Whilst I get your wider point I really must highlight that your DM is rubbish.
Haha. Fair enough.
Whilst I get your wider point I really must highlight that your DM is rubbish.
Well put. The outcome of the situation is dicated by tactical considerations, which players have plenty of control over.Maybe the mistake was moving into the center of the room which allows them to get around you and to the people you are supposedly protecting when you should have held the choke point? Should "narrative options" substitute for bad tactics?
The scenario he posited did seem to assume some ridiculousness on the DM's part (which, as I always say, is not for the rules to fix).Whilst I get your wider point I really must highlight that your DM is rubbish.
Haha. Fair enough.
The scenario he posited did seem to assume some ridiculousness on the DM's part (which, as I always say, is not for the rules to fix).
Yeah, it's a contrived example for illustration purposes but it doesn't work, IMHO:
If a lone fighter bursts into a room full of orcs (assuming they're combatants) they're going to wonder whether he's crazy or much more dangerous than he looks. Either way, all orc eyes will be on the fighter until they've established which.
So a "look at me!" feat is completely unnecessary to achieve the desired result, provided the orcs were role-played with the intelligence they warrant.
I want to move into the room and stand before the horde of orcs ready to fight them, become the target of their attacks. I look down at my character sheet and . . . nothing. Nothing's there that helps me do that. There are no options for me as the player to play the character I want to play. So I turn to the DM and raise my eyebrows. He shrugs and has half the orcs run past me and kill the rest of the party, when, let's face it, nobody ignores the guy with the weapon when he enters the room.
He wasn't alone in the example, thought I mentioned that. Oh well. I really think we need to start having these conversations without examples because people tend to only focus on the example and ignore the point of the entire post. Again, oh well.
From the quote above that wasn't clear.
I couldn't tell what the point was. Was the point that you expected your fighter to be able to force enemies to make a suboptimal tactical decision (attacking you)? Was the point that a fighter should be different in some way such that attacking him instead of other party members is a better decision? Those are the two interpretations that occurred to me, and neither made much sense to me.Oh well. I really think we need to start having these conversations without examples because people tend to only focus on the example and ignore the point of the entire post.
"He shrugs and has half the orcs run past me and kill the rest of the party."
Guess I buried it, though I didn't think it was that important. Tis the nature of examples I suppose.