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<div id='character-details'>
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[[File:icon_moonchild.png|250px]]
[[File:icon_acrobat.png|250px]]
<span style="display: block; color: black; font-size: 20px; text-align: center; margin-top: 10px;">Information</span>
<span style="display: block; color: black; font-size: 20px; text-align: center; margin-top: 10px;">Information</span>


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<td>Type</td>
<td>Type</td>
<td>[[Character Types#Outsider|Outsider]]</td>
<td>[[Character Types#Outsider|Outsider]]</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Artist</td>
<td>Aiden Roberts</td>
</tr>
</tr>
</table>
</table>


<p class='flavour'>"Scorpio looks sideways at the lovers, and you have a choice to make. With silver cross my palm, and your fate shall be revealed. With steel cross my throat, and by the stars you shall regret it."</p>
<p class='flavour'>"Welcome, one and all, to the greatest show on earth."</p>
<span style="display: block; color: black; font-size: 20px; text-align: center;">Appears in</span>
[[File:logo_bad_moon_rising.png|100px]]
 
<span style="display: block; color: black; font-size: 20px; text-align: center; margin-top: 20px;">Cult of the Clocktower Episode</span>
<span style="display: block; color: black; font-size: 14px; text-align: center;">by Andrew Nathenson</span>
<div style='padding-bottom: 10px' class="html5audio" data-file="https://anchor.fm/s/daf1f9c/podcast/play/56186402/https%3A%2F%2Fd3ctxlq1ktw2nl.cloudfront.net%2Fstaging%2F2022-7-15%2F280916138-44100-2-e1c79e6aab693.m4a">You need to enable JavaScript to play this audio</div>


</div>
</div>
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== Summary ==
== Summary ==
"When you learn that you died, publicly choose 1 alive player. Tonight, if it was a good player, they die."
"Each night*, if either good living neighbour is drunk or poisoned, you die."


The Moonchild curses someone upon death, killing them too.
The Acrobat dies if the people they neighbour are drunk or poisoned.
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<div class='example'>
<div class='example'>
The {{Evil|Pukka}} kills the Moonchild. The next morning, the Moonchild chooses a player, who is the {{Good|Exorcist}}. That night, the {{Good|Exorcist}} dies.
The Acrobat neighbours the {{Good|Lycanthrope}} and the {{Good|Amnesiac}}. The {{Good|Lycanthrope}} has been poisoned by the {{Evil|Widow}}. On the first night, the Acrobat lives, because the Acrobat's ability doesn't apply on the first night. On the second night, the Acrobat dies.
</div>
</div>


<div class='example'>
<div class='example'>
The {{Good|Pacifist}} is in play. The Moonchild is executed but remains alive. The Moonchild does not choose a player, because the Moonchild did not die.
The Acrobat neighbours the {{Good|Moonchild}} and the {{Good|Soldier}}. The {{Good|Soldier}} is executed, and the Acrobat's living neighbours are now the {{Good|Moonchild}} and the {{Evil|Boomdandy}}. The {{Good|Moonchild}} dies at night, and the Acrobat's living neighbours are now the drunk {{Good|Sailor}} and the {{Evil|Boomdandy}}. The Acrobat dies.
</div>
</div>


<div class='example'>
<div class='example'>
The {{Evil|Shabaloth}} eats the Moonchild. The Moonchild chooses the {{Evil|Assassin}}, who remains alive. The {{Evil|Shabaloth}} regurgitates the Moonchild. A few nights later, the {{Evil|Shabaloth}} eats the Moonchild again. This time, the Moonchild chooses the {{Good|Gossip}}, who dies.
The Acrobat neighbours the {{Evil|Imp}} and the {{Good|Dreamer}}. The {{Evil|Imp}} also neighbours the {{Good|Clockmaker}}. The Acrobat does not die, because neither the {{Good|Dreamer}} nor the {{Good|Clockmaker}} are drunk or poisoned. (The Acrobat's ability ignores Evil players, so the {{Evil|Imp}}'s status is not considered.) The {{Good|Snake Charmer}} selects the {{Evil|Imp}}, turning the {{Evil|Imp}}'s player into a good, poisoned {{Good|Snake Charmer}}. The Acrobat dies.
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== Tips & Tricks ==
== Tips & Tricks ==


