Aldarc
Legend
I think so, yes.I don't think so, no.
I think so, yes.I don't think so, no.
Isn't "powerful" a relative notion? Eg were-hyenas are powerful when fighting ordinary soldiers. But they are not all that powerful when fighting Conan (who I am putting forward as a paradigm of a "mundane" high level fighter).HP are intended to create fiction where defeating a powerful entities takes some effort. If that is not the sort of fiction one wants to create, then it is a wrong system to use.
It is not about number of words, it is about having to use this sort of feature that doesn’t represent anything that exists in the fictional world to patch the fact that your combat system doesn’t scale properly.
The minion stat block used in 4e D&D does represent something that is part of the setting, part of the fictional world - namely, it represents the relation between the PC and their foe. It represents that capacity of the PC to kill the foe with a single blow.The literal same creature in the fiction of the setting has multiple mechanical expressions based on nothing having to do with what it is in-setting.
The view I stated was (i) a prediction based on extrapolation from these innumerable threads, and (ii) a sardonic prediction.I think so, yes.
Thanks to bounded accuracy, you can just throw 30 level one dudes at a high level person! Huzzah
This seems to be similar to how hp attrition combat feels to someone who, in the 80s or 90s, decided that RM or RQ is a more serious game than D&D. "Level one dudes", "hit points", "armour class", all just seem like set dressing and the GM or the game designer putzing around with numbers.Yeah, minion rules did not have the desired effect for me or my players. It felt cheap, like I was playacting the combat and scoring a hit was the director telling an extra to lie down.
The fantasy lives in imagination.The whole minion problem is that it undermines that fantasy. The model has to be consistent for the fantasy to be fulfilled.
Why is it arbitrary? It's deliberate - deliberate on the part of the GM, to represent the power dynamic of the fantasy world as that pertains to this creature and these protagonists.Minion rules always seemed just designers giving up. "We want our heroes to be able to oneshot foes, but the normal combat rules we have designed and the hit points we are assigned to the enemies don't allow it. Well, lets just say that sometimes enemies arbitrarily have one hit point, problem solved!"
@Manbearcat gave a full post about the "win" - that depends entirely on the GM's ability to use the encounter building rules. When the mid-paragon PCs in my 4e game tackled the hobgoblin phalanxes, one of them died. The point of the minions, and the swarms (phalanxes), is not to "give the players a win". It is to accurately represent the fantastic fiction.the system is setting up easily killable stooges for me to slay so it will never feel particularly satisfying or earned.
Let's have an example. At early levels characters encounter a bunch of monsters of certain type. They have a tough fight, are badly beaten and barely manage to escape alive. Perhaps even one of the characters dies. Later in the campaign when the characters are higher level, they encounter the same monsters again. Oh no! But this time they defeat them with ease! The characters have become more powerful!
Now the fiction was system agnostic, but do you think the system being used would affect the players' perception of the situation?
Option 1) The monsters use the same statblocks both times.
Option 2) The monsters use statblocks with full hit points at the first time, but have only one hit point the second time.
Because to me it would matter, and I seriously doubt I'm remotely alone in this. With the option one it would actually feel we're beating the same monsters that were such a menace earlier and the victory would feel earned, with option two it wouldn't feel we're really fighting the same enemies and the GM is just giving us the win because they've decided this is the narrative they want to have here.
Sure doesn't. One of the many advantages of TSR era/OSR D&D.Bounded accuracy, inflated hit points, and level progression come together in a package.
Something has to go up and if you demand that attack and AC doesn't, then damage and hit points will.
And there are drawbacks to that.
Any gameplay, narrative , or simulation fantasy that relies on having low damage or low hit points doesn't work in 5e without additional rules.
That's not a thing in the world. That's a game state at the table.Isn't "powerful" a relative notion? Eg were-hyenas are powerful when fighting ordinary soldiers. But they are not all that powerful when fighting Conan (who I am putting forward as a paradigm of a "mundane" high level fighter).
If a FRPG based on levels doesn't permit a high level fighter to emulate Conan's feats, then I think it has failed.
There are many possible mechanical formulations that can avoid this sort of failure. But in this thread, I am mostly just expressing a view as to what the mundane high level fighter looks like. That fighter looks like Conan.
The minion stat block used in 4e D&D does represent something that is part of the setting, part of the fictional world - namely, it represents the relation between the PC and their foe. It represents that capacity of the PC to kill the foe with a single blow.
This is one of the possible mechanical formulations I mentioned just above.
TSR era/OSR D&D didn't have bounded accuracy.Sure doesn't. One of the many advantages of TSR era/OSR D&D.
As I've said many times before, I am far more interested in simulating a consistent imaginary world than I am in representing fantastic fiction.This seems to be similar to how hp attrition combat feels to someone who, in the 80s or 90s, decided that RM or RQ is a more serious game than D&D. "Level one dudes", "hit points", "armour class", all just seem like set dressing and the GM or the game designer putzing around with numbers.
The fantasy lives in imagination.
When I was GMing 4e, how did I assist my players to imagine their mid-paragon PCs as Conan-esque in their power? By statting up hobgoblin swarms that could heal themselves by "absorbing" adjacent hobgoblin minions. When the shared fiction is of (eg) a Dwarven warpriest of Moradin carving his way through a hobgoblin phalanx, the fantasy is not in doubt.
The game solved the problems with AD&D that I described just above (as reasons for playing RM and RQ instead), and one non-accidental aspect of that was providing a working model of a high level but "mundane" fighter.
Why is it arbitrary? It's deliberate - deliberate on the part of the GM, to represent the power dynamic of the fantasy world as that pertains to this creature and these protagonists.
@Manbearcat gave a full post about the "win" - that depends entirely on the GM's ability to use the encounter building rules. When the mid-paragon PCs in my 4e game tackled the hobgoblin phalanxes, one of them died. The point of the minions, and the swarms (phalanxes), is not to "give the players a win". It is to accurately represent the fantastic fiction.
I'd be fine with getting rid of bounded accuracy.TSR era/OSR D&D didn't have bounded accuracy.
WOTC decided to bound accuracy and AC in 5e. But a level based progression system needs progression. And feats were optional. So they progressed damage and bloated HP to hell.