Desdichado
Hero
Ahh, kamosa. What would a thread asking a low-magic question be without you coming in to complain about the entire concept?kamosa said:I've always found that to kind of be a straw man arguement. I mean, I don't find fighting, use of skills, or feats to match up very well with fantasy novels either. Yet, I never hear anyone say, "gee, I've never seen someone in a novel with power attack and great cleave." or "I've never read a novel where the main character took 20 great ax blows to the chest and walked away."

Actually, I think you'll find that the use of feats is something that is represented quite a bit in novels. Tons of characters have "special" abilities that are kind of their speciality; something they are known for that they can do that most people cannot. Not supernatural abilities, mind you (although sometimes that's the case) but special abilities nonetheless. Now whether or not Power Attack and Great Cleave specifically are feats that are replicated in novels or not is another question, but still, I think you're incorrect in this assessment.
Likewise, I've never heard of a D&D character that takes 20 axe blows to the chest and then walks away. Clearly, if he has enough hit points to walk away, the blows weren't to his chest, were they? HP are sufficiently abstract that if you're having problems like this, it's with the description your DM is giving of the blows, not the system itself.
Besides, plenty of books and movies both have extremely rugged heroes who can take a lickin' and keep on tickin'. It's almost a hallmark of action and martial arts movies, for example.
That's a fine position, except that the fun is subjective. Also, the system didn't evolve that way because it was popular. I don't believe in a rigorous application of any survival of the fittest doctrine in this industry, especially in regards to how widespread a system is. That has little to do with any qualitative merits of the system itself, and a lot more to do with the timing and business acumen of the parties that published it.kamosa said:Spells, like feats and skills, are just representations of the spells in fantasy. The system evolved because it was popular and because it could sell more books, IE it's fun. At some level this is a game, and as such, obeys game rules not rules of writing.
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