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The D&D 4th edition Rennaissaince: A look into the history of the edition, its flaws and its merits
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<blockquote data-quote="Voadam" data-source="post: 9571259" data-attributes="member: 2209"><p>The counterargument being you did not choose the timing of when to do your once a month spectacular play. You were presumably trying hard a lot but spectacular play is more than just choosing to do so and expending effort to do so, it depends on circumstances being right, etc. So choosing when to do your daily power does not perfectly model your every once in a while spectacular play.</p><p></p><p>Critical hits on a 20 might be a better model for soccer you where you try hard a bunch but sometimes things are spectacular.</p><p></p><p>A better analogy for daily powers might be characters in a story sometimes do spectacular things at dramatically appropriate moments such as a climax fight. Bruce Willis in Die Hard with his single last bullet for the end boss being an example. Van Dam pulling it together with a knock out blow after being outclassed and beat up for a while in a martial arts movie.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Voadam, post: 9571259, member: 2209"] The counterargument being you did not choose the timing of when to do your once a month spectacular play. You were presumably trying hard a lot but spectacular play is more than just choosing to do so and expending effort to do so, it depends on circumstances being right, etc. So choosing when to do your daily power does not perfectly model your every once in a while spectacular play. Critical hits on a 20 might be a better model for soccer you where you try hard a bunch but sometimes things are spectacular. A better analogy for daily powers might be characters in a story sometimes do spectacular things at dramatically appropriate moments such as a climax fight. Bruce Willis in Die Hard with his single last bullet for the end boss being an example. Van Dam pulling it together with a knock out blow after being outclassed and beat up for a while in a martial arts movie. [/QUOTE]
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The D&D 4th edition Rennaissaince: A look into the history of the edition, its flaws and its merits
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