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  1. Laurefindel

    D&D General Sandbox and/or/vs Linear campaigns

    Linear DM: step in for a rollercoaster ride Sandbox DM: entrance to the theme park right this way
  2. Laurefindel

    Let's Talk About Short Campaigns

    I used to be a sucker for slow adventure pace and long campaigns but I’m starting to appreciate more and more short campaigns. For me, a campaign is defined by a series of distinct adventures. Our Blades in the Dark games are pretty much 1 night = 1 adventure, so a short ark over 3-4 session...
  3. Laurefindel

    D&D 5E (2014) Dynamic Combat Movement houserules

    These specific rules? No. But I’ve used some similar ones, including the ones that are already in the game. My conclusion is that while they are cool, ultimately they serve little purpose other than pushing into/getting out of casters´ AoE spells. When these rules work too well, they get rather...
  4. Laurefindel

    D&D General How much do you care about rule change specifics?

    I had this nice jacket. Sheepskin bomber style, really heavy and warm. I loved it and wore it until it practically fell apart. Now I have a new one, very similar but you know, not quite the same. It has buttons instead of a zipper, it’s not as heavy and not as warm, which is an advantage...
  5. Laurefindel

    "I think Hydrogen is a rare element" and other science facts.

    Now what, next you’re gonna tell me that when a spaceship runs out of fuel, it doesn’t just slow down to a halt?!?
  6. Laurefindel

    Binary Success vs Multiple Levels of Success

    Indeed, And regardless of the system, whether it’s a binary roll like D&D, degrees of success like TOR, success with consequences like PbtA, or triple-axis icons like FFG Genesis/Star Wars, the table must understand that some things cannot be achieved with a single roll after 2 minutes of...
  7. Laurefindel

    Binary Success vs Multiple Levels of Success

    Thing is, the consequences of a failure is rarely “nothing happens” even in a pass/fail system à la D&D. Even when the result isn’t catastrophic, something usually still happens because many things usually happen at once. For example, we rarely just make an Athletics check to climb or a thieves...
  8. Laurefindel

    D&D 5E (2024) WotC Unveils Dragon Delves' Eclectic Art Styles

    I really dig that… githyanki?
  9. Laurefindel

    Binary Success vs Multiple Levels of Success

    Having run both systems, I can say that they don’t quite occupy the same writer’s room space, and players can often “purchase” benefits from a predetermined list when achieving additional levels of success (in the second edition especially), removing some of that burden from the GM. Sometimes...
  10. Laurefindel

    Binary Success vs Multiple Levels of Success

    Not quite, but there are similarities. Both are essentially pass-fail systems with additional levels of success and complications added on to them, but The One Ring is much easier to adjudicate. The One Ring’ system one of my favourite systems of all times; I’ve reused it for three other...
  11. Laurefindel

    Binary Success vs Multiple Levels of Success

    Now now, you’re trading bad GM habits for terrible GM practices. You don’t like pass/fail systems, I get that, but you’re laying it pretty thick there. PbtA is a good system and obviously it worked for you, but it is far from the panacea you think it is.
  12. Laurefindel

    How many years does it take for an RPG to become nostalgic, for you?

    Not a matter of years; it’s a matter of period of my life. A game becomes nostalgic for me when thinking about it reminds me of a period of my life that felt different from my life now. This could be 2 years or 20, it depends how fast life goes
  13. Laurefindel

    "I think Hydrogen is a rare element" and other science facts.

    It’s more of a systemic change as a whole, but (before Tasha) halflings didn’t have access to strength ASI and small creatures couldn’t use heavy weapons, which in turn soft-locked them out of high-damage builds and Great-Weapon Master feat builds. I feel something changed about small creatures...
  14. Laurefindel

    "I think Hydrogen is a rare element" and other science facts.

    Agreed We tend to compare and judge things based on what we’ve seen and experienced, and extrapolate from there. Whether it’s realistic usually doesn’t matter. Dog-size ant? We know what an ant look like. We’ve seen how it moves. We know roughly how strong a dog is, and how fast it can move...
  15. Laurefindel

    "I think Hydrogen is a rare element" and other science facts.

    I agree with most of your post but here’s where I disagree: D&D is not a simulator that aims to accurately reflect reality but it IS a reality simulator. All rulesets are. It takes a position on a scale, its not a yes/no question. People usually don’t go for ‘reality’, they go for...
  16. Laurefindel

    "I think Hydrogen is a rare element" and other science facts.

    Indeed, I like to call that the « because dragons! fallacy ». Still, I’m willing to make concessions and stretch my voluntary suspension of disbelief to allow a gameplay that would otherwise be made impossible with rules more in line with my perception of reality. D&D has combat. D&D has...
  17. Laurefindel

    "I think Hydrogen is a rare element" and other science facts.

    Yet, going plaid make still makes more sense than going salamander
  18. Laurefindel

    "I think Hydrogen is a rare element" and other science facts.

    Oh right, wasn’t Red Dwarf a mining vessel doing exactly that?
  19. Laurefindel

    "I think Hydrogen is a rare element" and other science facts.

    Getting all your science facts straight when doing sci-fi is hard. I’m ok to assume a good part of fiction in my science-fiction, but I prefer when the science part is hand-waved rather than explained. Gas tends to have a low molecule-to-volume ratio and density at normal pressure. I’d have...
  20. Laurefindel

    D&D General [rant]The conservatism of D&D fans is exhausting.

    Exhausting? Yes. Baffling? No. People have an emotional attachment to their hobby. Well, fans do at any case. Nothing surprising about them resisting changes to what they loved.
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