- Joined
- Dec 17, 2019
We're a bunch of 5e casuals.Eh? What are you playing anyway? If you're playing a magic filled TTRPG then your DM is the wrong kind of autistic. Did he ever explain or is it the "neutrons firing in a way I don't like" kind of unexplainable hatred?
I think what it generally boils down to is that the DM has it in his mind that magic can be used to solve too many problems too easily, so he wants to limit its use as much as possible. Forcing the wizard to have to study for many in-game days to learn a useful spell like Leomund's Tiny Hut instead of getting to pick it as a free level-up spell, refusing to ever let us find bags of holding because they trivialize encumbrance rules (that nobody actually cares about), and so on. Hell, part of the campaign itself involves a kingdom where magic is restricted and the wizard PC (the aforementioned busy guy) is essentially a magic inquisitor who's one of the few legally allowed to practice.
I legitimately have no idea where this bugaboo of his comes from, but it's retarded that he's fallen into the all-too-common trap of trying to force 5e into being a game it's explicitly not designed to be. Magic is already limited in terms of how many slots a caster gets per day, not to mention the number of spells they can know/have prepared, but that isn't enough for his liking. We had to talk him down from more severe restrictions like spellcasting actively harming the caster, thankfully, but I know that's what he'd prefer.
He was also not that favorable about my hypothetically DMing an Eberron campaign because of its widespread low-level magic usage because he found that silly. I've given up trying to understand.
I might as well mention it: the method is he wants to be turned into a cat somehow. Literally just a cat, nothing special about it. Why? I don't know, he wants to be a cat. Again, I've given up trying to understand. So he'd still be there, just not really doing anything anymore, but there's an opening for him to come back if he's able to.Ah, perfect. I wouldn't say it's dumb since when they have the time they can return, however I believe making them a DMPC or have another player take over and fill the guy in afterwards is a better solution.
The DM is going along with it but is leaning towards said cat being unable to talk because, in his words, cats don't have the biological ability to speak like people do. Never mind that talking animals are very much a thing in D&D, that fantasy trope is just too unrealistic for him. I might be able to convince him otherwise, but I'm also wondering if it's even worth bothering.
I don't know them personally, but other players do, and I don't think there will be an issue there. Still unknown if they'll show up or not, but we'll see.Also not a bad choice, again if you can't make it then I'm sorry but you should be removed from the group. I've done it, people here have done it, I've removed myself once since I also suddenly had way less time to play. It's the right thing to do, the alterative is that no one gets to play.
Hope the hypothetical new player isn't terrible, would rather take Schrodinger's Player than some mystery meat freak.
