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00:31
3
Q: Can the Telekinetic Feat be applied to yourself to act as a 'Disengage'

Matthew PerrymanIn Tasha's Cauldron of Everything, Page 81, it describes the Telekinetic Feat. The third paragraph states: As a bonus action, you can try to telekinetically shove one creature you can see within 30 feet of you. When you do so, the target must succeed on a Strength saving throw (DC 8 + your profi...

Ben
Ben
00:58
Howdy do
01:16
@Ben hidey-hi!
Ben
Ben
How are we today?
@Catofdoom2 There's no rule about "good" bosses. A good encounter is one that meets your group's needs at the moment in that particular game. Assuming you mean a high-stakes combat encounter which acts as the culmination of a narrative or exploratory arc, consider principles like "the encounter rewards engagement with previous parts of the arc" and "PCs and antagonist(s) have goals that might be accomplished w/o killing the other." But both of those are unnecessary for certain kinds of playstyles.
If you're in a game that values prolonged tactical-combat encounters, consider phased fights not unlike some of the more memorable MMO raid designs.
Even outside of games that emphasize prolonged tactical combat, I've had good results with including environmental elements that can be used to both advantage and disadvantage by all parties; some MMO boss fights give good examples of this if that's your style, but I also recommend studying the object-focused choreography of Jackie Chan films (especially from his Hong Kong era).
Now live online: Mnemomic: A Weaver's Almanac by A Circle of Weavers is now available as a digital web-book. Gameplay rules and setting lore for anyone looking to play out stories in the world of memory.
Help CoffeeSnake Crowdfund a Baby. A bundle hosted by CoffeeSnake Studios with content from 16 creators.
01:59
Fear not the Lich for his monstrous form; fear rather the man who bent all his will and sacrificed everything for power and domination over others.
Dec 28 '17 at 20:35, by BESW
Demilychee? A fruit-bearing lich?
Is that only funny if you don't know the ch in lich makes k sound?
It's only not funny if you insist on ignoring the common modern pronunciation.
I guess I just don't get it; and I tell lots of puns.
How many liches does it take to get to the center of a tootsie pop?
02:11
@MikeQ 🤣
@MikeQ A-one, a-two, a-phylacter-three.
Been watching Count von Count?
Mike made a Mr. Owl reference, so I did too.
I counted once. 464
02:17
Pun!
Ben
Ben
@Adeptus 'Ah, 'ah' ah!
Seriously though I'd be very happy if the word phylactery stopped being associated with monstrosity.
It seems disrespectful at best and I'm working on excising it from my fantasy vocabulary.
What about "horcrux" as a loanword replacement
only if you can win the copyright battle
would be a good change though as as far as I can tell that didn't exist before 1998
@MikeQ to be honest association with that franchise isn't exactly issue free
02:21
although it may be a pointless fight; Jedi really means something rather bad and nobody remembers now
Better in the sense that it's not disrespecting a religious tradition; not ideal in that it perpetuates the non-obscurity of the creator it's associated with.
I'd be inclined to use ordinary English descriptive words like "Soul Jar," or invoke a tradition like Koschei's egg which has always been that exact thing.
@BESW so very cursory searching online send to imply the term is not too contentious as it's not the only/main word, which is teffillin
Obviously opinions in that post aren't going to cover everybody, so I'm fine not using the term myself, but I've never seen it raised as an issue before
@BESW sounds good to me
[shrug] I've seen Jewish RPGers express concerns about it. Given the ubiquity of anti-Jewishness in fantasy I'm inclined to be extra sensitive to it.
You know; I'd love to just call it soul anchor
Fun fact: in old D&D it was supposed to be a box containing scrolls but people didn't like idea much and preferred more creative object selection
@BESW that enough for me
02:29
D&D, in particular, is rather infamous for stripping context from traditions. I'm not attributing intent to the use of the word in D&D, just observing that most of the time that D&D references real-life traditions it's already filtered them through at least one layer of white-English pop culture.
(see: Rakshasa)
Also the association between various djinn and the Greek model of 4 elements (although it's not as problematic as evil phylacteries)
And yes, the "box full of scrolls" description is VERY much a reason to dismiss arguments that "phylactery" might be used in D&D as a more generic term for a protective talisman.
@BESW there's plenty of better terms than phylactery for sure
02:32
Hmm I should go see what term Yep used for the Stolen Sea.
...Do I even still have those books anymore? @trogdor Did I give you the Dragon of the Stolen Sea and if so do you still have it?
He is a dragon, so maybe he stole it as per the title's instructions
Interestingly the Islamic equivalent is called Tawiz, and is forbidden/frowned upon/very popular depending on who you ask
@BESW uh what's that one about?
@trogdor It's the one with the Monkey King and the orphan boy and the dragon whose inland sea got stolen by a witch.
@BESW that sounds very inconsiderate
02:34
@BESW you either have not given that to me or I haven't read it
oooh wait
Omigosh how could I have NOT given that to you ages ago?
I just remembered that now, you did give me that at some point
VINDICATED.
(Correction: "Dragon of the Lost Sea.")
I think I gave it back at some point though?
02:37
The witch reduced the dragon's inland sea to a blue pebble, which became the focus for her magic. Unleashing the sea also caused her to lose all the magic she'd used to make the pebble in the first place, severely weakening her.
Wow, spoilers much
You know; I kind of liked the Wesnoth of making a Lich; you cast delayed raise dead (the same spell for animating a zombie) on yourself with your dying breath. No soul jar for you as a young lich; you only made one later, if at all.
Ah yes, the 40-year-old spoilers for a book inspired by a 500-year-old folktale.
03:00
Kickstarter: Strange Hills by Jason Vanhee. A tabletop rpg about loss and redemption, based on the No Dice, No Masters system.
Never Setting Sun by M.A. GUAX. An enigmatic and minimalist, system agnostic setting for any TTRPG
03:23
Who was it who had the idea of avoiding the Necromancy laws by only raising copies of self (via statues and stone to flesh).
A teamup of Narcissus and Pygmalion?
04:13
6
Q: Does moving by means of a bonus action provoke opportunity attacks?

