Conan the Barbarian 23
Conan the Destroyer 26
LotR 32
Willow 9+1 = 10
Krull 17
Princess Bride 10-2 = 8
Conan the Destroyer 26
LotR 32
Willow 9+1 = 10
Krull 17
Princess Bride 10-2 = 8
Agreed. Willow should beat out Krull and Princess Bride IMO. It is much more typical D&D than the other two movies.I wonder what happened to all the Willow love. At one point, it was the top vote getter. Now it's looking like it's not going to make the top 5, which sounds crazy to me.
LOTR is great, no doubt, and while it is a pinnacle fantasy movie, it is not a pinnacle D&D movie IMO, especially for 5E!!!People love the epicness of LoTR
Yeah, I know, LOL! I didn't like doing it, since I enjoy LOTR so much...@DND_Reborn - the 'like' is for the correction, not for the LotR downvote!![]()
Why not for 5e? In fact, maybe even more so for 5e - LotR shows 'em exactly how it's done.LOTR is great, no doubt, and while it is a pinnacle fantasy movie, it is not a pinnacle D&D movie IMO, especially for 5E!!!
The only spellcaster isn't even a "wizard" by D&D terms. It is incredibly low-magic in many ways, which a lot of 5E games, and the default level of magic in the game design, certainly isn't.Why not for 5e?
Not so much 5E. 5E is 4-5 PCs, not 8-9! That is more typical of B/X and AD&D IME and IMO.Large party.
Insane overlap of "classes" really, not some. 5E often has very distinct classes IME. Rarely do you have two or more PCs of the same class in 5E unless it is intentionally a theme (like when I ran my all monk game).Some overlap in character classes and-or abilities. In-party conflict.
LOL character deaths are also really not a 5E IME, especially after tier 1. You generally have enough HP that most encounters won't run the risk of death if you play by the design of the game. Of course a DM can ramp that up, but it really isn't the default. A downed PC has about a 60% chance to stabilize even without help!Character deaths, and in one case revival
Not really. Exploration and social where present, sure, but they weren't really "challenges" the party had to overcome. They were just part of the story. Certainly no more than they would be in any other edition of D&D.Exploration, social, and combat pillars all featured.
Again, this is hardly unique to 5E, and was more true in AD&D than it is in 5E. Most (certainly not all of course!) 5E games IME are shorter campaigns, where players play the same PC up to level 7-10 and then the group moves on to new PCs. Rare are the tables which play for several months or even years with multiple campaign stories going on leading to the same finale. Sure, there are some, but those were much more common with AD&D than with 5E.Later, the party splits into multiple parties each doing different things all leading to the same goal (i.e. all part of the same campaign), and new characters (Eowyn, Faramir) are introduced.
Sure, but that can be applied to any fantasy RPG, it is hardly unique to D&D or 5E. If anything, 5E doesn't have nearly the depth of setting and history prior editions had (again, especially AD&D). 5E returns again and again to settings developed in prior editions. Other than Ravnica (due to the MtG cross-over), does 5E have anything setting-wise that is unique??? It might, but I don't know if it does...And all on a grand epic scale against a well-detailed setting with a rich history.
It just doesn't get any more D&D than that!
C the D: my dnd game at 15. C the B: my dnd game as an adultConan the Barbarian 22 + 1 = 23
Conan the Destroyer 26
LotR 28
Willow 11
Krull 17
Princess Bride 9 - 2 = 7
Because BOTH Conan movies are legit D&D movies. They just switched DMs.