Micah Sweet
Level Up & OSR Enthusiast
Exactly! Actual superpowers have to come from somewhere.Neither does anyone else.
Exactly! Actual superpowers have to come from somewhere.Neither does anyone else.
yep, just pointing out that there are more reasons to argue for this than to hit players over the head with itThe problem is, there are DMs who do.
This is true but on the other side here are those who wanted to be Paladins purely for the mechanical effects and had no interest in following a code of any sort. So it cuts both ways.The problem is, there are DMs who do. A lot of those old "fiction" rules were wielded as clubs by DMs who were less skilled or benevolent. Paladin was the poster-child of "lets see how long I keep my character class THIS time" style of play, but clerics, druids, monks, even rangers were often targeted in the spirit of "role-playing challenges". Personally, I'd rather that chamber be unloaded by default and the notion added back in session 0 than to assume the chamber is loaded by default and lose my spells because the God of fire was upset I saved a child from a burning orphanage...
Radioactive spiders.Exactly! Actual superpowers have to come from somewhere.
But does it really differ from the 2014 default? I'm not sure it does. I think they're just being more explicit about it.Fair enough, I get you. My issue here is that they've gone from leaving these kinds of setting questions open to be determined by the DM and the group, to providing a default that differs from previous defaults and clearly favors the players, and don't even have the decency to do so in a new edition.
A great example, but not a cleric.Radioactive spiders.
By the way, I was able to read the answer to this question while the info was in the Free Rules in DnDBeyond.Generally, how does 2024 approach "cosmology", "planes", and the "multiverse"? How much is customizable, for example?
Being more explicit restricts options, unless you explicitly open them up. New players only see the new stuff.But does it really differ from the 2014 default? I'm not sure it does. I think they're just being more explicit about it.
I also get the sense that they're trying to make the core rules as generic as possible so that the setting books can do the heavy lifting in terms of fluff and setting logic. Obviously we'll have to wait for next year's FR books to see if that assumption is correct, but that's what I'm thinking. (That could be why the species in the 2024 PHB have so little fluff, for instance.)
on Earth, sure, in D&D I can at least understand how a god would be able to grant power, I am far less convinced an idea couldNeither does anyone else.