MarqThe criteria for not provoking an opportunity attack when leaving an opponent’s reach are: Take the Disengage action or Teleport or Move (or be moved) without using your action, reaction, or movement. (actual rules text: You can avoid provoking an opportunity attack by taking the Disengage act...

04:25
...the next time somebody comes at me with one of those "verisimilitude" arguments to justify some D&D nonsense, I may have to fire back with the taxonomy of the supernatural.
Oh? What's the context of this?
Oh, it's just part of my ongoing disquiet with the tendency for modern fantasy to classify the mystical. The difference between a zombie and a revenant, a vampire and a werewolf, a goblin and a fairy, are modern orders imposed mostly by people who did not actually participate in the traditions.
And it particularly irks me when people who accept that modern taxonomy without criticism, turn around and use "realism" or "historical accuracy" to argue against something that's actually historical like ethnic diversity or accessibility devices.
(As with many things, we can probably blame Tolkien and his fanatic imitators for normalizing a lot of downright abnormal choices in fantasy. You might think somebody with his reverence for Nordic texts wouldn't have represented elves and dwarves as separate species, or made such a big deal out of retconning orcs and goblins to be different groups just because he decided he liked a different word when he wrote the sequel.)
05:01
@BESW Same goes for golem?
Oh gosh so much more for that, especially in monstrous contexts but also just as a synonym for humanoid construct.
[rummages]
yeah golem were origionally guardians weren't they?
It's almost 40 minutes but I strongly recommend it.
(Amusingly, I'm currently editing some text and audio about the role of storytelling in identity.)
05:51
2
Q: Can Spined Devils learn Common?

Afşin MangudaiSpined Devils have 11 intelligence and they don't know common. Can they learn common language from a NPC/PC? For reference, I'm a player in this game. The DM said he remembers something like you have to have 1+int modifier for learning a language with normal ways (ı mean just by from normal teach...

06:48
@HotRPGQuestions StefanHuddlest1 wrote a twitter thread with a "DM tip: Consider granting more languages, maybe a lot more."
2
(Summary: tying language to Int is the kind of nonsense that only an insular monolingual culture could come up with; it makes more sense to tie the number of languages known to the number of languages the character is exposed to.)
3
(response threads include some really great discussions about how shifting language acquisition from on/off to a set of narrative-contextual fluent/dialect values, creates many more interesting story opportunities.)
 
3 hours later…
09:53
@BESW maybe this spined devil took a summer camp on the material plane
 
1 hour later…
10:54
@AncientSwordRage It seems odd that devils, generally, wouldn't know at least enough off a wide-distribution mortal language to ask where the bathroom is offer a rigged bargain.
11:33
@BESW my gnoll from AD&D had nothing remarkable for an INT mod, but knew oh, a dozen or so languages XD
3
Q: Do spells halving movement stack?

mkdirIf a group of monsters were, say, Slowed and then subjected to Sickening radiance would their speed be one-half normal, or one-fourth? Slow has, in part: An affected target’s speed is halved... A monster who fails their Sickening radiance saving throw: ...suffers one level of exhaustion... .....

