I don't have phb with me, but I am not sure if there is a BM feat that offers a second attack, but I still think that rapier + sneak attack + (something) only triggers sneak attack once per turn ...
@goodguy5 Except it's phrased in a manner that would admit something like "cast guiding bolt, roll a crit and all sixes on the damage dice" (which would improve over both of the existing answers).
The single enemy moving inside the cube of its friends is as far as I know the rules are with me, but I guess depending on the interpretation we could, uh... have an arbitrarily large number of enemies teleport in or something on a similar trigger?
@doppelgreener This has happened to me a few times in the past, and I've rarely been able to isolate the cause. Sometimes, if I switch browsers all of the problems go away. Today is not one such case.
@Rubiksmoose For one, lack of opportunity. For two, a couple of the players are first-timers and I worry about setting preconceived notions. For three, we're a pretty spread-out group and so sometimes we have scheduling issues. If the barbarian isn't there, then we literally don't have a frontline if I'm not a paladin.
@kviiri Really, I'm most concerned with role-playing identity right now since I just haven't doing much RP because I don't know what I want out of my character.
So I recently ran across this question about Catapult being cast on a Folding Boat. While this deals with the act of using a spell to propel the Folding Boat to hilariously lethal speeds, I was wondering about dropping the thing as a sneak attack as a way to easily deal with a bandit camp or som...
We made a lot of progress with our personality deficiency issues by creating characters as a team, making up backstories about how they know each other and what stuff have they done together before
Well, the Hexblade is the patron, but I've never been particularly clear on who the actual patron is for the sub-class: the weapon/artifact or the being who made the weapon/artifact?
@Yuuki Yeah I know exactly what you mean and are going through. Honestly, taking cleric basically gave me the chance to finally create a character for mine, but mainly through interaction with other characters/players. It is still a major issue for me in general.
One thing I'm considering is an intelligent-ish weapon (no mechanical differences from a warlock's pact weapon other than it can talk) to function as a quasi-bond with a party member.
Something I can riff off of to build character development.
But then I'm worried that I've saddled myself with another character to manage when I'm clearly already failing at one or the DM with an extra burden to make up for my lack of RP skill.
My suggestions are very much in the "Your Mileage May Vary" category, but the way I see it is as follows: your character's personality shines through the most through their interaction with the other players. Backstories, personal gimmicks, all that is cool and all, but it's only going to be relevant when you, and only, got the spotlight. Hence I think it's easier to build character by defining it through relationships with other characters, in a way.
That might be tricky if you're barred from doing that by fiat, but it's never too late to try.
@kviiri It's not so much fiat as it is that we never really did it during character creation and it feels weird to be imposing my character on other people now that we're 6 levels into the game.
I also need to nail down what kind of personality I want. Do I want to be a stereotypically dour and proper knight paladin, do I want a joker, or do I want something else?
This character has a very clear picture of what a hero should be, given all the stories they grew up with. But they are also emphatically not very good at the physical parts of hero-ing, having grown up on stories and village life rather than training to become an adventurer.
@NautArch Sorta? I mean, given that we're part of the way through a campaign, it's clear that this backstory means that my character has basically been lying to the party this entire time about who they are.
I'm thinking the reveal will come when the magical sword (woo, Hexblade multi-class incoming) appears.
@Yuuki Based on your initial description, the former seems more natural. But as @SPavel said, you can do both. It's also potentially a slow transition from one to the other.
I dunno, I feel like the "be who you are" storyline is overdone these days and occasionally sends a poor message. Sometimes, people want to change because they don't like who they are.
I could definitely see a sort of synthesis between the two though.
Like the kind of aside comments and jokes I've been making in the campaign so far are mostly pragmatic and/or somewhat self-centered. Definitely not "storybook hero" material.
I'm having trouble keeping my group's barbarian from attacking the bard
I'm the DM of a game consisting of a bunch of guys from school and a couple girls. I have some serious problems with this and among them is the fact that the Dragonborn barbarian keeps attacking and bullying the bard. A coup...
Seems like in Stack format he could either a) Ask "how can I stop the barbarian from attacking the bard" and post a self-answer with his own solution, which can get workshopped b) Ask "how can I write and enforce an effective No PvP rule"
@Rubiksmoose True, but lookint at each of their issues, that's the sum total. If you want to make it more specific, then it's about treating bullying. PvP is an aspect of bullying.
The closest my table gets to PvP is gambling in game. And no one plays with my bard or near my bard :(
@NautArch "Son, I don't give a damn if you're the End Of The World As We Know It or you have light shining out of your every orifice, you're going to learn how to make a proper chair."
@KorvinStarmast I can't wait for mine to get to level 10 :3
@NautArch Well I did as much as I am willing to. Others can edit if they want. The mods/community/OP can weigh in and revert or tweak it further. At least now there is a question in the question lol.
@Rubiksmoose dayum. My character design was to play an instrument constantly, so no physical weapons. And not needing to wear armor has been a bonus and I haven't encountered an antimagic field yet.
@NautArch I mean, Monster Hunter is a fantastic series. I love it and it's probably singlehandedly kept Capcom afloat all these years, but this will be the first time that the main series is heading to PC.
And PC development is notoriously bad in Japan. They have a lot of outdated practices.
but ultimately (based on the linked page): This is based on the story of creation in Genesis, where at the end of each day it says, "And it was evening, and it was morning; day one", "And it was evening, and it was morning; the second day" etc. By mentioning evening before morning, the Torah defines a day as beginning with the evening, followed by the morning.