* Try to avoid dying if you can! Even though you're an Outsider, you are still a good player, and in Bad Moon Rising you don't always have a lot of good players to spare. This is especially true for you, since the extra player who dies thanks to your ability ''must'' be good, meaning you can't even hope to take someone evil out with you. Bluffing as something difficult to kill (like the {{Good|Fool}} or {{Good|Goon}}) to avoid the demon's attention is a good option, especially if you quietly reveal to good players your ''real'' ability so they don't turn around and execute you. Alternatively, you can just not admit anything to anyone until you absolutely must, keeping yourself safe that way!
* The term "good living neighbours" specifically means your nearest clockwise and anticlockwise good and alive players, rather than if your nearest alive neighbours are good. So if the closest alive clockwise player is evil, it will ignore that person and skip over them until it finds the nearest good alive clockwise neighbour.
 
* Your neighbours are crucial to your ability, and you want to know whether they're information characters or not, and what kind of information they get. A lot of your possible strategies depend on who they are, and so it's important that you can learn as much about who they are and what they can do.


* DO die. This isn't always the best move (and should really only be attempted early in the game), but your ability is a pretty strong confirmation that a player is good. If they die, you can be confident they are telling the truth, which in turn means that you can trust their information. It's best to coordinate who you're going to choose before your death - some good players will be more comfortable with an early death compared to others. Asking for the town to execute you for the sake of gaining information is also a good way to build trust if you are dealing with suspicion - most evil players will not volunteer to die. A {{Evil|Zombuul}} or {{Evil|Devil's Advocate}} may throw a spanner in your works though!
* There is no need to pay attention to the first night. You can't die on the first night. But pay attention to who is alive and who is dead on the nights thereafter. Who is alive and who is dead will determine who your good living neighbours are.  


* On death, choose someone you think is good to inflict with your deadly curse. There's a couple of great reasons for this! Firstly, should they die: you know you can trust that they are good, and that any information they have is ''probably'' reliable. Secondly, if your ability activates and this person dies, it is likely that you are telling the truth. While the evil team ''can'' simulate your ability activating via the help of the Demon or {{Evil|Assassin}}, they will often just accept the free extra kill that you provided, leading to an unusual number of deaths. If the good team believes you, they can believe the person you killed, and from there start to piece information together to ferret out the evil team lurking among them!
* Even though it seems that your ability only harms you, it is actually quite helpful. If you live through the night, this means that your good living neighbours are both sober and healthy. While this cannot tell you anything about first night information, if either of your alive neighbours are worried about their information being influenced by poisoning or drunkenness, you can confide to them that their information is not affected by this.


* On death, choose someone you suspect is evil. There's a couple of great reasons for this! Firstly, if you believe that the following night is going to see a lot of death (e.g., a {{Evil|Po}} has charged up), then the extra kill from your ability might be the one that pushes the game firmly in evil's favor. Secondly, should that player not die? You can now be reasonably confident that they ''are'' evil. The confirmation is not as drastic as confirming someone as good, but if you believe you are sober, then regard that player with a lot of suspicion moving forward - there's usually more than one clue that someone isn't who they claim to be.
* The Acrobat only reacts to good alive neighbours being drunk or poisoned, but does not directly react to players registering falsely or being mad. If the Acrobat has an alive good neighbour being made mad by the {{Evil|Cerenovus}} there is no effect. If the Acrobat is next to an alive good neighbour that registers falsely the Demon, such as from the {{Good|Fortune Teller}} there is no effect. However, if the Acrobat has the {{Good|Recluse}} as a neighbour who is poisoned, then this would cause the Acrobat to die (in this instance, there is no chance for the {{Good|Recluse}} to register as evil because they're poisoned).


* When choosing the player you intend to pick, be aware that characters that "cannot die" or are protected at night will not die as a result of your ability. This includes characters like the {{Good|Sailor}} and {{Good|Fool}}, and players in the company of a {{Good|Tea Lady}} or an {{Good|Innkeeper}}. Try to have a good idea of who is who before you die, so you can choose around these character. Or, if you want to avoid an extra death, you can deliberately choose one of them, keeping the death toll from rising too dramatically.
* If you die at night, this means that one of your good living neighbours is drunk or poisoned. Assume that both of them are drunk or poisoned, and figure out which makes the most sense. Also, if you can figure out why they are drunk or poisoned, you may have found out that a particular Minion is in play, such as the {{Evil|Poisoner}}, or you may be able to confirm the identity of a good player, such as the {{Good|Sailor}}.