11:54
@BESW makes sense
 
2 hours later…
13:53
I'm looking at the DNDBeyond pdf character sheet and there's a few things that seem off like the fact that the character description is in very small text, and the image I uploaded isn't in the white square above that text (which is what I'm guessing it's there for)
I've not been much impressed by DDB's pdf sheets either
14:26
I like them, though they aren't prient friendly.
I think my favourite generated pfd sheets are the ones that Genesis does for Splittermond.
14:56
@Someone_Evil any alternatives you can think of?
@AncientSwordRage Generated? No, but I haven't looked at that. I made myself some custom ones, but that's mostly preference over the official ones
@Someone_Evil fair enough
My biggest issue with the DDB sheets were the amount of space wasted on headers and similar formatting, and redundant general info (which also then leads to text being small, because there's too much for the boxes)
@Someone_Evil hard same
I think some of the form fillable official sheets let you include a picture of yourself if you're going for that
15:16
@Someone_Evil I might look into it
16:03
VTC: Designer Reasons Intent in disguise: rpg.stackexchange.com/questions/190888/…
@Trish I think its fine, I'll just add a clarification that it is requesting official canonical sources.
@ThomasMarkov That seems like it is just asking for designer reasons, explained in written form.
I think there needs to be more detail in regards to what they are looking for to make it stackable.
How about "rules source" instead of publication
16:18
@ThomasMarkov That is certainly an improvement.
But I think even then it is right on the edge.
But that might also be my bias at work there.
So that devouring corpse question
I found the exact reference to Critical Role using hunger of hadar to devour corpses.
@ThomasMarkov Hadar was hungry, and I guess not very picky as to diet.
Also they feature a cantrip that does exactly what OP is asking about
 
1 hour later…
17:49
@ThomasMarkov @Someone_Evil @MikeQ , Do any of you know what page of "Buldars Gate Decent into Arnevus" the sword of Zariel stats are on?
@MemeMan It's the very last entry of Appendix C
Dont know the page number though.
Thanks!
I found it!
 
1 hour later…
19:00
hi
 
3 hours later…
21:39
6
Q: Have oozes ever been a playable race?

SkeithI would like to play as a gelatinous cube with class levels. The game is 5e and I know no such option is available in 5e but in previous editions lots of things were possible. Has there at any time in any edition of D&D been a ooze, preferably the gelatinous cube as a playable race?

22:04
2
Q: How do I upgrade my party's weapons?

BillhoodI am a newish GM. Me and my party had about 5 sessions and I think it is the time to give them better weapons, but I could no find any tables for lvl 4 characters or anything similar. Is there a need to upgrade them, like giving extra damage or change the die from 1d10 to 1d12 or will it be balan...

22:29
1
Q: Can you make a very very slow demiplane with create demiplane?

BinochioMy goal is to create a Demiplane where I could craft, taking my time to do it, while time on the material plane would advance very very slowly. Exemple : 1 year on my demiplane = 1 minute on the material plane In order to do that, I tried to understand the rules but I am not sure on how to interp...

