D6 15m (10 squares) No 3
Beam Laser-TL 11 11 Cr120,000 3 1/3 ranged (v distant) 7D6 15m (10 sq.) No 2
Meson Accelerator-TL 11 11 Cr180,000 12 1/6 ranged (distant) 11D6 10m (7 sq.) Yes 2
Artillery Gun-TL 12 12 Cr360,000 24 1 ranged (v distant) 13D6 40m (27 sq.) Yes 3
Fusion Gun-TL 12 12 Cr180,000 3 1/6 ranged (v distant) 13D6 40m (27 sq.) No 2
Gauss Cannon-TL 12 12 Cr450,000 24 1/10 ranged (distant) 11D6 6m (4 sq.) Yes 3
Howitzer-TL 12 12 Cr180,000 12 1/2 ranged (distant) 11D6 40m (27 sq.) Yes 3
Mortar-TL 12 12 Cr18,000 6 1/3 ranged (distant) 9D6 40m (27 sq.) Yes 3
Plasma Gun-TL 12 12 Cr90,000 3 1/6 ranged (v distant) 11D6 20m (13 sq.) No 2
Rapid Pulse Plasma Gun-TL 12 12 Cr90,000 3 1/12 ranged (v distant) 11D6 20m (13 sq.) No 2
Rocket Artillery-TL 12 12 Cr16,000 15 1/12 ranged (distant) 8D6 20m (13 squares) No 3
Beam Laser-TL 13 13 Cr160,000 3 1/3 ranged (extreme) 9D6 20m (13 sq.) No 2
Mass Driver-TL 13 13 Cr325,000 180 1 ranged (extreme) 13D6 6m (4 sq.) Yes 3
Meson Accelerator-TL 13 13 Cr180,000 12 1/6 ranged (distant) 13D6 10m (7 sq.) Yes 2
Pulse Laser-TL 13 13 Cr110,000 3 1/6 ranged (extreme) 9D6 20m (13 sq.) No 2
Railgun-TL 13 13 Cr225,000 18 1/8 ranged (extreme) 9D6 6m (4 sq.) Yes 3
Rapid Pulse Fusion Gun-TL 14 14 Cr360,000 3 1/12 ranged (v distant) 13D6 40m (27 sq.) No 2
Artillery Gun-TL 15 15 Cr400,000 24 1/2 ranged (v distant) 14D6 50m (33 sq.) Yes 3
Fusion Gun-TL 15 15 Cr200,000 3 1/6 ranged (v distant) 14D6 50m (33 sq.) No 2
Gauss Cannon-TL 15 15 Cr500,000 24 1/15 ranged (distant) 12D6 7.5m (5 sq.) Yes 3
Howitzer-TL 15 15 Cr200,000 12 1/3 ranged (distant) 12D6 50m (33 sq.) Yes 3
Meson Accelerator-TL 15 15 Cr200,000 12 1/12 ranged (distant) 14D6 15m (10 sq.) Yes 2
Mortar-TL 15 15 Cr20,000 6 1/4 ranged (distant) 10D6 50m (33 sq.) Yes 3
Plasma Gun-TL 15 15 Cr100,000 3 1/6 ranged (v distant) 12D6 25m (17 sq.) No 2
Pulse Laser-TL 15 15 Cr120,000 3 1/6 ranged (extreme) 10D6 25m (17 sq.) No 2
Rapid Pulse Plasma Gun-TL 15 15 Cr100,000 3 1/15 ranged (v distant) 12D6 25m (17 sq.) No 2
Rocket Artillery-TL 15 15 Cr18,000 15 1/12 ranged (distant) 9D6 25m (17 squares) No 3
Beam Laser-TL 16 16 Cr180,000 3 1/3 ranged (extreme) 10D6 25m (17 sq.) No 2
Mass Driver-TL 16 16 Cr350,000 180 1 ranged (extreme) 14D6 7.5m (5 sq.) Yes 3
Railgun-TL 16 16 Cr250,000 18 1/12 ranged (extreme) 10D6 7.5m (5 sq.) Yes 3
Rapid Pulse Fusion Gun-TL 16 16 Cr400,000 3 1/15 ranged (v distant) 14D6 50m (33 sq.) No 2
Artillery Gun-TL 17 17 Cr800,000 24 1/2 ranged (extreme) 17D6 60m (40 sq.) No 3
Fusion Gun-TL 17 17 Cr260,000 3 1/6 ranged (v distant) 17D6 60m (40 sq.) No 2
Gauss Cannon-TL 17 17 Cr1,000,000 24 1/15 ranged (v distant) 15D6 9m (6 sq.) No 3
Howitzer-TL 17 17 Cr400,000 12 1/3 ranged (v distant) 15D6 60m (40 sq.) No 3
Mortar-TL 17 17 Cr40,000 6 1/4 ranged (distant) 13D6 60m (40 sq.) No 3
Plasma Gun-TL 17 17 Cr130,000 3 1/6 ranged (v distant) 15D6 30m (20 sq.) No 2
Pulse Laser-TL 17 17 Cr150,000 3 1/6 ranged (extreme) 13D6 30m (20 sq.) No 2
Rapid Pulse Plasma Gun-TL 17 17 Cr130,000 3 1/24 ranged (v distant) 15D6 30m (20 sq.) No 2
Rocket Artillery-TL 17 17 Cr24,000 15 1/12 ranged (v distant) 12D6 30m (20 squares) No 3
Beam Laser-TL 18 18 Cr240,000 3 1/3 ranged (extreme) 13D6 30m (20 sq.) No 2
Disintegrator-TL 18 18 Cr5,000,000 24 1/3 ranged (v distant) 17D6 9m (6 sq.) No 2
Mass Driver-TL 18 18 Cr600,000 180 1 ranged (extreme) 17D6 9m (6 sq.) No 3
Meson Accelerator-TL 18 18 Cr250,000 12 1/12 ranged (v distant) 17D6 15m (10 sq.) No 2
Railgun-TL 18 18 Cr500,000 18 1/15 ranged (extreme) 13D6 9m (6 sq.) No 3
Rapid Pulse Fusion Gun-TL 18 18 Cr520,000 3 1/24 ranged (v distant) 17D6 60m (40 sq.) No 2

