Mind of tempest
(he/him)advocate for 5e psionics
humans are a jack of all options to list them is cheating it is like saying humans are scholarly, dwarves feel more like they are defined by great craftsmanship they fight as more a necessity than some grand need to fight, why fight because they have to not because they want to.This is where I would mention the Custom Lineage rules from Tasha's Cauldron of Everything, and get the usual responses.
Anyway. This is a different argument from the previous one about Dragonborn being the first to allow a proud, warlike character. I maintain that humans were the first--or dwarves, if you disqualify humans for whatever reason. We've had proud, warlike humans and dwarves in D&D for almost half a century.
dragonborn fight because it is fundamental to them it is who they are they just seek worthy reasons to do so.
core can be ignored at your pleasure worry less that things exist and more about why others want them.One could - and some would - argue that's the direction in which WotC are incrementally going, whether intentionally or otherwise.
The high- or low-ness of standards isn't the point; the point is that core is by definition "must-have" to play the game while optional is not. Which means, when we're told "everything is core" we're being told that every release will immediately become a must-have in order to play the game.
Pretty sure the first time(s) I heard the phrase was in/from WotC marketing....quite possibly at the same GenCon seminar where they told us 3.xe (that at the time they'd been pushing for years) was garbage.
It's a long time since I looked but the phrase might even show up in the DMG I. I don't recall.
The physical production quality was pretty good across the board, and remains so through 5e from all I can tell. The material presented and-or the manner of presentation...well, I suppose that's open to opinion.![]()
giving laser eyes to who?Because frankly you could give them laser beams for eyes and no one would care.