Parmandur
Book-Friend, he/him
We already have both Monsters of the Multiverse and the new PHB Race rules. They are the same.I suspect we'll soon find that MoM is more "inspired" by 1D&D than actually part of the new edition.
We already have both Monsters of the Multiverse and the new PHB Race rules. They are the same.I suspect we'll soon find that MoM is more "inspired" by 1D&D than actually part of the new edition.
Tabarnak....
don't tone police, especially in such circumstancesDon't swear.
That's an interesting way to think about it. So Nat20 Inspiration is the new Crit rule (and also expanded to all d20 tests), and weapon damage crits are a power bump to weapon users.Yeah, I think gaining easier Inspiration so that you can sneak attack more reliably will likely be reasonable compensation for not getting to double SA damage on a crit.
If you consider that a benefit.Is the biggest benefit of NPCs in the monster books not being stat-ed up like PCs and using spell-like effects instead of spells... that most of them should work the same after the PHB changes?
don't tone police, especially in such circumstances
No they're not.We already have both Monsters of the Multiverse and the new PHB Race rules. They are the same.
Yes, yes they are. The formatting and rules are entirely transparent. Crawford admitted that isbehat theybhad done, and you can read the book and thebplaytest packet.No they're not.
So they are really forcing inspiration at this point. I guess they didn't like how little folks used it before.That's an interesting way to think about it. So Nat20 Inspiration is the new Crit rule (and also expanded to all d20 tests), and weapon damage crits are a power bump to weapon users.
What I've been saying since I got in the hobby.That's the paradox in the arguments for why fixed racial ASIs are so necessary. It amounts to "Goliaths are way stronger than Halflings, and that should be represented by a +1 on d20." You'd have to give them +10 strength for it to even begin to address the realism argument.
A colorful racial ability goes so much farther in portraying the strength of a Goliath than does an ASI.