Giltonio_Santos
Hero
I see a lot of comments in the article saying "4E was better". I always thought that 4E used XP budget for encounters, how does it change in 5E?
My understanding is that many 4e fans consider "guidelines" to mean "GM can do whatever they want", so encounter-building rules are inherently better to them than encounter-building guidelines. It's mostly a semantics thing.I see a lot of comments in the article saying "4E was better". I always thought that 4E used XP budget for encounters, how does it change in 5E?
I see a lot of comments in the article saying "4E was better". I always thought that 4E used XP budget for encounters, how does it change in 5E?
My understanding is that many 4e fans consider "guidelines" to mean "GM can do whatever they want", so encounter-building rules are inherently better to them than encounter-building guidelines. It's mostly a semantics thing.
(emphasis mine)article said:As a rule of thumb, the game assumes that characters of a particular level can defeat a total number of creatures with an XP value equal to two hard encounters before needing to take a long rest
I believe that Mearls is using "hard" and "challenging" interchangeably here.
I see a lot of comments in the article saying "4E was better". I always thought that 4E used XP budget for encounters, how does it change in 5E?
I see a lot of comments in the article saying "4E was better". I always thought that 4E used XP budget for encounters, how does it change in 5E?
I like 5E Encounter Building Guidelines. Its a good mix of 3E Challenge rating and 4E XP Budget!
In 4e, a standard monster of your level was a fair challenge for a single PC. This made it much easier to eyeball encounters. You have 5 PCs who are level 8? Just throw 5 level 8 monsters at them.
Of course you could vary it a bit -- 4 level 6 monsters and a level 9 elite (counts as 2 monsters)? Probably doable, as that's close to 5x8. The point is, you didn't have to add up XP values until after the monsters were defeated, which means you didn't ever have to do it if the party skipped that encounter.
Is there an insult to call someone a 4e fan? What's so terrible about it?So, no, it isn't a "semantics thing". It has nothing to do with "guidelines". That is a semantics thing, but it's your semantics thing, not that of "4E fans".