Vehicular Weapon Ammunition

The Vehicular Weapon Ammunition table describes the price of ammunitions for certain vehicular weapons. (Weapons not included in the table are self-contained munitions that are larger than one Space, or are powered from the energy generated by the vehicle’s power plant.) Each column is described as follows:

  • Price/Space The price of a full Space (or kiloliter) of standard ammunition for the weapon.
  • Rounds/Space The number of rounds in a full Space (or kiloliter) of standard ammunition for the weapon.
Table: Vehicular Weapon Ammunition
Weapon Price/Space (Cr) Rounds/Space
Artillery Gun 4,000 25
Autocannon 4,000 25
Ballista/Catapult 100 50
Gauss Cannon 25,000 18,000
Howitzer 2,000 25
Machine Gun 5,000 10,000
Mass Driver 9,000 2
Missile Rack By Missile 1
Mortar 900 15
Railgun 900 15
Rocket Artillery 5,000 3

Ordinance Bays

Dedicated ordinance bays that carry just one type of weapon cost Cr5,000 per Space of weapon that they are designed to hold. Rate-of-fire is equal to the number of weapons in the bay, and bays can be reloaded. General purpose ordinance bays able to hold different types of weapons cost Cr10,000 per Space of weapon they are designed to hold. They can launch one missile or torpedo per round, or drop up to half their Space capacity in bombs.

Note that an ordinance bay takes up one weapon point per 60 Spaces in size, or fraction thereof, of the bay itself, minimum of one. For example, a Heavy Nuclear Bomb ordinance bay housing four such bombs occupies 24 Spaces, which takes up one weapon point. An ordinance bay housing 15 Heavy High Explosive Bombs occupies 90 spaces, and takes up two weapon points

