Turjan said:Evokers can basically do one thing. It's not nice when a different school, first, mirrors all evocation spells and, second, does so with even less penalties. This makes the school of evocation obsolete.
Kamikaze Midget said:So is it just a collection of spells from previous sources? Or is there any fresh hot beef injections in the book?
The Breakfast Club, sporto!DungeonmasterCal said:I have not heard that phrase in nearly 20 years... what movie was that from??
ForceUser said:Having all the spells in all of those sources in one book will dramatically increase my usage of non-core spells. I just don't enjoy flipping through a dozen sourcebooks looking for different spells. Now I won't have to.
Turjan said:Evokers can basically do one thing.
It's not nice when a different school, first, mirrors all evocation spells and, second, does so with even less penalties. This makes the school of evocation obsolete.
GQuail said:I very much agree. I own several of the books/magazines listed as being in this collection, but having to plough through multiple books when I can't quite remember where X spell is isn't fun. Sure, I could search online: but at the game table, that's not viable.
This book seems a bigger plus to players than DMs. If I'm making up an adventure, I don't mind flicking through my collection to seek out characterful spells: but I hate having to hand across a sourcebook I'm using mid-adventure because the Druid has a spell from it, especially if I'm mid combat with a monster from self same spellbook.
Li Shenron said:You're right that it will be more useful for a player rather than a DM. There's a balance problem tho: if the player is a Cleric or Druid, allowing this book means more than doubling their spells known. Unless you introduce some house rule which I'm fairly certain that this book doesn't suggest.