I am looking for a game system for a modern urban fantasy campaign that I have built. The world is as if a standard fantasy world exists in 2023 on Earth. I am having difficulty finding a system I think would do this style of campaign justice, and could really use some help.
Systems I have contemplated and the reasons I am having difficulty:
D&D 5e and Pathfinder 2e - don't translate to modern world well
Fate/Rules Lite RPGs - Doesn't give players a sense of advancement/leveling
Hero System/GURPs - Magic users are either very under powered or the point values get out of hand for non-magic users
Savage World - Combat is grindy
Open Legend - This has the flexibility, but doesn't have any bestiary making every monster/npc necessitate creation from scratch.
Systems I think might work well for this:
Genesys - The drawback is the narrative dice are sold out everywhere and secondary market for them is outrageous.
WOIN - Just found this and think it is suitable, but would like opinions as I have just discovered it.
BRP - Again just found this while searching suggestions and think it may work well, but would like opinions. New edition recently released.
"Modern Urban Fantasy" is synonymous with Unknown Armies 2nd Ed to me. Though it is very gritty in tone and revolves around the idea that magic makes you crazy, but the core mechanics are very flexible and it's a d100 system, you could probably just change the narrative fluff and have a perfectly workable, if lethal, game.
Eh, we've tried it, but the skills being tied together and to the sanity meters ruined character builds, so it just wasn't fun. We've kept the idea of making connected characters (just an ally and a rival) because it makes for excellent plot hooks, but otherwise went back to 2nd Ed.
They do, but in a way that I think felt limiting. You can't have too many identities without making them quite weak, and then you have limited slots to have them do something cool or just substitute for skills/stress checks.
There's also the feeling that your character can't progress at anything outside their identities, because progress in one skill is regression in another and is entirely at the fate of a dice roll.
I'm sure it's great for other people's playstyles, it's just not my cup of tea.