If it has hit points, we can kill it.
If it has hit points, we can kill it.
We don't see much of the block, and I'm sure it has some eldritch surprises.From what we see in the preview it seems likely that it doesn't live up to that title IMO. However, if there is something akin to the mythic trait hidden in there I may change my opinion.
Personally the best take I have seen so far for 5e was Sandy Peterson's version.
To be fair, the Cthulhu mythos was in one of the first AD&D books: Deities and Demigods. So if any RPG has some claim to it, it is kind of D&D.
To be fair, the Cthulhu mythos was in one of the first AD&D books: Deities and Demigods. So if any RPG has some claim to it, it is kind of D&D.
I mean I take the stance that D&D has never not had it. So it has done just fine with it since basically the beginning IMO.I'm aware, but I still don't like it and D&D has done just fine without it for over 30 years.
the scariest thing about Blair Witch was the shaky camera, the rest was boring as hellYes, what is scary is very subjective. Back when it came out I can remember a friend telling my "The Blair Witch Project" was the scariest thing they had ever seen and it didn't really do anything for me.
I'm familiar and I've played a little CoC too. I still have one of the 4e books (from the eighties) I think
Blair Witch was kind of an unusual case, because it was one of the first really successful found footage horror movies, and one of the first movies to play with the ARG-style viral marketing campaign. As you say, horror is subjective, but a huge part of why Blair Witch had such a reputation for being so scary was because of the context surrounding it, not the movie itself. It’s very slow, meandering, and contains almost no actual scares. The scary part is meant to be in convincing you that it’s a real thing that happened, or at least getting you to believe it could have happened, even if you know it didn’t really. Plus between the shaky camera giving a lot of viewers motion sickness and the one crying scene being so gross, a lot of people to vomited in the theaters, the stories (and smell) of which contributed to the impression of it being so viscerally disturbing that people couldn’t handle it.Yes, what is scary is very subjective. Back when it came out I can remember a friend telling my "The Blair Witch Project" was the scariest thing they had ever seen and it didn't really do anything for me. We are all different. I too didn't find "The Witch" scary, but I will say the movie "Let's Scare Jessica to Death" hunted my nightmares when I was a child.

(Dungeons & Dragons)
Rulebook featuring "high magic" options, including a host of new spells.