Presumably that's the drink they pour for your party right before you descend, inebriated, to the lower level and start slinging axes around for funsies.Hopefully the bar will serve a cocktail called "The TPK."
Presumably that's the drink they pour for your party right before you descend, inebriated, to the lower level and start slinging axes around for funsies.Hopefully the bar will serve a cocktail called "The TPK."
Not for funsies, but to kill rats to pay your bar tab.Presumably that's the drink they pour for your party right before you descend, inebriated, to the lower level and start slinging axes around for funsies.
I honestly do not know, as I have not been to Lake Geneva yet!Is the convention centre there really busy? You don't need to have the restaurant be full on D&D all the time to please the business crowd. A good bar, good food AND the axe throwing lane will probably be enough to keep them busy and out of TGI Friday or what have you.
This could get out of hand. Imagine optimizers complaining about desserts that just can't keep up with the expected CPS (calories per spoonful).I feel like a D&D themed restaurant should address the mechanics as well.
Like when you show up, roll a d20. Nat20 and you get the best seat in the house. Roll a 1 and they sit you by the bathroom.
The menu can just be a series of random tables to roll on.
Not to mention the negative results if you roll a 1 on the Chew and Swallow check. Hope someone trained in Medicine is around to do the Heimlich maneuver!This could get out of hand. Imagine optimizers complaining about desserts that just can't keep up with the expected CPS (calories per spoonful).