robus
Lowcountry Low Roller
Which can get downright peculiar if the assassin is acting on their own. If the assassin decides to make an attack on an unaware target, initiative is rolled, and the target is surprised but gets a higher initiative than the rogue, can the rogue on their turn declare "actually, I've changed my mind - I'm just going to stay hidden for now", ending the encounter with no actions having taken place? And can they then declare "okay, this time I'm definitely gonna go for it", initiating a new encounter in the hopes of winning the initiative this time around?
This is where I feel we misapply the rules. Remember the DM is the one that decides whether there is uncertainty in any situation. If a killing blow is struck is it uncertain that it would succeed? If yes, haul out the com bat rules, roll initiative and off we go. If it‘s not? Where’s the confusion? The target is dead.
We get peculiar results when we feed certain inputs into the uncertainty resolution mechanics . A person who should be dead is fighting back?! How did that happen? Because we brought in the rules before we asked if there was uncertainty to resolve.
Edit: jeez, autocorrect has been doing a number on my posts tonight. I demand satisfaction! Roll initiative you scurvy dog!
Last edited: