Stella Clark
La Factrice

Investigateur

Élu. Municipal.

Survivant
  • 3
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
Vie: 8. Santé Mentale: 8.

Après avoir échoué à un test de compétence : vous avez le droit d'effectuer une action supplémentaire lors de votre tour durant ce round. (Limite d'une fois par round.)

: +1. Vous avez le droit de choisir d'échouer automatiquement à ce test à la place pour soigner 1 dégât et 1 horreur.

« Je peux l'entendre. Peut-il m'entendre ? »
Aleksander Karcz
Stella Clark #1.

Stella Clark - Back

Investigateur

Taille du Deck : 30.

Construction du Deck : cartes Survivant () de niveaux 0 à 5, cartes neutres de niveaux 0 à 5.

Exigences du Deck (ne comptent pas dans la limite de taille du deck) : 3 exemplaires de Ni la Pluie ni la Neige, 1 exemplaire d'Appelée par les Brumes, 1 faiblesse de base au hasard.

Avant que Stella ne commence à travailler pour les services postaux d'Arkham, elle n'avait que deux certitudes. Premièrement, ses parents avaient fait une erreur en l'appelant « fils » et en lui donnant un nom de garçon. Deuxièmement, tard le soir, la maison située sur la falaise de Kingsport murmurait son véritable nom ; le nom qu'elle s'était choisi : « Stella ». Livrer le courrier six jours sur sept en toutes saisons n'était pas un travail facile, mais Stella aimait savoir qu'elle aidait les gens à rester en contact les uns avec les autres. Puis, elle commença à trouver les lettres. À la fin de sa tournée, il restait toujours une enveloppe supplémentaire dans son sac. Une enveloppe qui lui était adressée. Elle était toujours tamponnée à Kingsport et elle contenait toujours une lettre avec un unique mot, proprement tapé à la machine : « Stella ».
Stella Clark
Stella Clark

FAQs

No faqs yet for this card.

Reviews

I think people get the wrong impression of Stella. Her abilities reward failure, but there are really two ways to go: failure with success, and failure with “not caring about success ”.

What makes her so special is that there are so, so many survivor cards that reward failure. Predestination, take heart, rabbit's foot, “look what I found“, Live and learn... So if you’re going for partial success, you have the option to fail in your first and second action and set up your third and fourth. What’s great is, even in campaigns like the dream eaters where there aren’t many skill test on your encounter cards, you can slot the new level zero “test of will” to either get rid of a treachery or gain an extra action (and probably a card, because rabbit's foot is the best fit for an accessory.)

Permanents like a quick learner, which would be poisonous for most other survivors, let you fail early and succeed later. In fact, a -1 to future difficulty test means that you’re going to face automatic successes, especially if you’re dodging a low agility enemy, hitting an acolyte or group of rats, or using your old key ring to investigate a three shroud location. (Vital to appreciating this card: knowing that it doesn’t apply to the mythos phase. Your stats are safe there.)

In solo games, you’ll be able to persevere/bungle your way through skill test and fights with “neither rain nor shine”, getting these amazing +3 bennies, recurring with resourceful, and later True Survivor. Or you can rely on the Mysterious Raven to attack your sanity in exchange for one action clues, and heal with Grimm's fairytales.

In a group, you’re likely to get in a flex role: you’re great at agility, and with dark horse or the right skill cards, can be good at a few other things. Sometimes, with Peter S by your side, it’s soaking fear or dodging enemies. But Stella has a surprising role that is harder for other survivors to play: support. Neither rain nor shine allows you to give +3 wild skill icons to fellow investigators. Plus, it gets rid of the sting of failure. Some scenarios have cruel effects that, when resolved, can defeat you, take rounds off the scenario, or drive you insane. Not anymore.

You’ll have a lot of options to pick through as you gain experience, because the chainsaw and your .18 derringer both reward a failure first style. True survivor and drawing thin, while expensive in terms of XP, make an amazing late campaign engine.

Playing Stella will have you saying weird things though. Things like “darn, I succeeded all of my actions!”, or bragging about how how only the grit of the Postal Service can take on the horrors of the universe. So watch out for that.

MrGoldbee · 1391
That's a clever interaction with A Test of Will (0). I had written that off as being kind of a bad card. Not so in Stella's hands. — Zinjanthropus · 223

When I first looked at Stella, I worried about being able to trigger her ability reliably with lower difficulty Chaos Bags. Then I fooled myself briefly thinking that her ability wasn't much help except as a bonus to the Survivor "win by losing" strategy (it feels really good to attack an enemy with .18 Derringer, miss, Use Oops! to hit another target reloading the pistol in the process, then shoot the original target with Stella's special action).

Now, while both of those are at least partly true, I'm beginning to see Stella's ability as "tempo protection." While a on a critical test will still ruin her day, Stella gets 3 successful actions in a turn far more often than other investigators. The versatility of that "failure insurance action" allows her to do anything, where most of the investigators with bonus actions (e.g. Ursula Downs, Finn Edwards) are constrained to one sort of action, and Stella is a lot more versatile.

Rabbit's foot + Draw Thin. Fail better! — MrGoldbee · 1391
Drawing Thin is insane! Forget Dark Horse, you're going to be rich! Add in Quick Learner x2 and the occasional Eucatastrophe and you will pass the big tests. Neither Rain nor Snow completely negates any treachery with a test, then has 3 wilds, because why not? — Taevus · 636
tempo protection is a really good way to describe it — Zinjanthropus · 223

One thing the other reviews didn't touch on is how amazing Stella's health and sanity are. With very few exceptions (Calvin and Lola, and Pete except with Duke he does), an investigator's combined value adds up to 14 or 15. Stella is blessed with a generous 16! This might not seem like a huge deal, but health/sanity is king in Arkham Horror. Many scenarios are down to the wire and 1 more damage or horror can make the difference. And not only that, Stella has 8's in both sections, so she has no clear weakness! This, in combination with her access to Peter Sylvestre and Jessica Hyde and all the other survivor soak, makes her incredibly tanky! And remember, this is all just gravy on top of an amazing ability and solid skills. In fact, considering how good Stella seems to be with her current card pool, I don't know if she needed that additional hp. But I won't complain.

Cpt_nice · 76
It's funny, because Pete (with Duke) comes out to 16 as well, but he still can't go to 1 of either without making dog owners sad (and losing a bunch of utility), while Stella can. — SGPrometheus · 745
Extra durability makes sense for a character who wants to fail a lot. That tends to hurt. — MrGoldbee · 1391
She could take the Five of Pentacles and Anna Kaslow to get to 10/10 health and sanity just to flex. — Zinjanthropus · 223

Art note: The letter Stella is carrying is addressed to Jacqueline Fine, albeit misspelled as "Jakueline" -- this is easier to see on her investigator mini-card (or, I imagine, on her investigator card in Arkham 3rd, since to my knowledge that's where the art is from). Useful info if you're looking for flavor justifications for card pairings (similar to the also-mail-related Indebted and Finn Edwards).

anaphysik · 94