Table: Ordinance Bay Weapons
Ordinance Type TL Spaces Price (Cr) Range Damage Notes
Bomb, High Explosive, Standard 4 3 Cr1,200 ranged (v distant) 12D6  
Torpedo, High Explosive, Standard 4 12 Cr2,400 ranged (v distant) 12D6 Treat as aquatic missiles
Bomb, High Explosive, Heavy 5 6 Cr4,000 ranged (v distant) 14D6  
Torpedo, High Explosive, Heavy 5 24 Cr8,000 ranged (v distant) 14D6 Treat as aquatic missiles
Bomb, Nuclear, Heavy 6 6 Cr8,000 ranged (v distant) 28D6 + 2D6x10 rads  
Bomb, Nuclear, Standard 6 3 Cr2,400 ranged (v distant) 24D6 + 2D6x10 rads  
Torpedo, Nuclear, Heavy 6 24 Cr16,000 ranged (v 28D6 + 2D6x10 Treat as aquatic missiles
Torpedo, Nuclear, Standard 6 12 Cr4,800 ranged (v distant) 24D6 + 2D6x10 rads Treat as aquatic missiles
Bomb, Antimatter, Heavy 17 6 Cr24,000 ranged (extreme) 42D6 + 4D6x10 rads  
Bomb, Antimatter, Standard 17 3 Cr7,200 ranged (extreme) 36D6 + 4D6x10 rads  
Torpedo, Antimatter, Heavy 17 24 Cr48,000 ranged (extreme) 42D6 + 4D6x10 rads Treat as aquatic missiles
Torpedo, Antimatter, Standard 17 12 Cr14,400 ranged (extreme) 36D6 + 4D6x10 rads Treat as aquatic missiles

Missiles

A number of vehicular weapons determine range and damage by the type of tactical missiles they fire. Common missiles are listed in the Vehicular Missiles table. Standard HE refers to Standard High Explosive warheads.

  • Smart The attack roll for smart missiles is always 8+, and they may attack every combat round if they miss until they are destroyed, jammed or run out of fuel.
  • Radiation Hit In addition to standard damage, both nuclear and antimatter missiles automatically inflict one radiation hit, rolling on the Radiation Damage column of the Crew Hit location.
Table: Vehicular Missiles
Missile Type TL Spaces Price (Cr) Range Dmg
Standard HE, Unguided 3 1 Cr750 ranged (very long) 5D6
Standard HE, Remote-Guided 3 1 Cr750 ranged (very long) 5D6
Standard HE, Heat-Seeking 4 1 Cr1,000 ranged (very long) 6D6
Nuclear, Radar-Guided 6 1 Cr3,750 ranged (very long) 12D6 + 1 radiation hit
Standard HE, Radar-Guided 6 1 Cr1,250 ranged (distant) 6D6
Nuclear, Smart (Computer-Guided) 7 1 Cr5,000 ranged (distant) 16D6 + 1 radiation hit
Standard HE, Smart (ComputerGuided) 7 1 Cr2,500 ranged (very distant) 8D6
Nuclear, NAS-Guided 12 1 Cr2,500 ranged (very long) 13D6
Standard HE, NAS-Guided 12 1 Cr2,500 ranged (distant) 11D6
Antimatter, Smart (AI-Guided) 17 1 Cr10,000 ranged (extreme) 20D6 + 1 radiation hit

Anti-Missile Systems

Systems of this type will typically negate an incoming missile, rocket, launched grenade or mortar round on the roll of 8+. Some systems have Target DMs that modify this, and every system will suffer a -1 DM for every additional target it is forced to engage in each round. The Anti-Missile System Details table describes each system.

Table: Anti-Missile System Details
Type TL Effect Spaces Price (Cr) Minimum Effective Range Uses Reload Price (Cr)
Smoke Dischargers 3 DM+2 vs visual attacks (remote-guided missiles) 1.5 Cr1,000 6 Cr100
Chaff Dispensers 4 DM+2 vs thermal-guided attacks (heat-seeking missiles) 1.5 Cr1,200 6 Cr150
Flares 6 DM+2 vs radar-guided attacks (homing missiles) 1.5 Cr2,000 6 Cr200
Decoys 7 DM+2 vs smart missile attacks (radar-guided missiles) 1.5 Cr8,000 6 Cr1,000
Explosive Belt 8 Target DM +0 Cr15,000 Short 10 Cr800
Minigun 8 Target DM +0 9 Cr200,000 Medium 10 Cr7,000
Prismatic Aerosols 9 DM+2 vs laser-guided attacks; Lasers -2D6 damage 1.5 Cr4,000 6 Cr500
Laser 10 Target DM +1 12 Cr250,000 Medium
VRF Gauss 11 Target DM +0 9 Cr200,000 Medium 15 Cr20,000

Vehicle Armament Options

The following options are available as modifications on Vehicle Armaments.

