Shardstone
Hero
I'm not seeing it.I actually think modern D&D is tied more to Disney than medievalism.
I'm not seeing it.I actually think modern D&D is tied more to Disney than medievalism.
I'm not sure exactly what you mean. Can you elaborate?I actually think modern D&D is tied more to Disney than medievalism.
what is bro on about???I actually think modern D&D is tied more to Disney than medievalism.
D&D is a lot about combat.You want to make D&D less medieval? Then why are we largely talking about guns? It would make one think D&D is just about combat.
I would get rid of the cleric entirely, in favor of a priest class.How about making the Cleric class less required for healing to represent how the churches lost political power?
That's not a bad idea. Maybe reconfigure the alchemist as a pulp science hero type.How about more rules for research to represent the rise of the Scientific Method and the Enlightenment?
WutOr have a rule that gives advantage on saving Throws vs disease if you washed your hands??
Late 1700s would have had repeating air rifles.The OP mentioned Tommy guns. That was 1918, and automatic.
And even durring Napoleon in the early 1800's, he supposedly said "God is on the side with the best artillery".
Though in the 1600's and 1700's sure. The long reload time and low accuracy of flint locks would still allow for melee. It could basically be a once per encounter skill, then switch to the sword.
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But once the cartridge was created in the early 1800's, melee was on it's way out. Having pre-measured the gunpowder really boosted consistently and reload times. And the modern bullet was invented in 1849 sealed the deal.
Not that a game has to follow history of course. Maybe gunpowder was never invented and all guns use compressed air power, or some trapped elemental.
Which has a muzzle velocity of 600 ft/s and ~300' range. Which is comparable to a large crossbow.
What do you mean “modern”? Disney’s Sword in the Stone (1963) was a huge influence on the look of early D&D!I actually think modern D&D is tied more to Disney than medievalism.