delericho
Legend
The protagonist never dies on action movies... there's no danger around those movies![]()
Arnie 'dies' in "End of Days", so it's not totally unheard-of.
Still, it is extremely rare.
The protagonist never dies on action movies... there's no danger around those movies![]()
The protagonist never dies on action movies... there's no danger around those movies![]()
At least, they never die when it truly counts from the perspective of the BBEG. By the time they do die, the day has probably been saved, the enemies have been defeated, or they are sacrificing their lives for some meaningful event. Which still contributes to saving the day one way or another.Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon?
At least, they never die when it truly counts from the perspective of the BBEG. By the time they do die, the day has probably been saved, the enemies have been defeated, or they are sacrificing their lives for some meaningful event. Which still contributes to saving the day one way or another.![]()
It's like I've said since 4e came out. It plays a lot different than it reads. I've seen more hp loss and more dropping-to-zero-hp in 4e than I ever saw in 3.5. Less death, overall, granted, but more "holy crap, this is a difficult fight."
For a couple of levels, my players were scared of elven archers.
Yeah, the cleric in my group used to work overtime to get every drop of healing he could. The party's Fighter or Swordmage would have his HPs yo-yo over the course of a battle, going from 3 to 28 to 6 to 19 ... and so on.This matches my experience pretty well. Its a rare fight when at least one character doesn't drop below 0 (and thats with both a cleric and a warlord in the party). I think that 4e has made it slightly harder to die, but its a lot easier to get close to death.
Well you get action points to emulate the burst damage/scary things.
In my version of KotS, the hobgoblins were lead by a elite. The players had already interrogated a few goblins and a hobgoblins, so they had heard of this Chief WhatshisName. They knew he was a bad-ass. So when they were approching what they thought to be his lair, they sent the superstealthy rogue to scout and see if there was an ambush. For once, the rogue failed his stealth, and coming around a corner, the Chief charged right into the surprised rogue and hit him hard with his bastard sword (that was the surprise round). Initiative. Chief WhatshisName won it, and started. Double attack (he is an elite after all). Action point. Double attack. Permadead player. Not even a death save he got. Went straight to more than minus bloodied. And this was not some crazy sick monster that was higher level. Players were 3rd or 4th level, and the Chief was one level higher (and elite).
You guys are right about the slow burn vs the sudden shock. I like the sudden shock aspect.