Mmm....cake. Is the trick to buy or make two, and not tell anyone you ate the first? If so, posting about it feels like it ruins it.Because some people want to have their cake and eat it too.
Doh!
Mmm....cake. Is the trick to buy or make two, and not tell anyone you ate the first? If so, posting about it feels like it ruins it.Because some people want to have their cake and eat it too.
He was wrong twice. First in the quote. Second in thinking it should be obvious.Or as Gary used to do, "if you jump off a 200 foot cliff you are dead, I don't care how many hit points you have.". He didn't think such obvious things needed to be explained.
He was wrong.
Does it round to zero chance if you're rolling a d100. Of course more zeroes can be added and on a d1000?He was wrong twice. First in the quote. Second in thinking it should be obvious.
On mundane - One definition is that. Another is dull and uninteresting, lacking excitement. I think you can see why that doesn’t sit well.Isn't mundane the opposite of supernatural? Happy to get more word choices. What would you do with.
On mundane - One definition is that. Another is dull and uninteresting, lacking excitement. I think you can see why that doesn’t sit well.
I think Natural would be the obvious opposite to supernatural. Perhaps a better description though would be skillful. In whatever setting/genre I want the fighter to be skillful. In settings with supernatural fighters that’s what my skillful should be. In settings with captain America fighters that’s what skillful should be.
The question I think is - what kind of fighters are d&d setting fighters - and the fighters most associated with d&d are not supernatural.
Likely haven't been involved in the particulars of the threads you're referring to, but I believe I fit the description.Ok, so I've lost a thread (mental, not ENWorld one) somewhere.
I know why group A doesn't want super-buffed fighters unless they're supernatural somehow.
And I know that group B wants fighters to be just as gonzo as the wizards.
I've forgotten why either group cares if there is no decent mundane fighter option, and all the good ones are supernatural somehow.
Anyone care to say if they are A or B and if they hate the balanced-with-wizards /gonzo fighters needing to pick a power source like demi-god, ancient mystic heritage, secret inner power source, dipped in Styx, blessed by the gods, etc ..?
Personally I think asserting an "obvious truth" for a diverse population of magical fantasy settings is a tremendously foolish thing to do.Does it round to zero chance if you're rolling a d100. Of course more zeroes can be added and on a d1000?
Survival following a vertical free fall from 300 feet: The crucial role of body position to impact surface - PMC
We report the case of a 28-year old rock climber who survived an "unsurvivable" injury consisting of a vertical free fall from 300 feet onto a solid rock surface. The trauma mechanism and injury kinetics are analyzed, with a particular focus on the ...www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Likely haven't been involved in the particulars of the threads you're referring to, but I believe I fit the description.
My issue with the "pick a power source" solution is that I find that it unnecessarily limits folks thematic options. And ultimately, I don't see a strong reason to care where the martial power comes from. For me, what matters are the things your PC can do, not why they can do them.
It's not like we perform this level of justification for casters.
What are the setting conditions that make a wizard different from an academic?
A cleric different from a priest?
A bard different from a busker?
A sorcerer different from their siblings?
A druid different from a dirty hippy?
Fair enough!We don't really know and we don't care. I don't see why we should for martials.
Personally I think asserting an "obvious truth" for a diverse population of magical fantasy settings is a tremendously foolish thing to do.