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General Tabletop Discussion
*Dungeons & Dragons
The curious case of the double-dragon sorcerer
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<blockquote data-quote="Derren" data-source="post: 6511556" data-attributes="member: 2518"><p>No, its not. Having the option to do something is not a weakness if that option is not the optimal one. You do not have to take it.</p><p></p><p></p><p>Even if the second option is never the better one, something very unlikely to happen, you are not weaker by having it. Having more options is always an advantage which is why everyone would prefer the sorcerer with two known spells over the completely identical sorcerer with only one known spell.</p><p></p><p>Your example is beyond flawed. People don't spend sorcery points at random like in your analogy. They do it when it is useful. Or in your example your buddy does not buy a box at random in the hope it will be useful in the future. He waits till he knows which is useful and buys that one. And because he has the option of buying the green box too, he always has the "correct" box at hand (assuming those are the only 3 choices existing) while you do not have an appropriate box 1/3 of the time.</p><p></p><p>Options are power and someone who lacks option is weaker than the one who has them at no additional cost.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Derren, post: 6511556, member: 2518"] No, its not. Having the option to do something is not a weakness if that option is not the optimal one. You do not have to take it. Even if the second option is never the better one, something very unlikely to happen, you are not weaker by having it. Having more options is always an advantage which is why everyone would prefer the sorcerer with two known spells over the completely identical sorcerer with only one known spell. Your example is beyond flawed. People don't spend sorcery points at random like in your analogy. They do it when it is useful. Or in your example your buddy does not buy a box at random in the hope it will be useful in the future. He waits till he knows which is useful and buys that one. And because he has the option of buying the green box too, he always has the "correct" box at hand (assuming those are the only 3 choices existing) while you do not have an appropriate box 1/3 of the time. Options are power and someone who lacks option is weaker than the one who has them at no additional cost. [/QUOTE]
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The curious case of the double-dragon sorcerer
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