Raven Crowking
First Post
Admitedly, the vast majority of the population cannot do what you just did.
Not my experience.
But I may just be lucky (statistically speaking) that way.
RC
Admitedly, the vast majority of the population cannot do what you just did.
I'm not going to play word games with you.I'm not sure where you're getting this from what I'm writing. Tone is difficult I guess. I'm most certainly not stating that one form is superior to the other. I'm saying that where each person draws the line will be different.
Any value judgement you derive from that statement is purely your own.
I'm not going to play word games with you.
If you can't find the tone in your clear statements that there is a requirement for "willing to sacrifice to make the game work", then I don't have anything to say.
I reject that that line of thinking plays into the issue.
In 3E, If my character got knocked down to -7 to -9, I wouldn't bat an eyelid if the DMs description was something along the lines of..."the bolt sticking out of your eye REALLY hurts, you see everyone looking at you (with your good eye) in complete horror as you fall to the ground unconscious". I know that pretty much the only thing that's going to save his bacon is some instamatic healbot attention. In fact, such attention is going to be the only way that he's back up and in the frey once more in a handful of minutes.
If the same thing happened in 4E (bolt through the eye is described by the DM, dropping him to -7 to -9 unconscious), then it would feel kind of weird to make my save, surge up after the combat and be back to full operation (as in my guy has a similar chance of surviving another encounter as the uninjured fighter over there). No divine assistance, just a little bit of heroic grit. I'd ask my DM about the whole bolt through the eye thing to which he'd most likely have to say - "nah, it was just a flesh wound". I'd roll my eyes, think of the Black Knight, chuckle at the game rules and then continue on.
Not my experience.
But I may just be lucky (statistically speaking) that way.
Are you testing the "general population" or are you testing "people interested in gaming"? Because my point is that they're not the same.
(I feel like I'm going down a path that's previously gotten me censured on ENWorld, but nontheless...)
I think I'll leave it at "not my experience" and admit that I may simply have had statistically anamolous experiences. I certainly don't want to argue the point too strenuously with people who have studied the subject more thoroughly than I!
RC
I'm not Hussar, but I think the issue is that he probably shouldn't have used the word "sacrifice." It's a fitting word, but it has implications beyond what I think he meant.
I think he meant: Some stuff in games requires a level of abstraction. Everyone has their own level of how much abstraction they find acceptable in a game.
Sometimes, even though the rules might function perfectly fine mathwise, to do so, they've created a level of abstraction beyond which some find acceptable.
I think that's a perfectly fair/valid thing to say...
Always the worst way how to start a questionAre you saying...Herremann the Wise said:So yeah, I think 3E (at least how my group plays and interprets it) gives the DM a little more freedom in this regard to go to town with the guts on the floor - if such is your cup of tea.
No I'm not. That seems a silly question - a little insulting actually.cwhs01 said:that 3.x is a good ruleset because you don't follow the rules?