I'm not exactly sure; it's the same in the Judaic and Islamic calendars, and sometimes that's reason enough, but there's usually some symbolic or practical reason as well for continuing the tradition.
@doppelgreener fyi, I edited this question to actually include a question (because it was clear that it wasn't getting the votes to close it and it was attracting lots of responses). I'd appreciate it if you or someone would look it over when you get a chance to make sure what I did was appropriate.
I've seen some speculation that it's an optimistic symbolism of beginning in darkness and living toward light, possibly representative of the close of the Prophetic Cycle and the beginning of the Cycle of Fulfillment, but that's not directly based on any particular Texts. [rummages around for reasoning behind Florentine calendar]
@Rubiksmoose looks fine, thank you for doing that. when someone's presenting an obvious problem that's usually enough for us to work on, or enough to add a question like that if we feel one's needed.
you made a good judgment call in revising that the way you did
> I called work this morning and whispered, "Sorry boss, I can't come in today. I have a wee cough." > He exclaimed, "You have a wee cough!?" > To which I replied, "All right thanks, see next Tuesday."
Also, for many religions, important things happen at the transition between days. It's easier for people to observe those events if the transition between days is also literally observable.
eg, unless I'm in the polar regions I don't need a clock to know when to start and stop my fasting.
@NautArch It was a poor attempt at a joke. I found it humorous to think in some alternate universe the sun gets adjusted and the clocks stay the same (for daylight savings time)
@NautArch The Bahá'í Fast uses actual horizon-line sunrise/sunset, except in extreme latitudes where that is impractical and then it's clock-based.
...and for determining the New Year, it uses sunset in Tehran rather than locally, because that'd just be confusing.
(The New Year is determined as the day in which the vernal equinox occurs, which is often around sunset, so it'd be different days in different places if you're measuring from local sunset.)
When there's an extra day, we stick it onto our four-day celebration of hospitality and charity that comes just before the month of fasting, followed by the New Year.
We've got 19 months of 19 days each, leaving four intercalary days left over--sometimes five.
Though, here's a trick for the Gregorian calendar: if you can remember it's all 30 and 31 except Feb, which is 28 or 29, you can count it on your knuckles.
That is so cool though. Like it is technically a minor thing, but it is fascinating that something that is as routine as time and day counting can be completely different in different cultures. And it is not something that people in a monocultural environment ever have to think about.
Make two fists and put them together thumb-to-thumb so the knuckles line up, then count off the months from one little finger knuckle across toward the other: up-knuckle is 31 days, the valley between knuckles is 30 days (or 28/29 when you hit Feb).
The space between your hands isn't a valley, so you get July/August as both 31, which is where the pattern skips.
Another tip for the Gregorian calendar is to invent a time machine, go back to 1582, smack Gregory XIII upside the head, and come up with a more common sense calendar.
If you calculate the Birthdays of the two most important Figures in the Bahá'í Faith using the Gregorian calendar, they're about a month apart. But if you use the Islamic calendar They were born into, the Birthdays fall on consecutive days. And that's just too cool to throw away.
So we celebrate them as the first and second day after the eighth new moon after the New Year.
@Yuuki I'm pretty sure that's what the French Republicans tried to do, but they were 200 years late and far too obsessed with Celebrating The Agricultural System And Also Decimalization and kinda had a hard time recognizing that the two weren't always compatible.
Yeah, agriculture depends a lot on sunrise and sunset and if you're basing a calendar and clock cycle off of those, you're going to have a lot of problems.
I wish we reach a point in time where we just do away with timezones and use a single coordinated time standard (maybe based on atomic radiation?) and hopefully we do it before establishing colonies on other planets/moons.
Because good lord, there's enough difficulty in handling timezones on Earth where everyone has the same planetary rotation mechanics, but it's going to be even more of a nightmare on Mars. Which has different revolution and rotation mechanics.
@Yuuki The biggest issue with that is that it removes the universality of reference from time. If I tell you "I got up at 4am today", you know that means I got up really early no matter what timezone I'm in. If I say the same thing and we use UTC as a reference, you may think I got up early, or later, or normal.
@GreySage How about we just remove them and let everyone else deal with the chaos while we bask in the afterglow of never having to deal with timezones again?
I'm okay with passing the buck.
@GreySage Not just DST but places that change DST on different schedules.
And then there's Arizona, the DST Russian nesting doll.
@GreySage Arizona does not observe DST. But there's a Native American reservation inside Arizona that does observe DST. And there's a region inside said reservation that does not observe DST. And a region inside that region that does observe DST.
@BESW I feel like I need the "universal reference" of being able to say I got up at 4 and have people actually know what I mean regardless of where they are or where I am
Though I certainly don't hate the idea of a globally/spatially applicable time either
@trogdor I think I could get used to not having that universality if I got global consistent time, but it would require a shift in language and culture.
@Rubiksmoose well, there are a few things where metric's in the vernacular :P
but yeah, I agree, metric is far cleaner, and while I know my way around SI units fairly well, I don't quite have the ability to intuit in SI units all the way yet
@Yuuki My (boarding) school used to make the DST change at a different time than the rest of the world. So for a few weeks each fall there was "school time" and "town time."
hey @BESW, how do you handle spellcasting effects of monsters in DW? I got the notion that i could call the player got mind controlled on a 7-9 or 6-, and he can resist with willpower and maybe roll "defy danger" to get rid of the effect... But how about, paralyses, petrification and other things alike??