doctorbadwolf
Heretic of The Seventh Circle
It’s an ideaSorry. Where is that from?
It’s an ideaSorry. Where is that from?
Maybe? In either case, I'm not sure what point you are trying to make.In other words, "flavor".
That is what I mean about a doublestandard between the Rogue and Fighter.
The strict nonmagicality only applies to a Fighter.
"I am a character in an overt fantasy story."But the reverse is untrue. If the players want their character to do something that is overtly impossible in reallife, there needs to be an explanation for how such a thing might make sense.
Rogue, Barbarian and Ranger should all be allowed to be awesome without being forced to be magical as if having to provide their permit to have interesting mechanical choices.Yet it is unclear to me, how some players got so fixated on a nonmagical Fighter − and why not the Rogue?
Getting a "magical permit" "to have interesting mechanical choices" is exactly how 5e works.Rogue, Barbarian and Ranger should all be allowed to be awesome without being forced to be magical as if having to provide their permit to have interesting mechanical choices.
Getting a "magical permit" "to have interesting mechanical choices" is exactly how 5e works.
Yeah I mean exposure to mythic powers def should change people.Alternatively, what if the towns person says
"In their youth, the mayor was a great adventurer. They fought and killed several dragons, their party once went down to hell and killed a devil prince. For a while, the mayor was a regular consort with agents of the fey. Somewhere in all that, something must have happened, because when they came back, they could fly. No one knows exactly what happens, but this sometimes occurs with people who have done great deeds like the mayor has."
As long as it’s a generous interpretation of Cap.I think Captain America is a decent cutoff point. He's been able to knock down Hulk, hold helicopters in place, can lift 1,200 lbs, run 60mph, and has a warlordy subclass going on. He could take down a non-world-ending dragon on his own if needed by leaping up to its face and making it choke on its own breath weapon.
I’d rather have broadly defined skill-styles types of magic with parameters to keep them in line.I would give my eye teeth if DnD would do this. One attack spell per level. One defense spell. Three “effects” spells.
Complete magic system in four pages.
Yes please.