James Gasik
We don't talk about Pun-Pun
Really. At least in my play group, we took Con very seriously, as everyone wanted as many hit points as possible. Also note that the limit of being raised is your Con score, and everyone wanted the highest system shock possible, as our DM's were ruthless about making us check for it.Tbh I don't need it to be a massive penelty. It can be 100% fluff (awful spry 70 year old human since you have the same stats as you did at 20) I just want the player to record that age, let it seep into there minds and there RP.
I never once saw an elf age a year or two and not stop to contemplated it... I guess to some the ageing only mattered if it lowered your str... but to most I knew in 90's the idea of ageing a year in 10 minutes was something you took serious. We never had dragon characters but I do remember the vampire character did joke about haste a few times.
okay. so then we can add the number and let people think and play with it as they do.
I will say this my 18 or 19 year old brash fighter that gets hasted 5 times in 30 days and is all of a sudden 24 is going to have a bit of a crisis
really? I saw permanency used at least 1 or 2 times any campaign that hit 15+ level... did people really freak about a point of con?
I had to look it up, I knew it was a large swath... but 7-14 con didn't do anything to your hp, just system shock and ability to be raised. I didn't see many wizards or clerics with 15 or 16 con
"System Shock survival states the percentage chance the character has of surviving the following forms of magical attacks (or simple application of the magic): aging, petrification (including flesh to stone spell), polymorph any object, polymorph other"
And yeah, I noted back that magical aging causes System Shock as well, so I can tell you, I myself avoided spells that age my character like the plague, lol.
Turns out casting Slow on a bunch of enemies was about as good; I never so much looked at Haste twice until 3e. Do note that modern Haste already has a big downside, and the upside is nothing like "double your attacks per round"!
And no, no Dragon PC's. But in one AD&D campaign I was in, just about every spellcasting Dragon I fought had the spell, which was not only nasty on the face of it, it was the DM's explanation for why there were so many powerful Dragons running around (because of course, as monsters, they didn't have a Constitution score, so what system shock?*)
*The DM's words, not mine. I thought that was hogwash at the time, but I couldn't find any official rules saying otherwise at the time (but the answer is in Dragon # 133 if you're curious).