Actually at 12th lvl you can cast an Extended Mage Armor and have it last all day. In 3.5.Dracorat said:I am quite the opposite. 3.5 encourages smart thinking and planning. Now, you can't decide to just cast an extended mage armor for all day and that's that. Now, you have to choose when its important to have it (for example).
Them's fightin' werds!Cedric said:The more 3.5 I play, the more I can't stand huge parts of it.
Infiniti2000 said:Them's fightin' werds!
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IME, the tighter ruleset of 3.xe has made player creativity easier, not harder. Both you and the DM know what a spell (or whatever) will do; there's less room for a DM to squelch a good idea or tactic.Cedric said:They seem to have tried to remove or reword every spell that had some unintentional use that would allow it to be cool and allow players to actually be creative.
That's usually because (surprise, surprise) the damage spell in question has other effects, in addition to the damage.Cedric said:Half of the damage spells wind up with your target saving for no damage it seems.
shilsen said:Actually at 12th lvl you can cast an Extended Mage Armor and have it last all day. In 3.5.
That being said, I generally find the 3.5 changes to spells a significant improvement.
You're thinking, maybe, of something like Bull's Strength?Dracorat said:Yeah my bad on that one.
But still, many of the spells fall in the category I described (I just picked a bad example)
Cedric said:/Rant_On
They seem to have tried to remove or reword every spell that had some unintentional use that would allow it to be cool and allow players to actually be creative. Now each spell has to fit into some cookie cutter mold of "it does this and this only."
This isn't even mentioning the way durations have been castrated.
Invisibility - once a great scouting spell. Now a short lived spell which primarily is used to give an immediate combat advantage for one round, then is discarded.
The more 3.5 I play, the more I can't stand huge parts of it.
/Rant_Off
Cedric said:From a Fire Safety Manual...Grease of the cooking oil or animal fat variety is definitely flammable. In fact, one of the most dangerous house fires is a grease fire. The temptation is to throw water on it, but this scatters the grease (while it's still burning) and will not put out the fire.
I can understand your butter analogy, but grease itself is absolutely flammable.