• NOW LIVE! Into the Woods--new character species, eerie monsters, and haunting villains to populate the woodlands of your D&D games.

OotS 843


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I rather doubt the spell allowed a save, or at least, it was very restrictive in what saves it allowed. It might have only allowed a save if the target had a certain number of hit dice, much like cloudkill. Given that it was an epic spell, that hit dice limit would probably be quite high.

The Epic Spell creation system does not have a No Save factor, so one can only increase the save to a ridiculous amount (like DC 80) and hope it is enough. Of course, the Giant may have simply ignored that aspect of the Epic Spell rules, and it wouldn't be the first time he ignored the rules for some cool effect.
 

I don't think you're wrong. After I read this post, I just spent the last few minutes comparing the 1st strip and the current one, and there are some noticeable differences. The depth of field is markably more effective now. There are additional details in areas like costumes. The mouths of people talking are more obvious. Expressions are more readable. And, the biggest jump, the backgrounds and scene-setters are way more detailed.
There is a strip somewhere where Elan says "Oh, art upgrade" or something to that effect.
 


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