* If the {{Evil|Godfather}} is in play, they will get the chance to kill the same night that you die and curse someone. If you suspect a {{Evil|Godfather}}, be aware of this extra kill and plan your choice accordingly. Also be aware that they ''could'' choose to trick you into believing you killed a good player, but in fact it was an evil minion thrown under the bus to sow chaos and confusion in the afterlife!
* If you seemed to have died from a poisoned player, and this is clearly not your closet neighbour, then the players in between are evil. This is really useful information that you want to bring to the table.
 
* If you die, bring this information out immediately so that players know to that one of your good alive neighbours is currently poisoned. This could be very important to prevent a character with a once per game ability from using their ability while poisoned: stopping a {{Good|Slayer}} from wasting their shot, or a {{Good|Seamstress}} from ruining their hemlines.
 
* If you don't die, then either the sources of poisoning in the game are not in play, or that they are not or cannot target your neighbours. If there is a {{Evil|Widow}} in play, you know that neither of your neighbours are the target.
 
* Look out for good players who can make other players drunk or poisoned, like the {{Good|Innkeeper}} or {{Good|Sailor}}, because they can help verify who you are by triggering your ability. Get the {{Good|Innkeeper}} to choose both your neighbours as then one of them will be drunk. Likewise, get the {{Good|Sailor}} to pick your neighbours, because then the {{Good|Sailor}} knows if they're sober or not and could prove who they are after you've proved who you are.
 
* If you're the only death at night, this is probably a normal Demon kill. If you are one of many deaths, then your ability is a good explanation for yours. Just be mindful of other sources of deaths at night, such as the {{Evil|Assassin}} or the {{Good|Gossip}}.
 
* Try to hint that one of your good neighbours is a powerful information character, setting them up as a poisoning target: pretend that your neighbouring {{Good|Clockmaker}} is actually the {{Good|Balloonist}}. This will cause possible poisoning Minions and Demons to waste their shot on a player where it will have no effect. This requires coordination with the neighbour.
 
* Come out immediately and provide some measure of protection from poisoning to your neighbours. If evil knows you're the Acrobat, they will not want to poison your neighbours. Possibly get one or both of your neighbours to protect the next nearest person if their ability is more relevant.
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== Bluffing as the Moonchild ==
== Bluffing as the Acrobat ==
 
When bluffing as the Acrobat, there are a few things you should keep in mind:


When bluffing as the Moonchild, there are a few things you should keep in mind:
* Come out as the Acrobat and use your pretend ability as a reason to try and get one or more of your good neighbours executed. Even if they are a character whose ability doesn't pose a threat to the good team, it still forces the good team to use one of their executions on a good player.


* Bluff as the Moonchild so that the good players are afraid to execute you. Depending on how many players are left alive, many good players will be reluctant to execute a Moonchild. The threat that another player will die if you die can be enough to dissuade them from voting for you.
* If you are bluffing as the Acrobat, and you are evil, it is very unlikely that you will die at night. You'll need to have an explanation as to why your good living neighbour are always sober and healthy. This should be fairly easy to do, as drunkenness and poisoning isn't that common, but it helps to have your story prepared. Either you can say that there is no drunkenness or poisoning in the game, or all drunk or poisoned players are dead. This is much easier than saying that there is a drunk or poisoned player, and you know who it is.  


* Even better than just saying that you might be killing another player too if you die, is telegraphing specifically who you will pick if you die. For example, if the players are discussing whether or not to execute you, you can claim that if you die, you intend to pick the player claiming to be the {{Good|Innkeeper}}. After all - you will have to pick someone. This may be enough to get the {{Good|Innkeeper}} to avoid voting for you, as well as any other player who wants to keep the {{Good|Innkeeper}} alive.
* Come out as the Acrobat and use the fact you haven't died across the course of the game as a reason to disprove the existence of a poisoning character. The chance of you dying with a poisoner in play increases as the game goes on. If there is a {{Evil|Poisoner}} on the script, use the fact that you haven't died all game to suggest that there is none in the game.


