• NOW LIVE! Into the Woods--new character species, eerie monsters, and haunting villains to populate the woodlands of your D&D games.

The Order of the Stick meets a terrible Foe


log in or register to remove this ad

Concerning putting Vorpal on a weapon to easily cut people sheads off. Don;t forget yuou still need to roll a Natural 20 in order for the Vorpal ability to work. Just scoring a crit does not work, otherwise everyone would be using a Falchion with the improved crit modifier to get the crit range down to 15 - 20. Then you have a Falchion +1, Vorpal and you would be lopping heads off pretty much almost every other round.
 

Enough about the paladin, what's up with Elan's sprained wrist? The Order lives in a world goverened by 3.5 rules. What book or accessory am I missing that details lingering injuries such as sprains? And why can't the cleric fix it?
 


Zephrin the Lost said:
Enough about the paladin, what's up with Elan's sprained wrist? The Order lives in a world goverened by 3.5 rules. What book or accessory am I missing that details lingering injuries such as sprains? And why can't the cleric fix it?

This is the same as the 'multi-classing' discussion earlier...

OotS is loosely based on 3.5 rules. Rich has *no* problem deviating from those rules for the sake of a story or a joke. There have been a number of times the strip has not followed the rules.
 




I thought Belkar was the first multi-classed character. Isn't he like a rogue/ranger/barbarian or something? Sneak attack, wild empathy, and the strip where he goes to the barbarian trianing hall to take a level?

Funny good stuff. I was expecting Blue Cloak to be a drow.
 

I'm not sure, but I don't think Belkar has ever made with the sneak attacks. I think he's just a ranger, possibly with a level of barbarian, if he went through with the training.

And I was with you on the drow thing.
 

Into the Woods

Remove ads

Top