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4 months ago  ::  Feb 02, 2013 - 3:27PM #41
MeCorva
Date Joined: Jun 6, 2008
Posts: 770
Everyone wants a different game, and so wizards should be working on a sidebar that explains what happens if you choose certain options.  For instance:
1). No ressurection: pro: death is very serious - gives the opportunity for heroic sacrifices.  Con:  can make players feel a beloved character died before the story is complete.    Best used:  when creating characters is fast, and when shorter campaigns mean less time for complex stories.   
2). Gold only, or temporary setbacks.     Pro: players can choose when their characters story ends.  Con: some people find death is too temporary, leading to reduced interest/engagement.   
3) permanent drawbacks:  pro:   Keeps death a disincentive, increasing "edge of seat feeling".   Con:   Permanent drawbacks can feel like the player is being permanently punished for bad rolls or bad decisions previously.   

IMHO, permanent drawbacks seem the worst of all worlds - cheapening death compared
To "no resurrection" and punishing players.   But, as long as the dm who is makin the permanent drawback understands the players who like that kind of thing, I'm happy.
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4 months ago  ::  Feb 02, 2013 - 3:41PM #42
Electricbee
Date Joined: Sep 10, 2005
Posts: 1,180

Feb 1, 2013 -- 8:46PM, justmike1976 wrote:

without alignment in the game you will be floating around in a netherworld of nothingness guess another reason to include it as a module




Without alignment in the game, all souls can go to the same place and be rewarded or punished as their life actions dictate.  So not, it's not really a reason to include it in the game.  History is . . . and it's plenty good enough of a reason to do so.  Whole settings were built around it, as well as the symmetry of the default/greyhawk cosmology.

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4 months ago  ::  Feb 02, 2013 - 3:50PM #43
Qmark
  • vitriol and virtue
Date Joined: May 18, 2002
Posts: 16,528
Without alignments, the imaginary souls of imaginary characters go whatever imaginary place players and/or DMs imagine.  With alignments, the imaginary place is merely pre-imaginend.
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4 months ago  ::  Feb 02, 2013 - 4:01PM #44
Maxperson
Date Joined: Mar 22, 2008
Posts: 22,477

Feb 2, 2013 -- 1:54PM, CarlT wrote:

Feb 2, 2013 -- 6:38AM, Maxperson wrote:

Feb 1, 2013 -- 4:17AM, CarlT wrote:




Just because they raised your character, that doesn't mean you have to be happy about it.....


Carl       




In D&D, though, you have the option to refuse to come back.  If you CHOOSE to come back, you can hardly be upset with the person who cast the spell.




Where  - outside of fourth edition - is this stated?



Carl




Here is 3e.

You restore life to a deceased creature. You can raise a creature that has been dead for no longer than one day per caster level. In addition, the subject’s soul must be free and willing to return. If the subject’s soul is not willing to return, the spell does not work; therefore, a subject that wants to return receives no saving throw.




I don't see it in my 2e PHB, but I could swear it says it somewhere in that edition.

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4 months ago  ::  Feb 02, 2013 - 4:10PM #45
Qmark
  • vitriol and virtue
Date Joined: May 18, 2002
Posts: 16,528

Feb 2, 2013 -- 4:01PM, Maxperson wrote:

I don't see it in my 2e PHB, but I could swear it says it somewhere in that edition.


1E/2E has the CON-cap gimmick instead.

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4 months ago  ::  Feb 02, 2013 - 5:35PM #46
Maxperson
Date Joined: Mar 22, 2008
Posts: 22,477

Feb 2, 2013 -- 4:10PM, Qmark wrote:

Feb 2, 2013 -- 4:01PM, Maxperson wrote:

I don't see it in my 2e PHB, but I could swear it says it somewhere in that edition.


1E/2E has the CON-cap gimmick instead.




Yeah.  It's been ages since I played those editions.

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4 months ago  ::  Feb 02, 2013 - 6:25PM #47
CarlT
Date Joined: Apr 10, 2009
Posts: 2,878

Feb 2, 2013 -- 3:12PM, powerroleplayer wrote:

Sword of Spirit:
 If a first level character really wants to come back, despite the risks, why should you tell him no just because he can't afford to pay?  




In past editions (when a raise cost far more than any low level PC could afford) the standard practice in our groups (and elsewhere too, I would guess) was that you 'worked it off'.  This could be anything from undertaking whatever task the temple needed done (i.e. instant plot hook) or even working as a guard for the temple between adventures.