* The Moonchild is an interesting bluff to reveal once you are dead. If you have stayed silent about your character up until this point, or if you feel like changing your bluff upon death, the Moonchild is a great choice. You die. You claim to be the Moonchild. You pretend to curse a player. Whether or not that player dies, good will tend to focus on your Moonchild ability to the exclusion of other, more important, information.
* If you are a Minion, getting the Demon to kill you at night could make the good team believe that one of your living neighbours is drunk or poisoned. If you neighbour the Demon, this is an opportunity for the Demon to start giving false information. If you don't neighbour the Demon, the confusion could be enough to make your sacrifice worth it. Either way, the night you died may look like you were just killed by the Demon, so this strategy works best when characters add or remove deaths at night, such as the {{Good|Innkeeper}}, {{Good|Tea Lady}}, {{Good|Soldier}}, or {{Evil|Mastermind}}.


* When it comes time to curse a player - pick a good player, and co-ordinate with the other evil players so that this player lives through the night. For example, if you choose the {{Good|Tea Lady}}, and then they live through the night, they will look evil the following day, and probably be the executed player.
* Come out immediately as the Acrobat, because this might give your neighbours a false impression that they're immune from poisoning. Perhaps you're the {{Evil|Widow}} who has poisoned your neighbour.  


* When it comes time to curse a player - pick an evil player, and co-ordinate with the other evil players so that this player dies tonight. Either the Demon, an {{Evil|Assassin}} or {{Evil|Godfather}} can kill this player, which will make this evil player look good. You will lose an evil player because of this strategy, but sometimes feeding misinformation to the good team is more important than keeping evil players alive.
* When a neighbour thinks their information is dodgy from poisoning, you tell them that you're actually the Acrobat so that can't be the case. This will make the thing their dodgy information is good and may make strategic blunders because of this.


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[[Category:Bad Moon Rising]]
[[Category:Experimental Characters]]
[[Category:Outsider]]
[[Category:Outsider]]

Revision as of 15:16, 22 March 2023

Icon acrobat.png Information

Type Outsider

"Welcome, one and all, to the greatest show on earth."

Summary

"Each night*, if either good living neighbour is drunk or poisoned, you die."

The Acrobat dies if the people they neighbour are drunk or poisoned.

How to Run

Examples

The Acrobat neighbours the Lycanthrope and the Amnesiac. The Lycanthrope has been poisoned by the Widow. On the first night, the Acrobat lives, because the Acrobat's ability doesn't apply on the first night. On the second night, the Acrobat dies.

The Acrobat neighbours the Moonchild and the Soldier. The Soldier is executed, and the Acrobat's living neighbours are now the Moonchild and the Boomdandy. The Moonchild dies at night, and the Acrobat's living neighbours are now the drunk Sailor and the Boomdandy. The Acrobat dies.

The Acrobat neighbours the Imp and the Dreamer. The Imp also neighbours the Clockmaker. The Acrobat does not die, because neither the Dreamer nor the Clockmaker are drunk or poisoned. (The Acrobat's ability ignores Evil players, so the Imp's status is not considered.) The Snake Charmer selects the Imp, turning the Imp's player into a good, poisoned Snake Charmer. The Acrobat dies.