  • Heavy Turret Weapon (TL3) Any vehicular armament that can be mounted in a turret can be purchased in a heavier version. Multiply the weapon’s price by 1.5, multiply the weapon’s ROF by 0.5, and increase the weapon’s damage by 1D6. This cannot be stacked with Light Turret Weapon.
  • Laser Guidance (TL8) All vehicles with mortars, howitzers, artillery guns, and autocannons can be equipped with laser guidance. This costs Cr1,000, takes up 1 space, and grants a DM +1 on these weapon’s attack rolls against a stationary target.
  • Light Turret Weapon (TL3) Any vehicular armament that can be mounted in a turret can be purchased in a lighter version. Multiply the weapon’s price by 0.75, increase the weapon’s range by one range band, and decrease the weapon’s damage by 1D6. This cannot be stacked with Heavy Turret Weapon.
  • Missile Guidance System (TL5) All vehicles equipped with missiles can use an installed missile guidance system to better aim missile strikes. This costs Cr10,000, takes up 6 spaces, and grants a DM +1 on missile-based attack rolls against a moving target.
  • Rotary Turret Weapon (TL5) Any machine gun mounted on a vehicle can be purchased in a rotary version. Double the weapon’s price and ROF, and decrease the weapon’s damage by 1D6.

Special Rules for Vehicles

The following are special rules related to vehicles and the Cepheus Engine VDS.

Alien Vehicles

The Cepheus Engine VDS assumes that the vehicle designs are based on humans or humanoid creatures with similar physiological constraints as humans. Alien vehicles typically follow the same design process as humans, but exceptions, particularly in accommodations, may exist based on differences in physiology. The Referee is the final arbiter on those differences.

Airship/Balloon Lift Envelope

Airships and balloons require a lift envelope to hold the lower-density gasses that allow the vessels to fly. Hydrogen and helium balloons can stay aloft almost indefinitely. Hot-air balloons have a duration equal to their Tech Level x 2 hours.

The inflated size of an envelope in Spaces can be calculated as per the formula found in the Lift Envelope Size by Atmosphere Density table. The envelope is not considered part of the chassis itself, but can be stored away in a space with a displacement volume equal to one percent (1%) of its inflated size.

All non-explosive weapons inflict only 1 point of damage to the envelope for each hit. Automatic weapons inflict damage equal to their Auto Rating. Once the lift envelope has taken an amount of Structure damage equal to one point per 60 Spaces of lift envelope size, it loses integrity.

Table: Lift Envelope Size by Atmosphere Density
Atmosphere Density Envelope Size, Hydrogen or Helium Envelope Size, Hot-Air
Very Thin UWP Size Code x Chassis (spaces) x 100 UWP Size Code x Chassis (spaces) x 200
Thin UWP Size Code x Chassis (spaces) x 25 UWP Size Code x Chassis (spaces) x 50
Standard UWP Size Code x Chassis (spaces) x 10 UWP Size Code x Chassis (spaces) x 20
Dense UWP Size Code x Chassis (spaces) x 5 UWP Size Code x Chassis (spaces) x 10

Atmospheres and Aircraft

All aircraft can only work properly for world size and atmosphere type UWP codes within 1 of their homeworld. Aircraft operating outside of their design codes suffer a -1 to Agility if they are within 1 of their home UWP codes for atmosphere and/or size, and cannot fly at all if they are operating beyond this, unless they are designed with a wider operation range. In any case, all aircraft require a minimum atmosphere code of 1 in order to function. Aircraft descriptions should include the world size and atmosphere codes.

  • Extended Operational Environment Range Aircraft can be designed with a wider operational environment range. This costs 100% of the Base Price of the aircraft but allows it to be used within two digits of the UPP size and atmosphere values instead of just one. These aircraft also suffer a -1 to Agility in all environments.

Missile and Torpedo Attacks

Unlike beam weapons, which travel at the speed of light and so hit the enemy vessel almost instantly, missile and torpedo weapons take time to travel to their target. For the sake of simplicity, they can be assumed to strike after a number of turns dependent on launch range, as shown in the Missile/Torpedo Time to Impact table. Missiles and Torpedoes cannot be used at Personal or Close range.

Table: Missile/Torpedo Time to Impact
Range Time to Impact
Personal
Close
Short 0
Medium 0
Long 0
Very Long 0
Distant 1
Very Distant 4
Extreme 8

When the missile or torpedo is launched, the gunner must make a Turret Weapons or Bay Weapons skill check to determine the accuracy of the launch. The effect of the skill check determines the chance that the missile or torpedo will strike its target when it hits. A target may react to incoming missiles or torpedoes by dodging or point defense. This reaction does not take place until the turn the missiles arrive at their destination, so any target response must wait until then.

  • Smart Missiles The missile to-hit roll for smart missiles is always 8+ and if they miss they make another attack every turn until they are destroyed with point defense, jammed with ECM, run out of fuel or otherwise dissuaded.
Table: Missile To-Hit By Skill Check Effect
Turret Weapons/Bay Weapons check Missile to-hit roll
Failed With Effect -6 or less 11+
Failed With Effect -1 to -5 10+
Succeeded With Effect 0 8+
Succeeded With Effect 1-5 7+
Succeeded With Effect 6+ 6+

Non-Powered Vehicles

Some vehicles do not have a power plant or a powered propulsion system. These rely on two forms of external force to provide movement: animals or the wind.

  • Animal-Powered Vehicles Some vehicles, particularly at very low Tech Levels, are powered by living creatures. An animal-powered vehicle requires one point of Strength (Str) per Space of chassis to move at the animal’s base walking speed. (Ground vehicles that run on rails halve the required Strength for movement.) For every five points of Strength less than what is required, Speed and Range decrease by 10%. There is no lower limit and Speed can be reduced to 0 so the vehicle cannot move at all.
Table: Speed and Range Modifiers by Animal Gait
Gait Speed Modifier Range
Walk Walk x 1 Endurance x 30 minutes
Trot Walk x 2 Endurance x 15 minutes
Canter Walk x 3 Endurance x 2 minutes
Run Walk x 4 Endurance x 1 minutes
Table: Sample Terran Animals Used to Power Vessels
Animal Str Speed Walk/Run (km/h) End
Elephant 24 6/24 15
Horse 10 7/28 12
Human 7 6/24 7
Mule 11 6/24 14
Ox 18 5/20 18
  • Wind-Powered Vehicles Often called sailing vessels, wind-powered vehicles depend on the wind and weather to provide the force necessary to move. The Sailing Speeds table captures the base speeds of different types of vehicles, as a percentage of wind speed. In the table, water-based also refers to water or similar fluids, depending on the world for which the vessel is designed.
Table: Sailing Speeds
Vehicle Type Speed (Vehicles under 10 tons) Speed (Vehicles 10+ tons)
Air-based 35% of wind 40% of wind
Ground-based 20% of wind 15% of wind
Water-based 20% of wind 30% of wind

Off-Road Movement for Ground Vehicles

The listed movement rate for any ground vehicle is its on-road movement. If a ground vehicle goes off-road, it suffers a -2 DM to Agility, Movement rate is reduced to 25% of normal and rough terrain cannot be crossed. A vehicle that is off-road capable does not suffer the -2 DM to Agility, and the Movement rate is not reduced. It can cross rough terrain with a -2 DM to Agility.

Vehicles Over 20 Tons

Some vehicles, such as ocean liners and other large watercraft, exceed the usual 20 tons limit defined by the Vehicle Design System. When designing vehicles of such size, the process remains much the same, with the following exceptions:

  1. Chassis: Select a hull of the appropriate size, based on tonnage, from the Smallcraft or Ship Design systems in the Cepheus Engine Core Rules. Because the hull does not have to be spaceworthy, divide the hull price by 25 to get an appropriate price for the chassis. Multiply the tonnage of the chassis by 12 to get the number of Spaces available. Construction time remains the same as the original hull.
  2. Power Plant: Select an appropriate power plant and maneuver drive from the Smallcraft or Ship Design system to represent the vehicle’s power plant. The differences in power plant construction for vehicles as opposed to space ships lead to a few changes in volume and price. Modify these values as needed based on Power Plant Type.

