Outdoor represents a character’s ability to survive, navigate, and thrive in natural environments. It includes tracking, foraging, shelter-building, and understanding weather or terrain. Characters use Outdoor skills to travel safely, find resources, and avoid natural hazards. It’s essential for rangers, explorers, and anyone who operates beyond the comforts of civilization.
Launch surprise attacks from hidden positions, disrupting the enemy’s response and seizing control of the battlefield from the start.
Calm, guide, train, or influence the behavior of animals, from mounts to wild creatures—whether through empathy, discipline, or instinct.
Cooking is the skill of preparing meals, using knowledge of ingredients and techniques to create satisfying and nourishing food in various environments.
Craft and maintain arrows, bolts, and similar projectiles, including special ammunition with tactical effects.
Search for food, water, and natural materials in the wild to sustain your group or gather ingredients for crafting traps, poisons, or tools.
Identify and use natural plants, fungi, and roots to create basic remedies, drugs, poisons, and survival items.
Conceal yourself from sight using natural or artificial cover in wilderness or rural environments.
Track and pursue prey with animal-level intelligence across natural terrain, using stealth, pattern recognition, and survival instincts.
Fire from long range with calculated precision and deadly intent, applying full focus on damage rather than combat disruption or effects.
Control, maneuver, and fight while mounted—on animal, creature, or personal vehicle—across varied terrain and in combat situations.
Move silently and without trace through wilderness terrain, using subtle weight shifts and environmental awareness to avoid detection.
Maintain speed and balance through unstable, uneven, or hazardous terrain - even during combat - without loss of mobility or composure.
Endure, adapt, and guide others through extreme conditions - on hostile planets, space wrecks, or in chaotic environments (even in some combat situations).
Follow the trail of creatures, people, or vehicles - or cover your own - to manage pursuit, predict movement, or avoid being tracked.