Thomas Shey
Legend
That's true. Nevertheless, I wish they would. I view coherence as a virtue in both game and setting design.
And I wish there wasn't one giant RPG company didn't dominate the industry, but one is about as likely as the other.
That's true. Nevertheless, I wish they would. I view coherence as a virtue in both game and setting design.
I have enough supplements that I've got several different (that is, mechanically different, albeit only slightly) versions of major races, and this is something I'm looking at implementing in my next campaign where orcs are concerned.And racism is rampant, not between different types of Humans but between Humans and some non-Humans and between various different species of non-Humans.
Other than that, how''d you enjoy the play Mrs. Lincoln?Things I dont like about D&D, in no particular order:
Classes, levels, Armour class, vancian casting, safe easy magic, safe easy magic as the only reliable way to accomplish anything, immature power fantasy fulfilment, illusionism and railroading as an almost universal playstyle, bland anodyne fantasy bobbins, worthless resolution mechanics, tedious 'fetch this, kill that' adventures and fake easy confortable 'heroism'.
I know you're joking, but inflation is one of the few things mostly not a huge issue in medieval times unless the monarch started to debase coinage. There wasn't a regular 2-5% "accepted" level or anything.I've always reconciled that magic has done what technology did to the modern world. It has propelled civilization beyond medieval limits of thinking. Germ theory is nothing to people who have knowledge of other realms of reality and how to get to them. A small amount of druidic involvement keeps the crops from failing. Artisan Guilds enforce pricing on a national level. Etc.
Frankly, a more medieval world would be depressing. Rampant ignorance, corrupt elites terrorizing their populace, the price of goods rapidly fluctuating, witch hunts, superstition replacing science, the Church controlling all aspects of society, rampant racism and sexism. Who would want to live in a world like that?
True. It was supply and demand issues that caused prices to flux.I know you're joking, but inflation is one of the few things mostly not a huge issue in medieval times unless the monarch started to debase coinage. There wasn't a regular 2-5% "accepted" level or anything.
When I gripe about the game not being fun, this is usually what my complaint boils down to.The flat mechanisation of 'make a skill check' replacing detailed exploration of environments and conversations.