In 30+ years of playing, I can barely remember anyone bothering to keep track of ammo, rations, water, or even encumbrances or spell components, much less PC lifespans.
I mean…hi. I’m the guy from the only group that apparently did these things.
In 30+ years of playing, I can barely remember anyone bothering to keep track of ammo, rations, water, or even encumbrances or spell components, much less PC lifespans.
What about character retirement, character capture, character maiming to the point where it cannot continue, etc.?other groups however, choose to take character death off the table.![]()
Also fun and exciting.That, and IME taking death off the table would very quickly lead to some quite ridiculous play.
We track character age fairly closely, mostly because we like making a big deal (in jest) when our birthdays roll around.In 30+ years of playing, I can barely remember anyone bothering to keep track of ammo, rations, water, or even encumbrances or spell components, much less PC lifespans.
naw, we did tooI mean…hi. I’m the guy from the only group that apparently did these things.
Not in my experience. But too many folks have said what you're saying for me to discount it.Also fun and exciting.
This so much. The only time I ever really saw groups that had trouble filling a healer in the party tended to be the ones loaded with players too caught up in "look at how awesome that my guy is" to work with support build focused PC's like healer and controller types. Even in 3.x I remember it being rare for the party to not have a partially charged wand or two that got broken out for emergencies or stored forgotten in a bag in case the party ever had a bad run of luck.Interesting topic. In BECMI and AD&D healing was clearly a relevant aspect, but I always had players that enjoyed playing clerics, so with one in the group, it was never much of an issue.
Of course, but there’s a whole slew of games that do make resource management important. D&D used to make it more of a thing and people did track that stuff (and possibly still do). It’s a style of play.There is more to making resource management a part of the game than just ticking off boxes.
I mean, I don’t think anyone (well, given the amount of replies to the opposite, maybe I’m wrong) really enjoys Accounting & Actuaries.