psst, does anyone with pathfinder expertise want to add tag descriptions for and to wrap up thomas's usage guidance checklist?
@KorvinStarmast Sometimes users are just unwilling to align with the content standards of the community. This is okay, as long as the user can recognize that the community isn’t going to change just for them. But sometimes they dig their heels in and let frustration mount until you get what we have here.
@ThomasMarkov Or, like me, tell a few people how tired you are of their crap and then get suspended for a while.
I eventually stopped doing that, though.
GcL
GcL
@ThomasMarkov The shifting standards, the hard to find standards, or the standards you have to suss out yourself from extensive use of the site?
@KorvinStarmast but have you ever crapped so much it made you tired?
@GcL only when I got dysentery as a teenager
GcL
GcL
22:35
@KorvinStarmast At least you made it to Oregon. I was worried you'd die fording a river.
@GcL not to mention the cotton mouths
GcL
GcL
@KorvinStarmast Always have a gallon of water when you're getting stoned.
@GcL particularly if the word ecstasy is in the evening's vocabulary
GcL
GcL
@KorvinStarmast Also a pacifier in that case, or something squishy to grind your teeth on.
glad I never got into that scene, a few of the people who worked for me did ... so it goes
22:43
Well this conversation took weird turns in rapid succession
Song Title Adventure Jam A game jam hosted by 蠢謳迷 / omi chun. Song Title Adventure Jam is about taking real-world songs that exist and making analog game adventures out of them.
Royal Rumble by Nana. A solitaire TTRPG set in an alternate medieval universe
The Monsoon campaign setting is offering a free 5e adventure to people who sign up with their website. “Trail of Madness” is a quick-start adventure designed to introduce new players into the world of Moonsoon. Here, you and your friends will protect a Cappy village from an ancient rampaging guardian. Swashbuckling characters, mystical legends and a lush dangerous jungle awaits!
@Someone_Evil [offers alternative topics]
If your Obscure Tomes Of Forgotten Knowledge aren't littered with manicules, what's even the point? "Point, don’t point" by John Boardley for I Love Typography. From prehistoric pointing and medieval marginalia to manicures and mayhem. Learn about the printers' fist or manicule and its first appearence in typographic or printed books.
And even more off topic but certainly relephant to this chat's interests,
"We Asked, You Answered: Your 50 Favorite Sci-Fi And Fantasy Books Of The Past Decade" by Petra Mayer for NPR. Earlier in the summer, we asked you to vote for your favorite science fiction and fantasy reads of the past decade — so here are 50 fabulous reads, curated by our expert judges and you, the readers.
Reminds me to put Radiance back on my TBR for a time when my brain is feeling particularly limber. Loved the ambiance, but I've recently lost all patience with the "write like things only the author could possibly know are actually common knowledge" style.
...Also I haven't finished the Wayfarers series and I have no good reason for that.
Half that list is already on by TBR and everything on it that I've read I would whole-heartedly recommend.
GcL
GcL
@Someone_Evil Sometimes you get Oregon Trail references. It happens.
Spinning Silver (and Uprooted) get mine
23:04
Imperiah Radch blew my mind when I first read it, though it now feels rather traditional compared with Murderbot or Teixcalaan which address similar themes and motifs.
The Dead Djinn stories are great, they're funny and grim, sarcastic and sincere, and the worldbuilding is only outpaced by the characters which inhabit the world.
Green Bone, Daevabad, Wormwood, and Black Sun are on my TBR. Ted Chiang is on my TBR as a category unto himself but so far I've only read "The Story of Your Life." Haven't read Changeling but Victor LaValle is a horror author who is so intense I've been unable to finish some of his books so if you're into that...
Binti, of course. Just so good. Okorafor is iconically unbothered by conventions and expectations and Binti delivers the goods.
I've only read one Lady Astronaut story but it was enough to get all of them a spot on my TBR. Black Leopard, Red Wolf has been recommended to me many times. Cixin Liu is another "I don't know why I haven't read this author yet I really should" entry.
Broken Earth is powerful and awe-ful and will be in my head forever. I'm very glad I read it before 2020.
An Unkindness of Ghosts is a favorite of several of my friends. It looks really really good but I haven't been in an emotional place for it the several times I've started it. And then Solomon went and put out The Deep which I also want to read but EMOTIONS.
23:21
reminds me to say: @BESW, I finished Black Sun <3 very good book, me want more
Awesome!
Have you read anything else by Roanhorse?
I rarely notice the author's name when reading, so let me look up a list of her works
Oh, I remember reading that.
Dec 21 '18 at 23:04, by BESW
Trail of Lightning is a novel by Rebecca Roanhorse, in which the Diné (Navajo) nation walls itself off from the rest of the world as climate change causes flooding, storms, famine, and political upheaval. Within the walls of Dinétah, the old gods and clan powers return... and so do monsters.
She's also written at least one Star Wars novel.
23:24
None of the others ring a bell
May have been oversharing...
If we're recommending fantasy, I'll throw in Where the Mountain Meets the Moon and its sequels. Slightly embarrassingly, they're my main source of Chinese folklore knowledge, despite me being half-Chinese.
There's a delightful thing where (minor structure spoilers) the little short stories embedded throughout the books end up mattering in a big way to the plot/resolution of the final novel.
That sounds nice.
@bobble I'll definitely add it to my story graph list
@bobble Not speculative fiction, but you might be interested in Laurence Yep's "Golden Mountain Chronicles." It's a ten-book series spanning multiple generations of a Chinese family immigrating to America from 1849 to 1995, written by a Chinese-American from 1984 to 2011.
23:43
@BESW I have that queued up now for tomorrows walk to work
@BESW The Paper Menagerie is another good story in that space, but with a little more fantasy

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