Garthanos
Arcadian Knight
and raising the dead is an 8th level effect...Wizards can straight up fly at 5th level and teleport anywhere on the same plane of existence at 11th.
and raising the dead is an 8th level effect...Wizards can straight up fly at 5th level and teleport anywhere on the same plane of existence at 11th.
Depends on how hot it is.Heat through metal?
That electrical energy moves from the brain to the nerves a hell of a lot faster than those muscles can move after receiving the commands. For that matter, kinetic energy is transferred much faster as well.Also, moving a human arm involves the transfer of energy too. Never conduction velocity, the mechanical constriction of muscle fibers. The friction of tendons and bone.
Energy is not just 'glow stuff that moves faster than human reflexes'.
We cannot make determinations as to how fast a type of energy is transferred without knowing the actual type and medium.Depends on how hot it is.
How fast does the documented energy type known as 'glowy blueness' move through an unknown material that has the appearance of leather strands?That electrical energy moves from the brain to the nerves a hell of a lot faster than those muscles can move after receiving the commands. For that matter, kinetic energy is transferred much faster as well.
I think that to a lesser extent, it is more present in wuxia stories. It was mentioned to me once that mythological and certain comic book heroes were special because they were born that way (Hercules and Superman, for example) or due to a single one-off event (Achilles gets dipped in the Styx, David Banner gets pelted by gamma rays). However, wuxia heroes had to seek out masters of martial arts or knowledge set down in manuals and train and practice in order to acquire their special techniques. I'm no expert, but it does align with what I know of both genres."Leveling up" is a uniquely RPG concept. You don't really see it in media that isn't either an RPG itself or heavily influenced by/adapted from one.
i don't beowulf is just a man trained... and he wrestles grendel and a dragon then grendel's mother...Gilgamesh and Beowulf feel more than a little different to me than MCU Thor or Captain Marvel![]()
the problem is I am not suggesting we go over the top of the current power scales... take ANY 5th or 6th level spell and give a 17th level warrior class options like that and you STILL have full casters throwing 9th level spells... but some how that always breaks the game to some.But anyway, the question feels like it's a bit about genre. If player A wants Ocean's 11 and the other wants Batman it feels like something has to give. If player A wants historical WWII and player B wants MCU WWII something has to give.
Is it that D&D just hasn't decided what the top level of power is?
we tried at the beginning of the edition... and fighters get board fast.I guess I'm curious about the actual play experience of folks who run things past level 12 and how the current fighter players are experiencing things compared to the current Wizard players.
i don't beowulf is just a man trained... and he wrestles grendel and a dragon then grendel's mother...
Thanks for the feedback!we tried at the beginning of the edition... and fighters get board fast.
by the mid point of the edition I was finding even NEW players get board by 5th or 6th level (and not just with fighter, even the paladin and monk and both have magic abilities too)
"Lasso: Whiskey carried around a whip/lasso that he could use to fend off multiple opponents: the lasso could also be activated so it became charged with electricity—strong enough to cut someone in half. He was skilled enough to catch objects in midair with the lasso, or pull objects using it."We cannot make determinations as to how fast a type of energy is transferred without knowing the actual type and medium.
How fast does the documented energy type known as 'glowy blueness' move through an unknown material that has the appearance of leather strands?
Halve the problem we have is fans can't agree on how a normal humanoid could train hard enough to reach the power level of Hercules or the Hulk looks.I think I would prefer a D&D that is built around the idea that a normal humanoid could train hard enough to reach the power level of Hercules or the Hulk.
Appropriating "ki" for the monk class is problematic in all the ways that WotC is trying to get away from.I think that to a lesser extent, it is more present in wuxia stories. It was mentioned to me once that mythological and certain comic book heroes were special because they were born that way (Hercules and Superman, for example) or due to a single one-off event (Achilles gets dipped in the Styx, David Banner gets pelted by gamma rays). However, wuxia heroes had to seek out masters of martial arts or knowledge set down in manuals and train and practice in order to acquire their special techniques. I'm no expert, but it does align with what I know of both genres.
While it could be argued that wuxia heroes are powered by supernatural ki and are not purely martial, I think I would prefer a D&D that is built around the idea that a normal humanoid could train hard enough to reach the power level of Hercules or the Hulk.
Ballistic missiles don't exist in D&D. Restarting a neutron star is a narrative thing, not mechanical.Captain Marvel turned around ballistic missiles accelerating towards earth and destroyed really big freaking space ships by flying through them. Thor did something with restarting a neutron star. Those feel different than wrestling even fairly big things to me...
Thanks for the feedback!
Did the wizards still stay interested?