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General Tabletop Discussion
*Pathfinder & Starfinder
April 3rd, Rule of 3
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<blockquote data-quote="BryonD" data-source="post: 5877369" data-attributes="member: 957"><p>In general terms:</p><p></p><p>I could endorse something like this.</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>Meh, "realism" is such a loaded term it is hard to say anything really meaningful with it in this context and really know that you and the person you are talking to is taking it to mean what you intended.</p><p></p><p>But my aversion to surges really isn't about pacing. Clearly pacing is tightly interlaced with the concern. But pacing itself is not it at all. If the system is such that a fighter can go through 100 battles and (presuming no "fatal" wounds) never once receive a wound that requires actual healing but instead were every single time just so many ouches that get mojoed through, is a fundamental flaw to me. And there is no mention of pacing in that. Now, expecting some concept of wounds that require healing to exist obviously does immediately bring pacing issues into the equation. But those issues only arise ofter the problem has been defined, they are not part of the definition itself.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="BryonD, post: 5877369, member: 957"] In general terms: I could endorse something like this. Meh, "realism" is such a loaded term it is hard to say anything really meaningful with it in this context and really know that you and the person you are talking to is taking it to mean what you intended. But my aversion to surges really isn't about pacing. Clearly pacing is tightly interlaced with the concern. But pacing itself is not it at all. If the system is such that a fighter can go through 100 battles and (presuming no "fatal" wounds) never once receive a wound that requires actual healing but instead were every single time just so many ouches that get mojoed through, is a fundamental flaw to me. And there is no mention of pacing in that. Now, expecting some concept of wounds that require healing to exist obviously does immediately bring pacing issues into the equation. But those issues only arise ofter the problem has been defined, they are not part of the definition itself. [/QUOTE]
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April 3rd, Rule of 3
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