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*Dungeons & Dragons
King (for a day) of the Monsters: Rot Grub Swarm
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<blockquote data-quote="The Scythian" data-source="post: 7340293" data-attributes="member: 6875986"><p>The delayed damage isn't a design flaw. It's an attempt to make combat with the rot grub swarm less dangerous, as it will often (but not always) result in one or more characters getting the chance to act before the target takes any damage at all. In the case you presented, the problem wasn't the delayed damage tricking the paladin into wasting an action, it was that you didn't say something like, "You can cast cure wounds, but while the rot grubs are burrowing into the wizard's flesh, they haven't actually done any meaningful damage yet." That would have given the paladin's player a more accurate idea of what was going on in the game world. It's not the monster designer's fault that you didn't do that.</p><p></p><p>Beyond that, the rot grub swarm is certainly a tough CR 1/2 monster, but most encounters with it will be a cakewalk. Its attack bonus and AC are awful, its hit points are low, it's slow, it has very limited senses, and it must move into an opponent's space to target it. They're not exactly the stealthiest creatures, either. Most of the time, even low-level parties encountering rot grubs are going to walk away either completely unscathed or with very little damage. Sometimes, one or more party members will die, but if you're not playing <em><strong>Tomb of Annihilation</strong></em>, that's not necessarily a big deal.</p><p></p><p>Since you are playing it, one thing you might consider is treating monsters capable of outright killing characters, instead of merely downing them, as significantly more dangerous than their challenge ratings might otherwise indicate.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="The Scythian, post: 7340293, member: 6875986"] The delayed damage isn't a design flaw. It's an attempt to make combat with the rot grub swarm less dangerous, as it will often (but not always) result in one or more characters getting the chance to act before the target takes any damage at all. In the case you presented, the problem wasn't the delayed damage tricking the paladin into wasting an action, it was that you didn't say something like, "You can cast cure wounds, but while the rot grubs are burrowing into the wizard's flesh, they haven't actually done any meaningful damage yet." That would have given the paladin's player a more accurate idea of what was going on in the game world. It's not the monster designer's fault that you didn't do that. Beyond that, the rot grub swarm is certainly a tough CR 1/2 monster, but most encounters with it will be a cakewalk. Its attack bonus and AC are awful, its hit points are low, it's slow, it has very limited senses, and it must move into an opponent's space to target it. They're not exactly the stealthiest creatures, either. Most of the time, even low-level parties encountering rot grubs are going to walk away either completely unscathed or with very little damage. Sometimes, one or more party members will die, but if you're not playing [I][B]Tomb of Annihilation[/B][/I], that's not necessarily a big deal. Since you are playing it, one thing you might consider is treating monsters capable of outright killing characters, instead of merely downing them, as significantly more dangerous than their challenge ratings might otherwise indicate. [/QUOTE]
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King (for a day) of the Monsters: Rot Grub Swarm
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