Old Fezziwig
hell yes bro
I'm as surprised as you are.What, questionable logic and writing??? In a TSR product from the late 1980s?????
I'm as surprised as you are.What, questionable logic and writing??? In a TSR product from the late 1980s?????
I don't see why we can't blame both the writer and the editors.Found the culprit, unless we are blaming the editors.
I was thinking that the author might have been part of that British D&D nonsense back in the day. It might have been a natural slip.I don't see why we can't blame both the writer and the editors.
Found the culprit, unless we are blaming the editors.
Robin Jenkins, the Pride of Woodruff, Wisconsin?*I was thinking that the author might have been part of that British D&D nonsense back in the day. It might have been a natural slip.
From page 3:I'm more interested in the XP totals and how you get different amounts for killing or defeating or retreating.
It works for me - the statues could be quite worn and weathered yet their species still be obvious; and the days of "somewhat well-traveled" could have been a long time ago.The structure is close enough that shepherds have knowledge of it, such that they can say it's crowded with statues of victims. It's old enough and far enough away that its function isn't well-remembered but not so old that the shepherds can't tell the races of the statues, which suggests that it's in passable repair, the shepherds have explored, and the area's somewhat well-traveled if there are lots of victims. To me, it just feels like there's a lot of stuff to kind of straighten out. It feels over-written, like it's trying to do too much.