The rules for rigging is a little disjointed, with implementation spread all over the book. I had to do a lot of cross-referencing while looking up information on how to build a rigger character, and I still have loads of questions.
The next page goes on talking about rigging in AR and VR.
My question is: can you really rig in AR? I dont think the VCR has any use if youre not in VR. So is the section just using the rigging term wrong? And should instead be using "controlling" or piloting, and use rigging when the mean VCR use?
I would agree with you on the term "rigging" being used inconsistently, but not necessarily "wrong" per se. When you're using AR to control a vehicle, you have to do so using the Control Device Matrix Action. This confused me for a while, because you can also use this action while in VR.
The way I see it, there are 5 distinct ways of getting a vehicle to go from point A to point b:
1. Use GridGuide
2. Use the onboard Pilot program
3. Remote Control (AR)
4. Remote Control (VR)
5. Jumped In Control.
The first two are largely the same, but they are distinct because the second can be done while the device is off the Matrix (i.e. cannot be hacked). 3 and 4 only differ in what attributes you use for the test (physical in AR, mental in VR, SR6 page 180), while 5 is similar to 4 but is the only method that actually requires a Control Rig (SR6 page 197).
Take the Control Rig itself, for example (SR6 page 283); it only provides it's bonus when "you are jumped into a vehicle or drone". The RCC, on the other hand, provides "the rigger the ability to control more than one drone or vehicle at a time" (SR6 page 197).
Ultimately, then, this question mostly comes down semantics, because there is technically no clear definition of what "rigging" is, nor is there a rule that explicitly depends on this term. To my mind you are "a rigger" if A) you are jumping into a vehicle with a Control Rig, B) you are using an RCC to send commands to multiple drones at a time, and/or C) you are using the Control Device action from VR. Once you move into the AR remote control method I feel like you're entering the grey area between rigging and piloting, because you are now using your physical attributes instead of your mental ones, but this is purely how I feel and not at all a "rules" interpretation.
And a follow up question: it seems to me, when a drone ( when not direclty controlled, or jumped into) is fired upon it rolls piloting+ evasion autosoft to evade the attack, or piloting -1 if it doesnt have the autosoft loaded.
Is that correctly understood?
Furthermore are the autosofts no longer limited by the pilot rating of the drone?
Correct and correct.
Some other questions I accumulated over the past few days.
1. When exactly do you gain the bonus point of Edge for having a control rig?
"When you’re jumped into a vehicle or drone, the control rig provides its rating as a dice pool bonus on all vehicle skill tests and a bonus point of Edge."
Once when you jump in, or every time you take an action that the control rig would affect (up to the usual 2/Combat Round)?
2. How does an anthro drone perform an unarmed attack?
A jumped in rigger would simply calculate attack rating (normally Strength + Reaction) using Charisma + Intuition, with a DV of (Charisma/2, round up); Page 196 seems to suggest that "vehicles and drones have an attack rating of the driver's Piloting skill + Sensor, which would be the Maneuvering autosoft + Sensor, or Sensor -1, but how do you calculate DV? Pilot / 2, round up, as Pilot stands in for most other physical and mental attributes?
3. Can you slave non-vehicle devices to an RCC equal to it's Data Processing attribute in addition to it's Rating x 3 of vehicles and drones?
4. Can a weapon mount hold different types of ammunition and switch between them, or are you restricted to only a single type of ammo?
5. More of a decker question, but how do drones and vehicles resist Matrix damage, and can they be hit by biofeedback damage?
6. Related, why is the entry for Encryption on page 198 different from the one on page 184? Can I use either? Both?
7. If a microdrone (operating independently or piloted by a rigger) uses the Stealth skill, how does this interact with the size modifiers introduced by the errata?
A microdrone adds 4 to the threshold to spot it using Perception, but Stealth is normally an opposed check.
I have some other questions as well, but those are very niche and I'll save them for after errata comes out.