Axel said: If you still have questions, I guess I need to know what part you think is still unclear. Can you explain what specifically about this is troubling you? You can always defend against someone else's action, even if it's not your turn. If someone attacks you, or otherwise rolls against you, you are always allowed to roll to resist or defend. Defending doesn't require an action on your part, even though you're normally only allowed to take an action that involves a roll once per exchange. In a normal situation, the attacker rolls to attack, and the target of that attack rolls to defend. If someone interposes themselves, that person is the one who rolls to defend instead, and that person is also the one to suffer the effects, i.e. the damage. Example: It's the monster's turn, and it rushes towards Adam, swiping at him with it's claws. Johnny interposes himself between Adam and the monster. It's not Johnny's turn, but the in the narrative it makes sense that he can do this. The monster attacks with Fight and rolls +5. Normally, Adam would defend, but since Johnny interposed himself, he defends with Athletics and rolls +3. The monster rakes Johnny with its claws, and Johnny suffers two sifts of damage. Johnny checks his second physical stress box. Adam takes no stress, this time, and now it's Adam's turn. Except if Johnny interposes and then defends by avoiding the attack with Athletics, and he successfully evades the attack, doesn't that mean he also wasn't there to block the attack? That doesn't make sense at all to me. My interpretation would have been different. My instinct is instead of having the Interposer roll, the original target still rolls, and after they determine if they would take damage is when the Interposer could come in and take the same damage the original target would have instead, without any roll to defend against it. "and you have to suffer the effects of any failed rolls." This is mostly what causes my interpretation, so I am mostly asking for clarification of if this makes sense, or if I am genuinely interpreting it wrong.