MichaelSomething
Legend
This isn't the way I play D&D. That's all I can really say.
This isn't the way I play D&D. That's all I can really say.
No probs!Thanks, this was extremely helpful in better understanding the relationship between the two. I had missed this.
Thanks!I read the transcript of your game - pretty cool.
That's an excellent question, but I can't recall properly. At the time I must have had something in mind, but I don't know what I would have done - maybe a surprise attack from the roper?Was the roper introduced due to the Action Declaration of the player or due to the success with the Perception check?
Or in other words, what would have happened if the player had rolled poorly - would the roper have been introduced?
Something more colourful than that, but more or less. The table was in no doubt as to what had happened - the player in question had thought of the possibility that there might be a roper disguised as a stalagmite, and I had been prompted to look up my book (as above, I think in the context of calling for a Perception check) and then narrated the roper. When my friend was reminiscing about it a few weeks ago, he was the one who was laughing at it being the (other) player's fault, as it was the (other) player who had introduced the possibility by declaring the action.And did you actually say something to the effect of "I had not prepared for a roper, but your action declaration/perception roll prompted be to include it" ?
I don't know if I've ever heard the GM described as using Force. I typically reserve Force to either physics or threats/use of violence. But you know what? I'm down. What kind of Force do I use as a GM? Why Magnum Force of course!
Why force? Because "use of force" has the very pejorative implication that you're noticing with respect to threats/use of violence.

(Dungeons & Dragons)
Rulebook featuring "high magic" options, including a host of new spells.