freyar
Extradimensional Explorer
Though one of the Arcane magic splatbooks introduced a way to Master another wizards spellbook.
Magic of Faerun, maybe?
Though one of the Arcane magic splatbooks introduced a way to Master another wizards spellbook.
Even better, after all that take-out you'd never have to sit in the privy, because there are no rules for it!But yea, I could sit around in the D&D world and order take-out and never get up from my seat and never get tired.
I ran one; in that case, it was the result of deliberate experimentation by the BBEG. Successful experimentation, I might add, although when I saw what killed it, I stopped and laughed for a bit.Yeah, but how often are you going to find a half-dragon gargantuan monstrous scorpion? I try to keep my rare crossbreeds rare.
Even better, after all that take-out you'd never have to sit in the privy, because there are no rules for it!
D&D clearly needs rules for going 1 and 2.
Like my first sentence explicitly stated, I don't think wizards are weak or need a helping hand. I DO think making them go through all that tedious bs just to fullfill their function (know lots of arcane spells) is a dumb way to "balance" them and makes the game (remember? game? supposed to have fun?) a lot less enjoyable for the person playing one. Hmm...how about I make up a class that always scores a confirmed crit on every hit. But, in return to "balance" it, the DM gets to punch the player in the face every time he attacks with the character.
Where's that fluff from? It certainly doesn't match the crunch. If that were the case, then all spells would be standard actions (or faster) to cast since they were 'stopped at an almost complete state'. Many spells have casting times of full round, one round, or longer.
Wow, I just tried to make a house rule for this, but it got complicated fast. My ruling was going to be that partial concealment didn't negate, only full concealment did. But then I start reading up on spells like Blur, which would seem to be exactly the kind of thing that should confuse a sneak attack. The problem? It provides partial cover. So a blanket rule that partial cover isn't enough to negate a sneak attack makes no sense. I immediately wanted to make 20 exceptions to my house rule. Ridiculous.The worst rule concerns sneak attack. Did you know that you may not sneak attack a creature who has any type of concealment?
This means that the shadowy rogues attacking in dark places cannot sneak attack because even shadowy illumination provides concealment.