ezo
Hero
Which if fine, of course. As I said, not knowing the whole situation and what the "costs of failure" might be, I'm just saying I might have required the rolls. If there was really no major cost of failure, and success was fairly automatic, I wouldn't require any rolls, either.To reiterate/clarify: Yes, in hindsight, I know that the rules support it. It was a decision I made 8 years ago. I felt like it was the wrong decision made by an inexperienced DM (me) at that time.
Oh, I know all about those from the DMG. For me, it really depends on two things:Go back and (re)read what I quoted from the DMG regarding The Middle Path (the bit that you cut out of your response.)
It seems you prefer the "Rolling with It" style of DM adjudication. That's fine.
1. How automatic do I think success or failure should be? Is this low enough or high enough to not bother rolling?
2. What happens if they fail on the check? Are there severe consequences? If so, should I really allow things to be automatic?
If the price of failure isn't a big deal, I won't ask for rolls, of course. If failure is a big deal, then you have to roll. It is where the price of failure is someplace in the middle, that auto success or failure comes into play regarding a needed roll or not.
I don't know of any system that had coup de grace rules where a kill was automatic. Many became a save or death instance, but not automatic. Granted, there are LOT of systems I am not familiar with. LOLyeah the lack of clear coup de grace rules was a major bugbear when transitioning to 5e, its still a bother, having to haggle with the DM about whether my stealth attack on the sleeping enemy should be an autokill
