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  1. Maxperson

    D&D 5E (2024) Mike Mearls explains why your boss monsters die too easily

    They can, but probably won't since they are below average in intelligence. It's unlikely that they will think of it on their own.
  2. Maxperson

    D&D 5E (2024) Mike Mearls explains why your boss monsters die too easily

    You're imagining a whole lot that doesn't exist. There is no "controlling what the players are allowed to know," and there is "so they will believe they're under pressure when they aren't," and there is no "lead them to believe it's pressure." I don't run my game like that. You're barking...
  3. Maxperson

    D&D 5E (2024) Mike Mearls explains why your boss monsters die too easily

    What is the difference between CR and level?
  4. Maxperson

    D&D 5E (2024) Mike Mearls explains why your boss monsters die too easily

    No. I present the situation. Sometimes that comes with some sort of time pressure. Usually it doesn't. The players cannot know that there isn't something happening off screen, though, so they often pressure themselves. There is no effective difference. Perceived pressure vs. real pressure...
  5. Maxperson

    D&D 5E (2024) Mike Mearls explains why your boss monsters die too easily

    Hit them with an encounter 6-10 CR higher than their level and hope that they don't TPK. There's a pretty narrow line between, "This encounter can survive a PC nova and dish back" and, "This encounter can survive a nova and dish back more than you guys can take."
  6. Maxperson

    D&D General Why Enworld should liberate D&D from Hasbro

    "This suit of armor is reinforced with adamantine, one of the hardest substances in existence. A razor made from it can even shave a dwarf."
  7. Maxperson

    D&D 5E (2024) Mike Mearls explains why your boss monsters die too easily

    No. You don't get to tell me what I suggested. You asked for examples of a mechanical consequence, and the only thing I "suggested" was that here is an example of one possible mechanical consequence. By the way, why are you fighting so hard to avoid responding to the second possible...
  8. Maxperson

    D&D 5E (2024) Mike Mearls explains why your boss monsters die too easily

    The thing is, it's not even suboptimal. If the goal is to rescue the princess, stopping to rest and let her die is about the least optimal choice you could make. Optimization is not just about combat.
  9. Maxperson

    D&D 5E (2024) Mike Mearls explains why your boss monsters die too easily

    A lot of people play for the social situation and to be challenged. For many it is very enjoyable to meet and overcome challenge and adversity. It is incorrect to remove challenge from the purpose of play, because there are many purposes for playing D&D. It's perfectly fine for you and your...
  10. Maxperson

    D&D 5E (2024) Mike Mearls explains why your boss monsters die too easily

    So I've imagined all the times my players pressured themselves into moving on, because it was possible there would be some sort of consequence that they came up with on their own? All of those times never happened?
  11. Maxperson

    D&D 5E (2024) Mike Mearls explains why your boss monsters die too easily

    That's some politician level of word twisting there. I never said anything about "should" with Oathbreaker, and I never mentioned the death domain cleric. You asked for an example of a mechanical consequence, so I provided two. You've blatantly twisted the first beyond belief at this point...
  12. Maxperson

    D&D 5E (2024) Mike Mearls explains why your boss monsters die too easily

    The Death Domain cleric, yes. The Oathbreaker is DM applied to a PC paladin. It's in the 5e PHB. Breaking an oath =/= villain. It can be a villain, but it can also be someone who made a large and tragic mistake and seeks to atone.
  13. Maxperson

    D&D 5E (2024) Mike Mearls explains why your boss monsters die too easily

    It's in the DMG for a reason, and that reason is that the DM applies it to the PC, not the player. It's not a subclass meant for players to pick. It's a consequence for narrative action or narrative and mechanical action. Since you wouldn't respond to it in the other post. Here's another...
  14. Maxperson

    D&D 5E (2024) Mike Mearls explains why your boss monsters die too easily

    You need to back that up with some facts, because I've taught a bunch of folks who came to D&D from video games and zero of them were like that. 🤷‍♂️ It's almost as if they understood the difference between a sit down roleplaying game and a video game. I blame both Critical Role and their...
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  16. Maxperson

    D&D 5E (2024) Mike Mearls explains why your boss monsters die too easily

    If the players have agreed to play their character in a roleplaying version of the game, then they will not ignore narrative consequences. For example, a good party isn't going to rest and let the princess die just because they aren't at 100% resources. That would be bad faith play for a good...
  17. Maxperson

    D&D 5E (2024) Mike Mearls explains why your boss monsters die too easily

    Yes, and it's not the only board game with narratives. Runebound is another one where it's both a board game and a narrative is happening. And Arkham Horror.
  18. Maxperson

    D&D 5E (2024) Mike Mearls explains why your boss monsters die too easily

    It wasn't empty. It was open ended deliberately. Unless the group has agreed to play a boardgame instead of a roleplaying game when they play D&D, narrative consequences will almost always matter in some way. How will depend on the party and the details of the scenario. The consequences...
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