Maxperson
Morkus from Orkus
You overestimate people if you think they're going to remember Tabaxi or what they are like if they come by that infrequently.Once a Generation! That is plenty frequent for people to know about them. Especially if it had been going on for two hundred or three hundred years.
In a world full of various cat monsters? Absolutely. They aren't going to know a Tabaxi from a Weretiger(or other were cat) from a Rakshasa from other similar creatures. It's not as if they're going to give the benefit of the doubt and risk death.I'm sorry, so there are elves, halflings, dwarves and humans living in this remote village in the middle of nowhere... but a catman is going to be treated with fear and suspicion? This is a cosmopolitan town with four different races living together in harmony, yet seeing someone unusual is going to cause them to freak out?
Yep! Some NPCs will know about them. Most, since villages are primarily human in most campaigns, will not. Maybe the Tabaxi gets lucky and first meets an elf...........that has enough monster knowledge to tell the difference between a Tabaxi and any of the above.Ignoring the fact that the Elves and Dwarves have seen multiple tabaxi over their lives, if one comes every twenty years and the those elves and dwarves are likely 200 to 300 years old.
At any given time I have probably a dozen or more ideas that I'd love to play. I'd be a complete arsehole if I insisted on playing the one that reduced the DM's fun. Same with other players. Pick an idea that doesn't negatively impact someone else.There are times when I dislike the fact that I can't cuss people out on this sight, and I rarely cuss. The assertion that your first option is the one you would enjoy the most, and therefore your enjoyment is impacted by the loss of that option in no way what so ever should ever indicate that you are too limited creatively to enjoy more than one thing.
One has to go. Negatively impacting anyone's fun is unacceptable. Between the DM and one player, the choice is obvious. If the DM leaves, all the players lose out. The player can go find a game where he can play his ideal PC without disrupting things.I disagree. I have disagreed, I will continue to disagree. If the DM has so much authority and power, that means they need to compromise more, not shove out players who don't agree with them.
You aren't changing any mechanics. The mechanic of race + class = PC is as intact with one race as it is with twenty. That the races have bubbles of mechanics associated with them doesn't alter the mechanics of game play at all. Think of it like this. We both go out and buy the same make, model and year car. You don't want blindspot sensors so you get a model without them. The car still functions as a car just as well as mine does, even though mine has those sensors. Did you remove something mechanical? Yes. Did you alter the ability of the car to drive? Not at all.So, it isn't a mechanical change... because why? It just isn't? Removing mechanics from the game is still changing the mechanics Max.
So since a Medusa had an instant save or die ability in prior editions, they should also have it in 5e, right? Fireball in 3e gained 1d6 per level the Wizard went up, so it should do that in 5e, right? Things have changed for 5e."A tabaxi resembles a lithe, graceful, athletic human with a leopard or jaguar-like head and a tail. Instead of skin, they have beautiful spotted fur pelts that ranged in color from light yellow to brownish red. They have sharp teeth and retractable claws, which are their primary weapons in combat."
"Tabaxi were taller than most humans at six to seven feet. Their bodies were slender and covered in spotted[2] or striped[3] fur. Like most felines, Tabaxi had long tails and retractable claws."
Seems the info was sourced from the Fiend Folio and the Fires of Zatal adventure. So since an excerpt from a novel counts, these should count to support my side.
In my game, though, if you brought that to me, I'd give you retractable claws. That would be my personal game ruling. It wouldn't affect what is written, though.