    • Vehicle Power Plant Spaces = Ship/Smallcraft Power Plant Drive tonnage x 0.90 x 12
    • Vehicle Power Plant Price = Power Plant Drive price x 0.006
  3. Propulsion: Select an appropriate maneuver drive from the Smallcraft or Ship Design system to represent the vehicle’s propulsion system. The differences in propulsion systems for vehicles as opposed to space ships lead to a few changes in volume and price. Use the Performance number given in the Smallcraft or Ship Design system to determine the craft’s base speed. Modify these values as needed based on Propulsion Type.

    • Vehicle Contact-Based Propulsion System Spaces = Ship/Smallcraft Maneuver Drive tonnage x 12
    • Vehicle Contact-Based Propulsion System Price = Ship/Smallcraft Maneuver Drive price x 0.0055
    • Vehicle Thrust-Based Propulsion System Spaces = Ship/Smallcraft Maneuver Drive tonnage x 0.90 x 12
    • Vehicle Thrust-Based Propulsion System Price = Ship/Smallcraft Maneuver Drive price x 0.25
  4. Crew: Determine crew using the standard Ship Design rules in Chapter 8: Ship Design and Construction of the core rules. Commercial and private vehicles tend to use the Minimum column of the Ship Crew Requirements table, while military vehicles tend to use the Full Complement column.
  5. Additional Vehicle Components: In addition to Vehicle Components, large vehicles can purchase an airlock or other ship design components. Multiply the tonnage of the component by 12 to get the number of Spaces it takes up.
  6. Armaments: Large vehicles have one hardpoint per 100 tons of displacement, minimum of one hardpoint, and can install ship weapons as per the ship design process, in addition to vehicle weapons.

Universal Vehicle Description Format

After a vehicle design has been created, it must be presented in a format that allows players to use the information within the game. The Cepheus Engine VDS describes vehicle designs using a universal vehicle description format, which is essentially a paragraph of text laid out in the following manner. Examples can be found in Chapter 2: Common Aircraft through Chapter 6: Uncommon Vehicles.

[Vehicle’s Tech Level] [Vehicle Descriptive Name]
Using a/an [Vehicle Configuration] [Vehicle Chassis Displacement]-ton chassis ([Chassis Damage Value] Hull, [Structure Damage Value] Structure,), the [Vehicle Descriptive Name] is [General Description of Vehicle’s Function]. [List any vehicle configuration options, if any.]. It carries a [Vehicle Power Plant Type], power plant/engine, Code [Power Plant Drive Code], and a/an [Vehicle Propulsion Type] propulsion system, Code [Propulsion System Drive Code] giving a top speed of [Vehicle Base Speed], a cruising speed of [Cruising Speed] and an Agility DM of [Agility DM]. [List any vehicle drive options, if any.] [Fuel Volume] kiloliters of [Fuel Type] support the power plant for [Duration of Vehicle Use]. [Any additional fuel usage notes.] This vehicle is equipped with [Vehicle Control System Interface] controls, [Vehicle Communication System] communication ([Communication System Range]), [Sensors Type] sensors ([Sensors Comms DM]), and a Model [Computer Model]computer. [Include any additional notes on the vehicles Control Systems, Communications Systems, Sensors or Computer.] There are [list accommodations individually by type and number]. The vehicle has [Number of Weapon Points] weapon points. [Describe any vehicle armaments that have been installed, if any. Also note any ammunition carried.] tons allocated for fire control. Installed on the hardpoints are [Describe number and type of turrets, and any weapon systems that have been installed, if any. Also note any ammunition carried for missiles and sandcasters.] This ship has [Number of Screens Installed] screens: [Describe number and type of screens]. There are [Number of Small Craft Hangers] small craft hangars, [Describe number and contents of each hangar]. [List any additional vehicle components here]. Cargo capacity is [Cargo Tonnage] tons (or [Cargo Spaces] kiloliters). The chassis is additionally armored with [Armor Type] (x[Level of Additional Armor].) [Note any Vehicle’s Armor options that have been installed.] The vehicle requires a crew of [Crew Total]: [List crew positions]. The vehicle can carry up to [list additional passenger count individually by number and type of accommodation]. The vehicle costs KCr[Price of Vehicle] (including discounts and fees) and takes [Construction Time] hours to build.