Vaalingrade
Legend
Until you got the wand of Lesser Restoration online.Even so, 3e at least had status effects that didn't go away the next morning.
Until you got the wand of Lesser Restoration online.Even so, 3e at least had status effects that didn't go away the next morning.
Nonsense is relative. If there's an expectation mismatch, at the end of the day it doesn't matter who's "right", even if that could be determined. No one is going to have a good time.
You do if they refuse to explain why they disagree. That's not a discussion, that's name-calling. No matter what side it's coming from.
So we assume the assertion is false? You can just say no and you're in the right?
You must have seen different Zweihanders than me. I've never seen any real sword with a hand-width blade.About the width of a hand. Just like a typical Zweihander.
Nah, it's a bit exaggerated.Unless the mystical halo around you got you confused, the sword Elmore depicted is perfectly normal.
That's not from a modern D&D book (or a D&D book at all), so I fail to see it being relevant to my query or to the complain about about weapons in modern D&D being anime-inspired.The sword of "Zangetsu" is taller and got a wider blade than his head! And he can weild it one hand...
Burning a bunch of spell slots like that by doing an overnight rest to cast a bunch of cure spells was not without risks, the healer was down all of those slots the next day and would want another rest making "let's go back to town" something players of those characters were likely to consider pushing for instead of just the gm trying to convince the party it's unsafe since there was the first risk of wait while beat up & down on slots till they can pray in the morning to cure everyone else up then the risk of being massively down on spell slots while waiting till they could pray for it again the second morning or the healers were down whatever they just used. By that time two days have passed and the risk of going back can be much higher.I always love the whole "Naw, 3e didn't have unlimited healing". It makes me giggle.
Never minding that clerics had their healing abilities massively increased, paladins became a commonly played class, rangers got healing at what, 3rd, 4th level, AND the party could make their own healing wands for a feat that the wizard got for free.
Good grief, did you ever see a group actually heal naturally in 3e? Ever?
Then again, the 3e change was mostly based on how 2e was being played where, sure, it wasn't overnight healing, but, it was as fast as the cleric could cast Cure spells. Meaning that the natural healing rules were 99% ignored anyway.
This "change" is more just a reflection of how the game was actually being played.
For everyone else's reference, Zangetsu is a magical ghost sword made spirit energy and its size is a symbol of the wielder's lack of focus in his spiritual power. Once he gains focus and ability, it gets smaller.The sword of "Zangetsu" is taller and got a wider blade than his head! And he can weild it one hand...
Literally asked for more than one word to express an opinion.They asked 'Am I Wrong?', not 'please write up a dissertation to explain why I'm wrong to satisfy some other random poster who will ride your butt for it for no reason'.
They don't get to act like its all the DM either. Seems like it's always portrthough. 100% one or the others fault though.Absolutely true--but people don't get to act like that's all the players' problem because they have unreasonable expectations. And there's certainly parts of the "it was better in the old days" crowd that clearly think that.
I completely understood what he was talking about, for my part.I feel no need to particular be kind to people who are, at best, using an idiosyncratic use of a word and not bothering to define it, and at worst are using it as a way to play the dozens on stylistic choices they dislike. I don't consider calling them out for doing that in any way inappropriate.