wow why not just let the DM play for them....LOLA painful lesson I've failed to learn over and over again. It cracked me up when I learned PF2 has a feat you can take that let's the DM just tell you when you're chasing a total red herring.![]()
wow why not just let the DM play for them....LOLA painful lesson I've failed to learn over and over again. It cracked me up when I learned PF2 has a feat you can take that let's the DM just tell you when you're chasing a total red herring.![]()
My players forget their class features all the time, but NEVER forget what their magic items can do.
Seems like your players could learn something from each otherForgetting inventory items have never been an issue that I can recall, however forgetting class features or spells has happened.
Seems like your players could learn something from each other
Maybe they were quietly hoping to gain all the benefits of being a lycanthrope without that one inconvenient downside of eating your friends.I once had an entire 4-member party forget that one of them was a werewolf, including the player who was the werewolf. And I did a bunch of stuff to try to remind them. They had several in-game days to deal with it, and a cleric who could have prepared Remove Curse during multiple long rests but just didn't. The full moon finally arrived and the player turned when they were all resting inside Leomund's Tiny Hut and she started eating them in their sleep.
As they say in the Old Country: "Never use sriracha-flavored healing ointment bought from a cackling night hag."Maybe they were quietly hoping to gain all the benefits of being a lycanthrope without that one inconvenient downside of eating your friends.