Maxperson
Morkus from Orkus
People describe the dragon as being armored. People describe the baron as being unstable. Armored has a mechanical expression in the game. Unstable has no such mechanical expression. It could. The DM can simply assign a DC with that in mind.....to convince this nutjob, you need to score X on a Persuasion check or Y on an Intimidate check. Doesn't take much. But it's not something that's already there. If it was, this thread wouldn't exist.
If I describe a dragon as being armored, what armor class is it? You could take a guess, just like you can take a guess that someone unstable has a good chance of taking your head off if you insult him.
Right. Why wouldn't he consider the PCs along those lines? Not that he'd be as wary of them as he would Strahd, but more wary than townsfolk for sure.
How would he know the PCs are more powerful than his soldiers? He knows Strahd. He knows the townsfolk. The PCs are from somewhere else.
Yes, mistakes can happen with any system. My point is that this system lends itself to this particular mistake. It make it more likely to happen.
How does D&D make the DM sloppy with descriptions or the players miss details?
It's not that I'm ignoring it, it's that I think my point is that this is a weak spot for this system. I don't think that the DM needs to do a poor job for their to be confusion. Even great DMs are going to leave something out, or they're going to be more vague than they think they're being, and so on. In most cases, this won't be poor DMing.
Okay, but leaving stuff out applies to every system. It's because those playing it are human and imperfect.
Failure = don't succeed. It does not = don't succeed plus setback. There are no rules for critical failures like that. If the DM is breaking feet over simple failed attempts at opening doors, he is stepping beyond what is written.I really don't think that's something precluded by the rules. The DM determines the outcome on a failure, whether it's no progress, or partial success, or success with a setback. I don't think that there's a rule that says "The DM can't say the PC breaks his foot."