Sacrosanct
Legend
Mostly only online, and mostly during the 3e era. After that, it died down a lot. But back then, the most common thing I heard was how if I wasn't optimizing, I was hurting my other players.
It’s almost impossible to make an incompetent character in 5E. Worst you could do is put your lowest stats in your class’s primary stats. Everyone gets at least four skills. The only way to screw that up is to also put those in skills with your lowest stats. Even then, you end up with an average character who’s not laser focused on their assumed area of expertise. That’s a character being not amazing, that’s not the same as incompetent.I agree that players should make characters that are competent, but not need to be optimized. The game itself is designed for average PCs and falls when the whole group is optimized. I like my group with nobody taking some of the big feats that seem a problem and they are still quite powerful.
Yes, I really like her videos as well. I imagine posting "sub-optimal" characters tend to get a lot more push back on social media, it being what it is. The worse I ever got was the occasional eyebrow raising back in 3e days. (Dwarf bard? Are you sure?) I play with people I know really well, however, so my experience is limited.I have watched some other Ginny Di videos and enjoyed them but it seems to me that the blog referenced is not really a response to Ginny Di's video more a projection of the authors issues onto that video. At least as far as I have read it.
It appears to me that Ginny Di posted her less than optimised warlock on social media somewhere and got pushback and then posted on twitter and got dogpiled.
She decided to make a video about and why wouldn't she, she has a hungry algorithm to feed. Is it real, I suspect so, it has happened to me after all. I suspect that it happens more often to women (even if the character is not actually sub-optimal, just unorthodox). That is called out and made fun of in "The Gamers: Dorkness Rising" movie.
Yes.Most of the stuff in the OP is just awful.
With the one exception of the time I played in Olgar Shiverstone's game and he used point buy only for character generation, I haven't made a pc without rolling my stats in order since, I believe, 2e at least.When I get to be the player, I sometimes roll my PC stats and features just to see what comes up, and play whatever I get. It's NEVER unplayable.
I had to take someone aside in AL play for going off that other D&D players at the table weren't optimizing their characters for combat damage.But is he right? Is this woman complaining about nothing, or are there jerks who try and force people to "optimize" or some such?