steeldragons
Steeliest of the dragons
You did nothing wrong that I can tell. Though, I will echo the confusion at the idea of Rope Trick being a 'metagaming power move." That doesn't really seem accurate. There were opponents, things were not going well, I guess, or the player just panicked? Or the PC is supposed to be a coward? Or whatever. But I don't get what's "metagamey" or, really all that [over]"powered" about it.
There is no reason the orcs/orogs wouldn't have attacked the ranger (real valor-driven guy there, huh?) climbing up the rope and then climbed up the rope after him. Trying to deploy a Rope Trick when already in combat is a tough move. Could be a good tactic if the party is all crowded/clumped around each other. But still tough, and almost certainly not going to happen without taking some rounds of AOOs/heavy damage.
If the other characters didn't follow him up the rope (sounds like they were busy) that's not your fault. Not the ranger's either.
I could see a case being made, depending on the superstition/worldliness levels of your orcs perhaps being shocked/stopping their climb to see the ranger disappear before them/at the top. But that's a real nitpicky "maybe." The idea that they would know the spell well enough to pull the rope up behind them...eh...that's probably something that should have had an explanation.
But I don't see ther being anything untoward or purposely punitive by what happened. Definitely not ANYthing -rules calls, changing spell descriptions, unrealistic opponents' actions, or anything else- that was "cheating." Sounds like the player may have a bit of growing up to do.
There is no reason the orcs/orogs wouldn't have attacked the ranger (real valor-driven guy there, huh?) climbing up the rope and then climbed up the rope after him. Trying to deploy a Rope Trick when already in combat is a tough move. Could be a good tactic if the party is all crowded/clumped around each other. But still tough, and almost certainly not going to happen without taking some rounds of AOOs/heavy damage.
If the other characters didn't follow him up the rope (sounds like they were busy) that's not your fault. Not the ranger's either.
I could see a case being made, depending on the superstition/worldliness levels of your orcs perhaps being shocked/stopping their climb to see the ranger disappear before them/at the top. But that's a real nitpicky "maybe." The idea that they would know the spell well enough to pull the rope up behind them...eh...that's probably something that should have had an explanation.
But I don't see ther being anything untoward or purposely punitive by what happened. Definitely not ANYthing -rules calls, changing spell descriptions, unrealistic opponents' actions, or anything else- that was "cheating." Sounds like the player may have a bit of growing up to do.