Micah Sweet
Level Up & OSR Enthusiast
You think he was lying? I haven't heard that claim before."Supposedly" doing a lot of heavy lifting, there.
You think he was lying? I haven't heard that claim before."Supposedly" doing a lot of heavy lifting, there.
Pretty much, yeah. I'm sure you could describe the casting of it in the fiction differently, but if the effects are the same it's going to look the same.Honest question. Disguise self is a spell castable by Wizards, Sorcerers, Bards, Artificers, and Trickery Domain Clerics. Despite being mechanically the same, is it the same spell in the fiction?
But would the characters recognize a difference?Pretty much, yeah. I'm sure you could describe the casting of it in the fiction differently, but if the effects are the same it's going to look the same.
Depends on the person, but if they make the second claim I wouldn't object to it.But would the characters recognize a difference?
Like, if a cleric cast Disguise Self, would the wizard say "I can do something like that", or would they say "I can cast that same spell?" Because I view that as being two different things.
not really, it does very light lifting, it’s just that I cannot confirm it"Supposedly" doing a lot of heavy lifting, there.
convenient to end it right before they talk about them dropping off as they did for all prior editions as wellQuoting from the article I linked to: "4E was released in June of 2008, with stronger presales and opening sales than 3E, according to both anecdotal gaming store data and Wizards of the Coast (EN World has several articles on this). Sales held strong throughout the edition’s lifetime."
My main issues with cards in RPG are asthetic (I'm not playing a card game) and a lack of interest in buying expensive bling I feel is unnecessary.Also, abilities/spells/feats/whatever being formatted to easily fit into a printable card format is amazing, and I wish more systems did it. A character sheet is great for knowing what your character can do at a glance, but having a deck of cards that you can skim through that list out the details of each ability your character has access to is amazing, especially for more crunchy systems. D&D 5E (and a lot of other systems before it) have side products that do it for spells (and I THINK class abilities, but I haven't paid much attention to 5E products lately), and it is so useful, especially for newer players who aren't as proficient at skimming the relevant books or holding their character's abilities in memory.