Ovinomancer
No flips for you!
Have you never read a post by @iserith?See, I was not even aware that this is literally RAW while doing it like that, still feels good to have the RAW on my side![]()

Have you never read a post by @iserith?See, I was not even aware that this is literally RAW while doing it like that, still feels good to have the RAW on my side![]()
Elves always cheat. At love, strength, making toys.I've pondered bows after reading up on medieval bows and warfare (e.g. why a crossbow vs. longbow). By the end, even a shortbow requires over 100 pounds of pull. There was a shipwreck with a career archer who had deformities from pulling the bow so often.
However, then there's the Lord of the Rings elf who pulls his bow all day long but clearly isn't as muscular. So, by the end, maybe we have elven style bows that somehow bypass physics and historical bows, and you can pick
Or just pour a little bit of whiskey in them, and stick into a box until you need them. Like cigars.Triage and resource management are a major boon to a campaign.
And precious is the player who enjoys playing a well-run healer. They must be cherished and humored.
CR is not very reliable in determining the Strength of a particular (group of) monster(s) vs. a party of every possible constellation.
It's ambiguous. The criteria for making that decision isn't spell out specifically. However, if the criteria that the DM uses (to decide who succeeds, fails, or needs to roll) is anything other than "roll when the DC is within 20 points of your modifier, fail if the DC is more than 20 points higher, and succeed if a 1 would be sufficient on the die roll," then you introduce massive inconsistencies within the mechanics. If you have two methods for resolving uncertainty (DM fiat, and the d20 roll), and they give wildly different outcomes, then the deciding factor becomes the arbitrary choice of which method to use.Deciding that certain characters can't make certain checks is RAW. The DM is always allowed to determine whether an action automatically succeeds, auto fails, or requires a check. They also have all the leeway in deciding why to do so.
Rules As Written.What does RAW stand for?
Rules As Written.
A corollary acronym you'll see sometimes is RAI, which stands for Rules As Intended; relevant in situations when RAW and RAI don't entirely agree.![]()
I disagree. It's not ambiguous so much as leveraging the greatest strength any RPG has - the ability to rely on the human mind for decision making.It's ambiguous. The criteria for making that decision isn't spell out specifically. However, if the criteria that the DM uses (to decide who succeeds, fails, or needs to roll) is anything other than "roll when the DC is within 20 points of your modifier, fail if the DC is more than 20 points higher, and succeed if a 1 would be sufficient on the die roll," then you introduce massive inconsistencies within the mechanics. If you have two methods for resolving uncertainty (DM fiat, and the d20 roll), and they give wildly different outcomes, then the deciding factor becomes the arbitrary choice of which method to use.
So you're saying that a 5e character with a +6 athletics bonus trying to climb a wall produces unreasonable results?Note that the d20 system, un-fettered by Bounded Accuracy, doesn't have this problem. In 3.x, you can let someone roll whenever they're within 20 points of the DC, and you get reasonable results. This issue is solely a result of Bounded Accuracy.