D&D General Should a low level character know to burn a troll?

Should a low level character know to burn a troll?

  • Yes

    Votes: 86 78.9%
  • No

    Votes: 23 21.1%

Wolfpack48

Adventurer
I would ask how prevalent myths and tales of such creatures would be known by the character and by society in general. That might be encapsulated by a general knowledge roll (INTx3?), or by some other kind encapsulated Mythology or Folklore skill. I'd say it's a judgment call based on the setting and backgrounds you are running.
 

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Greg K

Legend
In my campaigns, it would depend if the character is from a region of the setting with trolls nearby.. If so, they would know without a roll. If not, they can acquire the information in play by asking around, or I can set a DC based upon where the character is from, how long they have been in the area etc. (possibly employing 5e's advantage/disadvantage). (Edit: if someone has just arrived in the area, I might not allow a roll at all).

The above assumes the use of Poul Anderson inspired trolls. Normally, trolls in my game are either slightly larger ogres that physically resemble Earthdawn/Shadowrun trolls or they are like trolls in Tolkien.
 
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FrogReaver

As long as i get to be the frog
I answered yes because if they don't know to burn a troll then they likely end up as troll food for said troll as they would never have burnt the troll.

(I noticed there was no timeframes in the original question, so not knowing to burn a troll implies they never learn to burn a troll, which implies characters becoming troll food)
 

Greg K

Legend
Trolls are common enough in my campaign that everyone knows that you need fire. That's true whether the player is a 30 year veteran or only knows trolls from Billy Goats Gruff.
Really, I don't recall the troll in 3 Billy Goats Gruff being defeated by fire. I thought he was defeated by the largest of the billy goats ramming him with its horns.
 

Yardiff

Adventurer
Ok, let me amend that...

The problems start when you people start also role-playing other people’s characters, by telling them what their characters know.

Is that better?

But I'll add that what you originally wrote:

has the language/tone of a sentiment commonly expressed by people who think there's only one kind of roleplaying, and it involves pretending to not know stuff. Those people, even if they aren't directly telling other people how to play, are definitely "policing" roleplaying.

You seem to have a very low opinion of other players and that colors what you read in posts.
 

G

Guest 6801328

Guest
You seem to have a very low opinion of other players and that colors what you read in posts.

Not sure how you jumped from what I said to the conclusion that I have a low opinion of other players. I do have a rather low opinion of posters who claim that their way of playing is role-playing, with the implication (or sometimes explicit claim) that other ways of playing are not really role-playing.

The language you used was similar to the language those people use. Apologies if I mistakenly assumed you were one of them.
 

G

Guest 6801328

Guest
Really, I don't recall the troll in 3 Billy Goats Gruff being defeated by fire. I thought he was defeated by the largest of the billy goats ramming him with its horns.

You must have missed the part where he regenerated, came back up onto the bridge, and the goat had to use his Flametongue Horns to defeat him.
 


Greg K

Legend
I think there needs to be a depends choice. As is evident from many answers (including my own), several us believe that various setting considerations (size of the setting, how common are trolls in a region, the region in which a given character is from, etc.) should be taken into account before deciding.
 

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