le Redoutable
Ich bin El Glouglou :)
Ah: you were faster than meI literally have no idea what you mean here. Humility from you, from me, from Conan...?

no, I wanted to add that I was entering Combat Mode ( by means of a hidden Intimidate )
Ah: you were faster than meI literally have no idea what you mean here. Humility from you, from me, from Conan...?
WTF is right…you should ( at that time ) try to override your Athletics skill ( wtf ? )
Personally I think it's a minority. I think if there were barbarian subclasses that just were supernaturally strong, fast, and tough,they would be embraced by the community.Oh, I perfectly understand that other fantastic stories, like superheroes, can have characters that aren't supernatural but are able to go toe-to-toe with ones that are. The problem is that D&D players have repeatedly shown their distaste for those concepts existing in D&D. Hell, they even explicitly refer to "supers" as a mockery of editions they don't like.
Do not mistake me: I would love to see this. I'm not talking about my interests. (I am, after all, a fan of 4e, where pure-strength Martial characters were empowered to contribute just as much as characters with supernatural powers.)
The problem is that, whether it is a majority or simply a vocal minority, the decisive voices in the community absolutely hate even the idea of melding the two a little bit. The official designers aren't interested in offering well-made "Warrior of Physicality" options (look at how both the Berserker and the Champion, the peak "Warrior of Physicality" archetypes, are not very good), and the few times such options have been well-made, they've gotten serious backlash. There's neither internal nor external motivation for it to happen...so it won't.
You'll have to look to third-party sources for that. And third-party sources are going to want to do a variety of things, not all of which you're going to care for.
... for diversion usageWTF is right…
Thank you! I may check it out!For anyone interested in a scholarly approach to witches, witchcraft, and their definitions across cultures, I highly recommend The Witch by Ronald Hutton (a respected subject authority). Great read if you're into academic literature.
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