Urriak Uruk
Gaming is fun, and fun is for everyone
Might've been a bit of a freudian slip.
Sorry, what was the slip?
Might've been a bit of a freudian slip.
We seem to agree on psionic power as skill or cantrip power level,
but for more dramatic and powerful usage Psion will need a way to allow psionic burst.
seem that the term slot is incompatible we Psion, maybe points can be use, but aside semantic debate we will have to find a way to control usage of more powerful psionic abilities. We can’t have dominate person at will. And slowly Psion will use daily usage, saving throw, and even maybe concentration. I just hope that you wont ask for exclusive concentration mechanic only for Psion. Do we start the debate about dispelling and counterspell? Or maybe wizard will simply ask for spells dispel psionic and counterpsionic!
It is definitely up for debate. Personally when we played back in the 80s we played 1e AD&D and D&D and didn't realize they were two different games! So I get that, I was just playing devil's advocate and point out there are other ways to look at it.I actually do not agree. It was all D&D to me, as in not Runequest, Rolemaster, etc.
IMHO, I feel D&D has supported play beyond 20th level, anecdotally because we played it.
But no worries.
/thumbs up
Except that quote is not actually what the OP said or even a good paraphrasing of it:
So it's not necessarily only that psionics appeared in every edition, but also the degree that they did and the degree of their imprint on D&D's legacy. I'm not sure, for example, that a shaman really is part of D&D's meta-setting wherein it hews its own sort of supernatural powers/magic.
Here's the thing, I actually bothered quoting what he said rather than inventing a quote for the OP and tried to represent his argument in good faith. And maybe I haven't, but this is where I would invite @Sword of Spirit to clarify his argument for me if I misrepresented it. Inventing quotes claiming to represent what other people say doesn't seem kosher.I think you are spinning and taking out of context what he said.
Well it is a contributing factor. It seems disingenuous to pretend that somehow longevity, tradition, and nostalgia do not factor into our sense for what should be in a open edition. This is one likely reason why psionics have been worked on as much as they have by WotC. Regardless of whether psionics have differing degrees of mechanical implementation, they have been a fairly persistent part of D&D.Which is my point - TIME and NUMBER OF EDITIONS is not a determining factor. No matter how you spin it, the OP is in fact arguing they are determining factors. It's not me taking him out of context if you dispute that, it's you. You seem to have wanted him to be making a different argument than the one he made
It doesn't have to be. It just has to be meaningful to those who find meaning in a particular tradition.It's because he likes the concept of the class, not just because of tradition. And liking the class is a different topic. That topic goes back to the other thread - where we consider if the people who like it as a dedicated class are meaningfully representative of the player pool for this game.
I think you're being deliberately obtuse now, because I'm talking specifically about the psion? Saying "you don't make a good argument about the psion class" doesn't mean I'm talking about ALL caster classes.
Here's the thing, I actually bothered quoting what he said rather than inventing a quote for the OP and tried to represent his argument in good faith. And maybe I haven't, but this is where I would invite @Sword of Spirit to clarify his argument for me if I misrepresented it. Inventing quotes claiming to represent what other people say doesn't seem kosher.
Well it is a contributing factor. It seems disingenuous to pretend that somehow longevity, tradition, and nostalgia do not factor into our sense for what should be in a open edition. This is one likely reason why psionics have been worked on as much as they have by WotC. Regardless of whether psionics have differing degrees of mechanical implementation, they have been a fairly persistent part of D&D.
It doesn't have to be. It just has to be meaningful to those who find meaning in a particular tradition.
Curious . . . does anybody have any experience with a third-party and/or fan psionics system for D&D 5E. Perhaps on the DM's Guild? This thread got me looking, and I picked up "The Korranberg Chronicle: Psion's Primer" on the DM's Guild, but have barely began digesting it.