Tony Vargas
Legend
The idea is that everyone stays engaged with the game and derives more enjoyment than they would if the attention shifted to one player who had the right skills and was the only one playing for a while. It is, indeed, an old idea going back to storytelling and indie games, and an alternative to spotlight-style balance (and extreme examples thereof like Netrunners in cyberpunk games), that was used in 4e (Skill Challenges, though, not just untrained skills, were how it was implemented out of combat) and has not really been retained in 5e, which mostly goes for the more classic-D&D spotlight balance model, in which you participate when your character's specialty comes up, and let others have their fun in turn.And why should someone who has no idea what he is doing be kept "in the game"?
Imo this "everyone can do everything" philosophy which survived 4E hurts the chatacterization and devalues skills in general.
5e, though, did keep group skill checks and a gap between skilled & unskilled that was narrower than 3e's 23+ (and obviously, narrower than classic have-it/don't-have-it special abilities), in keeping with the Bounded Accuracy design goal. So you can have the DM call for, say, stealth checks from everyone, without the result being virtually guaranteed failure because there's at least one guy in heavy armor. But when it comes to a skill your party Rogue are Bard decided to take expertise in....
(Summary: you decided not to try because you saw better ways of using your spell slots.) That does seem to obviate the details of the mechanic. A simple blanket immunity might be less cumbersome and have the same net effect.I finished a module fighting a ton of dragons. It was quite common. That is with three casters in the group. We never once broke Legendary Resistance. Not a single time with a bard, cleric, and wizard in the group. Not once did we even come close to breaking Legendary Resistance for the following reasons
Well, yeah, 'faster combats' and all. Faster combats, less time for strategies to pan out, need fewer slots because there's fewer rounds to cast them in. None of that seems out of line for 5e's goals, though.3. Don't have time to use options that don't work due to the damage output of Legendary Creatures. You have to kill them fast or they kill you fast. No time to waste trying to break Legendary Resistance.
I don't have to wonder: you did a cost/benefit and decided it was not a worthwhile use of spell slots. Not that you couldn't do it, just that it clearly wasn't worth it. If anything, that's indicative of a 'trap option,' albeit not in the usual sense - a 'gotchya' monster ability, then. A chance for players to take an obvious path to a solution, find it doesn't work (or works but is too wasteful of resources), and learn 'smarter play' from the experience. Not an entirely inappropriate design element for the more traditional direction 5e took.Even if you have to wonder how three highly experienced players playing the most powerful casters in the game that had a fairly easy time with the final encounter in Tyranny of Dragons managed not to break through Legendary Resistance even a single time in 16 levels. I'd bet that our experience is not unique.
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