Crothian
First Post
Jürgen Hubert said:Such as?
d20
I've got some of the books and they are hit and miss. Nothing about the game has every grabbed me enough to want to run or play it.
Jürgen Hubert said:Such as?
Crothian said:
I've got some of the books and they are hit and miss. Nothing about the game has every grabbed me enough to want to run or play it.
Jürgen Hubert said:D&D, on the other hand, is mostly concerned about keeping track of a variety of resources, not about being cool.
Crothian said:I don't need a game to include ways fto tell me my character to be cool. I make my character cool and show it. Its all in the way you run it.
Jürgen Hubert said:Yes, but how much do the rules support your character in being cool?![]()
Crothian said:cool and rules have nothing in common. Cool is style, rules are mechanics. I don't need or want the rules to tell me I'm cool, that's not what cool is.
Jürgen Hubert said:See the difference?![]()
Crothian said:Yes, I admiot the mechanics of the games are different. However, I faiul to see how one makes the character cooler then the other.
In fact, its so easy to do that in Exalted I'd argue its a routinue manuveur, but in d20 that's an impressive feat. But again, cool does not enter into it. That is just reflecting the fact Exalted characters are a lot more powerful by designb then D&D charcaters. If that defines cool, the Nobolis characters must be cooler then Exalted characters.
Jürgen Hubert said:So the inherent power of the character is only one part of the story - the mechanics are at least as important. In Exalted, the game mechanics award you if you try over-the-top things. In D&D, they punish you for attempting them unless your character was already hyper-competent anyway.