Hey, I'm not the one you have to convince. I'm not the one who's saying that they have been "well-used in several settings". Heck, I largely AGREE with you. But, apparently, you are 100% wrong according to @Faolyn. So, like I said, you fine folks figure it out and let me know. Because until you guys figure it out, how am I supposed to carry on a conversation where the two people I'm talking to are claiming exact opposite things as truth?This is a false dichotomy based on not looking at what is actually being said.
the point that if you break things down by subrace and apply your crude filter we kick out dwarves.
If goblins and kobolds make the 6e PHB, rest in pepperonis halflings and gnomes.Yeah, that's going to absolutely crush gnomes and halflings
The setting the issue is about is Forgotten Realms. Has anyone defended Forgotten Realms here?Hey, I'm not the one you have to convince. I'm not the one who's saying that they have been "well-used in several settings". Heck, I largely AGREE with you. But, apparently, you are 100% wrong according to @Faolyn. So, like I said, you fine folks figure it out and let me know. Because until you guys figure it out, how am I supposed to carry on a conversation where the two people I'm talking to are claiming exact opposite things as truth?
Well the same issue kinda exists in Greyhawk, Mystara, and Generic Setting #4.The setting the issue is about is Forgotten Realms. Has anyone defended Forgotten Realms here?
Do these even have 5e setting books?Well the same issue kinda exists in Greyhawk, Mystara,
Did you create Generic Setting #4? If you did, that's your own fault. Nothing in halflings inherently makes them bad for homebrewed settings. Several people here have told how they're used in their own worlds. That some people don't know what to do with them is a personal problem, not a problem with halflings.and Generic Setting #4.
Why on earth do you think the halflings are fighting 1 on 1? We've got an entire village of community minded farmers against a single raiding party. Especially at range quantity has a quality all of its own.I'm with you for most of it, but slings aren't effective enough. Range of 30 ft if you don't want disadvantage is too close, 1d4+1 is an average of 3 damage (my math previously said 4, I think I was rounding up) meaning it would take potentially 7 strikes to take down a gnoll, at close range when they only need one strike.
Their bonus is literally just a +1.
That's worse than base proficiency.
They have adventure books.Do these even have 5e setting books?
We shouldn't run the game on the expectations of everyone being an expert and veteran.Did you create Generic Setting #4? If you did, that's your own fault. Nothing in halflings inherently makes them bad for homebrewed settings. Several people here have told how they're used in their own worlds. That some people don't know what to do with them is a personal problem, not a problem with halflings.
As normal you seem to be distorting what's being said.@Neonchameleon - I have to admit, I tend to agree with what you are saying. If they are going to keep halflings in the game, then actually use them. Unfortunately, I don't think they will. They'll keep halflings in the core, because, well, as this thread has shown, any modifications to halflings is treading some very, very dangerous territory. There's been a lot of pretty negative reactions to some of the proposed changes and I think that the traditionalists in the hobby will lose their collective minds if we stray too far afield.
And once more you demonstrate that you, personally, @Hussar have very little understanding why people love halflings and what halflings add to the game. I've a feeling kobolds will be the final nail in the coffin for gnomes if they aren't locked behind a paywall. Rock gnomes with their tinkering specialty in particular are going to suffer against D&D's archetypal trapmakers. (Forest gnomes tend to come second to lightfoot halflings anyway).It will be interesting to see what happens after the new dragon book comes out. I'll bet, as a thought, they'll spend a fair bit of time on dragonborn but also on kobolds. As it stands right now, the only real competition for halflings is gnomes - they're the only 2 small races in the PHB. And, "the small race" is a definite niche. But, if kobolds get a bunch of loving in the new Dragon book and if they become free to play on D&D Beyond, my prediction is that by this time next year, halflings will be pretty much gone. A short race with ties to dragons? Yeah, that's going to absolutely crush gnomes and halflings.
Will be interesting to see.