The questions are totally unrelated
1st question, In RMC arms law, why are the individual attack and critical tables unlisted in the table of contents?table of contents simply stops at 52 and picks back up at 110, right where all the most important combat tables are listed. Now I understand that you can simply start at page 52 and flip to the needed table, but this slows things down quite a bit.
My question is: what was the reason for this? Surely this would have been found during even the most basic playtesting, such as when any melee/ranged character or monster used their melee/ranged weapon in combat... (I ultimately just printed off a piece of paper with the page # of all the tables...)
2nd question: has anyone tried using the talents/flaws system from Character law (RMFRP) with a RMC campaign? Does it fit in without much problems, and/or do you have any tips for doing so? I know that RMC character law has some background options, but it is severely lacking compared to (RMFRP) Character Law's collection of background options.