anti SJW
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- Dec 26, 2016
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Damn there goes my Final Solution to the Orc Menace sourcebook (the rightous paladin crushes that orc baby under his heel) as being the first 3rd party supplement to be published i had a deal lined up with antelope hill and everything.Was this posted?
Apologies if the 1.2 was already brought up but, yet again, they're trying to make sure the hateful conduct bullshit remains firmly in place. It sounds so transparently a nonstarter that it really makes you thunk.
Curious to see the trannys and handmaidens defend this since I think even they know how mercurial they're allies are with regard to starting shit oer random perceived slights and the constant changing waters of offense.
It has already been disappearing. The further back you go into D&D history, the more distinct the character types are. In AD&D, a magic-user was very different from a fighter, and while there were in between cases, it was like a bishop and a rook. In the first edition, there is even a rule in the DMG that says you should penalize a player who does not play to type with a character through increased training costs (restricting their level advancement). To be fair, most people never applied this rule because their friends would have flipped the table on them, but at least it shows what the system is meant to do.You know I've realised something else that will be lost with Wizards ongoing march towards racial conformity where the race no longer makes a difference. Inefficient combinations of race and class.
I've played a lot of 3.5 and between half-orc spellthieves, barbarian elves and of course the ever popular warforged bard I know that people can enjoy unusual race/class combos. Which will disappear as a concept in these newer editions.
I had a bad experience with Pathfinder so I’m really wary of everyone fellating Paizo right now.
We were playing those LOL so random Goblin campaigns. Meant to be light hearted and hilarious. I found the DC’s improbably high, the multitudes of abilities really finicky and specific (like, get +1 to your melee attacks in this very narrow circumstance) and it was nearly impossible to do funny stunts because using a skill untrained gave you a hefty penalty.
Or maybe it was my DM? I dunno it left a real sour taste that a system can make even a light-hearted comedy scenario awkward and difficult to support goofy shenanigans. So much “whiff” factor and we spent most of the time mining for any bonuses we could get. It was so fucking boring.
If he's talking about the We Be Goblins series though, I think the pregens you're using aren't minmaxed.PSA: I idon't have my HTD20 dump anymore. Or if I do it is buried so deep in mydegenerate pornartistic, tasteful nudes folder it's lost forever.
The answer is "yes".
You should have been min-maxing your wacky shennanigans goblins, because for Pathfinder players scouring obscure books for unintended feat synergies is wacky fun. Thoe impossible DCs are nothing for the average min-maxed PF character.
But your DM was also being a dick (or maybe hadn't read and thought through the math which I've done) if they were running a wacky adventure as a deathgrinder.
It's a license for other people to release their own shit with, so a moral clause wouldn't make sense. Even if they put one in, you could take it right back outI'll wait until we have the full text. If Paizo isn't trying any sneaky shit, they won't be trying to obfuscate.
I think it's Paizo and the DM wasn't ready. Source: That happened to me with my first Starfinder campaign. The DCs are insane past first level. I was told that the adventure path I was running (Against the Aeon Throne) was badly written and thus wasn't balanced, but it seems to be a recurring problem in every Paizo adventure I've run.Or maybe it was my DM? I dunno it left a real sour taste that a system can make even a light-hearted comedy scenario awkward and difficult to support goofy shenanigans. So much “whiff” factor and we spent most of the time mining for any bonuses we could get. It was so fucking boring.
Steve Jackson Games had an RPG called Toon in which you literally just played a toon. The system was super simple and you could basically just do anything that would happen in a cartoon and then roll a handful of dice for something wacky to happen. It was really lolsorandom but before that style of humor had been beaten to death with a club like a baby seal.We were playing those LOL so random Goblin campaigns. Meant to be light hearted and hilarious. I found the DC’s improbably high, the multitudes of abilities really finicky and specific (like, get +1 to your melee attacks in this very narrow circumstance) and it was nearly impossible to do funny stunts because using a skill untrained gave you a hefty penalty.
Dndshorts posted a video going over everything that the rouge Wotc employees gave him
D&D humour spawned by 5e is legitimately the worst thing I've ever encountered. I've seen it pop up so much on my timelines since this OGL shit on things like Facebook.View attachment 4317970
I wonder what type of rogue he was. Maybe a Thief or, a Burglar? No. If he was a wizard of a coast he had some kind of spell casting ability. Must have been an Arcane Trickster.
LOL that’s the worst part! These “We be Goblins” modules had pre-made characters. They were made by the game writers specifically for this campaign and I remember at least 2 of us had feats or powers that were completely irrelevant or useless in that context.You should have been min-maxing your wacky shennanigans goblins, because for Pathfinder players scouring obscure books for unintended feat synergies is wacky fun.
There was a spate of humorous RPGs back in the late 80's. Toon, Teenagers from Outer Space (TFOS), Ghostbusters, and (to an extent) Paranoia.Steve Jackson Games had an RPG called Toon in which you literally just played a toon. The system was super simple and you could basically just do anything that would happen in a cartoon and then roll a handful of dice for something wacky to happen. It was really lolsorandom but before that style of humor had been beaten to death with a club like a baby seal.
Having a moral clause in a contract without a guideline, AN ACTUAL QUANTIFIED GUIDELINE NOT RELYING ON ESOTERIC DEFINITIONS, for what you deem is moral either shows you think your audience is retarded or you are.![]()
We Chat With Paizo’s Chief Creative Officer Erik Mona About ORC, Pathfinder, and More!
Paizo shocked the TTRPG world last week with their announcement of a new open, perpetual, and irrevocable Open RPG Creative License (ORC), and people's inter...youtu.be
Roll for Combat did a live stream with Paizo's CCO (Chief Creative Officer) Erik Mona.
One of the first things he addresses is the moral clause (multiple times too might I add)
To make It brief Erik claims that having a moral clause in the ORC would simply not make any sense.
Having a moral clause in an open license would contradict it. Erik at one point said that people publishing content with the orc that you don't like is something companies have to "deal with".
I'm pissed they revised the voluntary flaw shit.As a person currently playing a goblin wizard in Rise of the Runelords I resemble this remark.
Actually I don't because we're playing 5e rules and I didn't know our campaign was set on Golarion until after rolling the character so I'm pretty much a beige colored less-manic gnome by local standards, I've just tried to lean into some mild pyromania and hating dogs/horses to fit in