MET LARP SRD
(2013 BNS MET System)
Recrimination
Description
Humans and vampires alike are obsessed with documenting, categorizing, and cataloging everything. As technology spreads across the world, it's harder and harder to remain off the grid and beneath notice. While the rest of the world has to resort to feats of digital editing and prayers to go unnoticed you rely on dark favors and the combined will of the infernal to stay hidden, casting suspicions on others, as you deny involvement.
System
To enact this ritual, you must sit in complete darkness and solitude and rid yourself of personal thoughts. Focusing on the names and faces of others you have met during your existence, enemies, or friends even you envision yourself fading into the background of these memories. As long as you do not willingly raise your voice or cause the focus of a social situation to be drawn directly to yourself, you may continue to benefit from this ritual for the remainder of the night. If others cause you to become the focus of a situation the ritual benefits remain.
While benefiting from this ritual whenever you can touch an object and obscure any onlookers’ view of that object you can alter any visual representation of a person contained on it to another individual. For example, if someone presented a photograph of a person caught in the act of stealing you could take that picture, look at, obscuring the accuser's view of it, and instantaneously alter the image to depict another individual you are familiar with. If you choose, you may instead alter the image to show a complete stranger that bears no resemblance to anyone of importance. The effects of this ritual last for the remainder of the night and does not cause your aura to appear infernal unless you have other infernal effects active. The items you alter likewise show no signs of infernal magic. This is an exception to the rule that states when effected or employing infernal powers your aura displays the telltale signs of infernalism. This ritual does not confer any mind-altering effect on those observing the newly altered evidence. It is best used to alter incriminating evidence before it is observed and when deleting the evidence altogether might cause further investigation.