Flexor the Mighty!
18/100 Strength!
see my sig.
The new stat block is great. It's a vast improvement, IMO, over the previous, unreadable, unusable "paragraph crapshoot" style. I've used both in play, and the new format is 2,399.41 times easier to manage in-game, for me.Vraille Darkfang said:That's what the new stat block is. Blatent Obfuscation.
buzz said:The new stat block is great. It's a vast improvement, IMO, over the previous, unreadable, unusable "paragraph crapshoot" style. I've used both in play, and the new format is 2,399.41 times easier to manage in-game, for me.
The issue is simply editing.
Vraille Darkfang said:If I buy Hordes of the Abyss, I'm gonna have to spend hours with a pencil "updating" before I'd even consider using a single monster in my game. Then, I don't by that sort of book soley as a "Monster Book". So, I'll read through it (completely) and then decide rather to buy it.
Vraille Darkfang said:Silly Wizards, hiding the errors under a sheet doesn't get rid of them.
But I don't think the format itself precudes the data from being there. James already pointed that out. This is just editing silliness.JoeGKushner said:Well, it's not necessarily simply editing as there are numbers missing. Editing won't account for that.
buzz said:But I don't think the format itself precudes the data from being there. James already pointed that out. This is just editing silliness.
They could always do it like this: hp 33 (6d10 HD)JoeGKushner said:Perhaps not the power attack, but what about hit dice type for example?
Garnfellow said:I sympathize with much of your post, but I think you're way off base here. I've seen a lot of theories about why Wizards adopted the new format: to make us buy new books, to change for change's sake, and now to obscure the math.
But I think that, clearly, the sole driving reason for the change is to improve usability in play. Pure and simple.