darjr
I crit!
We’ve made it.Funny thing: When I googled to find the feedback, Google landed me here.
Also yes fill out the commentary blocks with as much as you need to.
We’ve made it.Funny thing: When I googled to find the feedback, Google landed me here.
The easiest solution would be no extra damage on a crit.Why not just a flat damage bonus on a crit? That's the easiest solution.
Within 200-500 words. I always push the upper end of the number of words you're allowed to give for feedback.Also yes fill out the commentary blocks with as much as you need to.
LOL! Studying phonetics destroyed my abilility to spell English properly. My spelling used to be impeccable before then.I also didn't notice any, but I'm a phonetic reader who studied German and Medieval literature, so I tend to elide over spelling errors usually.
What you are describing is severe OCD. Mild OCD does exist and does not noticeably impair daily living.Pet peeve here: you may be mildly compulsive about these things, but unless you have an irrational fear that your family might die if you don’t spot the typos, it’s not OCD. Everyone experiences compulsions. Obsessive Compulsive Disorder is a very serious anxiety disorder that causes some people to become obsessively consumed by those compulsions, often to the point of experiencing debilitating fear if a compulsion isn’t satisfied.
Obviously OCD can vary in severity, but in my experience when someone says “I have mild OCD about [thing]” they usually mean “I have a mild compulsion related to [thing].” If it doesn’t noticeably impair daily living (without some form of treatment) then it isn’t a disorder.What you are describing is severe OCD. Mild OCD does exist and does not noticeably impair daily living.
Tell that to all of the psychologists. They've decided that they are still a disorder. Like high functioning alcoholics, high functioning people with mental disorders still have a disorder.Obviously OCD can vary in severity, but in my experience when someone says “I have mild OCD about [thing]” they usually mean “I have a mild compulsion related to [thing].” If it doesn’t noticeably impair daily living (without some form of treatment) then it isn’t a disorder.
I had exactly the same thoughts.Some of my feedback:
- Don't like inspiration for humans, because lots of groups don't play with it, or forget they have it. In general, I'm not a fan of racial traits for things a lot of people don't even play with.
- Don't like ability modifiers for backgrounds. The charlatan wasn't even on their list of backgrounds in the survey, but what I'm seeing is that by having a background like that, every warlock chooses that background. When ability modifiers are tied to background, you end up having each class having the same small handful of backgrounds. No different how everyone was a dwarf fighter, or halfing thief back in the day when abilities were tied to race.
- Not a fan of level 1 feats, because a) that tells me feat chains are coming, and I hated those in 3e (along with system mastery tied to them) and b) not everyone plays with feats
- Really not a fan of removing monster crits. The reasoning was because no one likes a level 1 PC dying from a critical hit in one shot. Remember, the whole point of having fast XP progression at level 1 and 2 was to offer that zero to hero style that many of us like, and if players wanted more robust PCs, they would start at level 3