Thanee
First Post
MerricB said:Certainly... if there is such a thing as an average campaign.
Campaigns vary so much that a feat that might be weak in one game is excellent in another.
Absolutely!
Bye
Thanee
MerricB said:Certainly... if there is such a thing as an average campaign.
Campaigns vary so much that a feat that might be weak in one game is excellent in another.
Plane Sailing said:I wouldn't allow those sudden feats on the grounds that they are a huge tactical boost for wizards and clerics, and nothing comparable is done for bards and sorcerers. Perhaps if spontaneous casters were allowed to freely apply metamagics as part of standard-action spell casting (and could use quicken) then it would be reasonable - I think maintaining the differential in metamagic usefulness between prepared/spontaneous casters is vital.
My House Rules Document said:Sudden Metamagic: You may apply any one metamagic feat you know to a spell as a free action once per day per five class levels. Prerequisite: any one Metamagic feat.
My House Rules Document said:QUICKEN SPELL
Prerequisite: Silent Spell or Still Spell.
Special: A sorcerer or bard can cast quickened spells as a move action, instead of as a full-round action.
swrushing said:I get you enhoyed it a lot. Do you think they did as much?
JoeGKushner said:Trust me, with them not being able to effect the guy at all, they were happy for any resolution.
Lord Pendragon said:But a feat that basically grants a spellcaster a +3 level spell once a day does start warning bells going off in my head. Spells are already balanced based on their limited number. It seems that adding even more limitation for even more power creates a single attack of such power that it makes it difficult to judge the pacing of the game anymore. Would I allow a 6th-level wizard to spend a feat to cast Disintegrate 1/day? I would not. And that's what a Maximized Fireball is: a 6th-level spell.