mamba
Legend
oops, yes, it is level 12, my point about wanting a continual increase still stands however11 isn't easy to get, it's actually the hardest level to get. That sort of makes sense since 11 is the start of tier 3
oops, yes, it is level 12, my point about wanting a continual increase still stands however11 isn't easy to get, it's actually the hardest level to get. That sort of makes sense since 11 is the start of tier 3
That's totally fine. I'm just pointing out there's a sensible rationale for it, not saying whether or not I agree with the overall design choice.oops, yes, it is level 12, my point about wanting a continual increase still stands however
It's a huge problem given that using more powerful (and higher CR) monsters is the most common solution to problems caused by PC classes being designed for adventuring days so bloated that wotc has never actually written a 5e adventure book for them. The stronger monsters are designed for even higher exp needs than those the PCs have & the PCs wind up just accelerating their power gain forcing the GM to accelerate it even more by continuing using monsters that grant more & more exp the PCs don't need.I don't mind it so much. If I had to pick one level I thought was the exact sweet spot for 5e, it would be 10th.
A gamist rationale, but yes, a sensible one from that perspective.That's totally fine. I'm just pointing out there's a sensible rationale for it, not saying whether or not I agree with the overall design choice.
Sure, but each level being necessarily harder than the last isn't the only approach that makes sense even from an in-universe perspective.A gamist rationale, but yes, a sensible one from that perspective.
And before anyone says anything, I believe that classes and levels have some meaning in-universe, and are not just a gamist construct.
But how much more educated are you as a senior, really?Sure, but each level being necessarily harder than the last isn't the only approach that makes sense even from an in-universe perspective.
Senior year of high school is way easier than junior year (at least in the US), to give one real-world example.
I don't know about your corner of the world, but over here there are the same number of academic days in the junior school year and senior school year. I've heard that some schools are starting to require a set amount of volunteer work for seniors since covid too.Sure, but each level being necessarily harder than the last isn't the only approach that makes sense even from an in-universe perspective.
Senior year of high school is way easier than junior year (at least in the US), to give one real-world example.
Nitpicking the example aside, the core point that "challenge doesn't always progress linearly, sometimes the hardest point of progression can be in the middle" stands.I don't know about your corner of the world, but over here there are the same number of academic days in the junior school year and senior school year. I've heard that some schools are starting to require a set amount of volunteer work for seniors since covid too.
It's not nitpicking. Not one single detail in your post was on target. There are two parallel threads of discussion being talked about & your comment addressed neither.Nitpicking the example aside, the core point that "challenge doesn't always progress linearly, sometimes the hardest point of progression can be in the middle" stands.
It's not about versimilitude, you are making an analogy that tries to conflate two different problems as if they are the same problem.Verisimilitude does not REQUIRE that every new level requires more challenges than the last.