Tips & Tricks

  • The term "good living neighbours" specifically means your nearest clockwise and anticlockwise good and alive players, rather than if your nearest alive neighbours are good. So if the closest alive clockwise player is evil, it will ignore that person and skip over them until it finds the nearest good alive clockwise neighbour.
  • Your neighbours are crucial to your ability, and you want to know whether they're information characters or not, and what kind of information they get. A lot of your possible strategies depend on who they are, and so it's important that you can learn as much about who they are and what they can do.
  • There is no need to pay attention to the first night. You can't die on the first night. But pay attention to who is alive and who is dead on the nights thereafter. Who is alive and who is dead will determine who your good living neighbours are.
  • Even though it seems that your ability only harms you, it is actually quite helpful. If you live through the night, this means that your good living neighbours are both sober and healthy. While this cannot tell you anything about first night information, if either of your alive neighbours are worried about their information being influenced by poisoning or drunkenness, you can confide to them that their information is not affected by this.
  • The Acrobat only reacts to good alive neighbours being drunk or poisoned, but does not directly react to players registering falsely or being mad. If the Acrobat has an alive good neighbour being made mad by the Cerenovus there is no effect. If the Acrobat is next to an alive good neighbour that registers falsely the Demon, such as from the Fortune Teller there is no effect. However, if the Acrobat has the Recluse as a neighbour who is poisoned, then this would cause the Acrobat to die (in this instance, there is no chance for the Recluse to register as evil because they're poisoned).
  • If you die at night, this means that one of your good living neighbours is drunk or poisoned. Assume that both of them are drunk or poisoned, and figure out which makes the most sense. Also, if you can figure out why they are drunk or poisoned, you may have found out that a particular Minion is in play, such as the Poisoner, or you may be able to confirm the identity of a good player, such as the Sailor.
  • If you seemed to have died from a poisoned player, and this is clearly not your closet neighbour, then the players in between are evil. This is really useful information that you want to bring to the table.
  • If you die, bring this information out immediately so that players know to that one of your good alive neighbours is currently poisoned. This could be very important to prevent a character with a once per game ability from using their ability while poisoned: stopping a Slayer from wasting their shot, or a Seamstress from ruining their hemlines.
  • If you don't die, then either the sources of poisoning in the game are not in play, or that they are not or cannot target your neighbours. If there is a Widow in play, you know that neither of your neighbours are the target.
  • Look out for good players who can make other players drunk or poisoned, like the Innkeeper or Sailor, because they can help verify who you are by triggering your ability. Get the Innkeeper to choose both your neighbours as then one of them will be drunk. Likewise, get the Sailor to pick your neighbours, because then the Sailor knows if they're sober or not and could prove who they are after you've proved who you are.
  • If you're the only death at night, this is probably a normal Demon kill. If you are one of many deaths, then your ability is a good explanation for yours. Just be mindful of other sources of deaths at night, such as the Assassin or the Gossip.
  • Try to hint that one of your good neighbours is a powerful information character, setting them up as a poisoning target: pretend that your neighbouring Clockmaker is actually the Balloonist. This will cause possible poisoning Minions and Demons to waste their shot on a player where it will have no effect. This requires coordination with the neighbour.
  • Come out immediately and provide some measure of protection from poisoning to your neighbours. If evil knows you're the Acrobat, they will not want to poison your neighbours. Possibly get one or both of your neighbours to protect the next nearest person if their ability is more relevant.

Bluffing as the Acrobat

When bluffing as the Acrobat, there are a few things you should keep in mind:

  • Come out as the Acrobat and use your pretend ability as a reason to try and get one or more of your good neighbours executed. Even if they are a character whose ability doesn't pose a threat to the good team, it still forces the good team to use one of their executions on a good player.
  • If you are bluffing as the Acrobat, and you are evil, it is very unlikely that you will die at night. You'll need to have an explanation as to why your good living neighbour are always sober and healthy. This should be fairly easy to do, as drunkenness and poisoning isn't that common, but it helps to have your story prepared. Either you can say that there is no drunkenness or poisoning in the game, or all drunk or poisoned players are dead. This is much easier than saying that there is a drunk or poisoned player, and you know who it is.
  • Come out as the Acrobat and use the fact you haven't died across the course of the game as a reason to disprove the existence of a poisoning character. The chance of you dying with a poisoner in play increases as the game goes on. If there is a Poisoner on the script, use the fact that you haven't died all game to suggest that there is none in the game.
  • If you are a Minion, getting the Demon to kill you at night could make the good team believe that one of your living neighbours is drunk or poisoned. If you neighbour the Demon, this is an opportunity for the Demon to start giving false information. If you don't neighbour the Demon, the confusion could be enough to make your sacrifice worth it. Either way, the night you died may look like you were just killed by the Demon, so this strategy works best when characters add or remove deaths at night, such as the Innkeeper, Tea Lady, Soldier, or Mastermind.
  • Come out immediately as the Acrobat, because this might give your neighbours a false impression that they're immune from poisoning. Perhaps you're the Widow who has poisoned your neighbour.
  • When a neighbour thinks their information is dodgy from poisoning, you tell them that you're actually the Acrobat so that can't be the case. This will make the thing their dodgy information is good and may make strategic blunders because of this.