It doesn't have to be cheap and without consequences to still be available.


This can easily be handled through sidebar advice for the DM. 

Carl   

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4 months ago  ::  Feb 02, 2013 - 7:28PM #48
cassi_brazuca
Date Joined: May 24, 2012
Posts: 692
This is mostly table by table. It depends heavily of the group. I already had some ideas of the process, none of them tested.
About the penalty issue, I'm mostly okay if is reversible in some way.
About Classes: Spoiler: Show

There is one advantage in class design that it’s not mentioned very often. The short version is: being a Wizard actually means something.
I will try to explain this.
A class is formed by several parts: It has the mechanics, which is obvious. But it also has fluff, flavor, description and legacy. Basically there are the stories about characters of that class, the class’s identity and all of such. To better represent my opinion, I shall bring to the discussion another commercial franchise: Final Fantasy.
In many FFs there exists the Job system, which is really just a class system. Many times the Final Fantasy’s games uses a system different from that, but usually it’s a system unique to the game, and even so references to the Job system exist, so the Job system wins as most common system used by FF. Thing is, many people recognize FF Jobs, from classical Jobs such as Black Mage, White Mage, Warrior, Ninja, Paladin, Dragoon to less iconic Jobs such as, I don’t know, Jobs that only appeared in one to three games. Thing is, with considered time, these Jobs have all sort of Fluff and Legacy with then. Many characters not only use one Job, but also marked the series. When people talk about the Black Mage, for instance, not only they will remember the concept itself, but they will also remember all the appearances made in Job based games (which, in that specific case, are many) and also many characters like Palom from FFIV or Vivi from FFIX or Lulu from FFX. Things is, these Jobs marked the series and being one of them actually has meaning, because this Jobs have strong identities attached to them.
The problem with classless systems is that, they are classless. What is a Wizard in a classless system? This really matter? In a classless system, is there some meaning in being a Wizard? The problem with classless systems is that these identities are kinda of lost, because being a Wizard is not so important, because being a Wizard does not have any mechanical marks and basically in a classless system, there is no Wizard by default, this doesn’t have meaning in a practical way. With class bases D&D, however, that is different. Being a Wizard in D&D has meaning, an when people talk about Wizards in D&D they will not only remember the current version of the Wizard, they will also remember all versions of the Wizard, and all characters and NPCs that are Wizards, and now, they will also remember the mechanical difference and the flavor, identity difference between the Wizard and the other spellcasting classes.
This is something really hard to put in words, there is my best shot.

Right now, I would make Vancian the standard magic system for most classes in D&D (including Wizard and Cleric). What people complained is the fact that the Wizard was Vancian-Only. If it was Vancian-Default, that would be different.
I've long advocated supporting both the Points of Light setting and settings full of magic items.
I had some thought on one spellcasting system.
Spoiler: Show

It is basically composed of three parts:
1.    The Standard System:
The standard system would be classic Vancian.
Wizard: classic Vancian, have to learn spells first, and then prepare them. All the 9 spells levels.
Cleric: It would be Vancian, but with some differences, The Cleric would carry on the tradition of choosing spells directly from the class’s spell list, but it would have some old school disadvantages to compensate, such as 7 spell-levels for Clerics and Druids (and even less for Paladins and Rangers), and most divine’s spells would be about healing and support (the Druid and the Ranger can have more offensive spells), and, in general, they would have less spells, perhaps even having divine spells (Cleric, Druid, Paladin and Ranger) be worse than arcane spells, as I’ve told that it was like this in pre-3rd Edition.
2.    The Flagships
The Flagships are classes that represent one alternative magic system in the standard system. They, by default, are not Vancian, they use another system (with the possibility of using Vancian or other systems).
Sorcerer: This Sorcerer would be a little different than the other casters. They would have the same spell list as the Wizard (a la 3.X) and they will use, by default, flexible spell-slots spellcasting (the current system. Very like 3.X Sorcerer, but with class benefits that make then different, a la 4th Edition.
With regards to other classes, I would make Bards Vancian, but the Warlock is also a good candidate to some different spellcasting mechanics. Possibly the Witch (4e post-Essentials subclass) somewhere?
3.    Modular Magic Systems
And there would be a module that changes the way that the spellcasting works. This would be a module that has guidelines about altering the default spellcasting mechanics. The guidelines would consist of how the quantity of spells cast can be ported over, and from which spells they prepare, etc...
Let’s give a proper example: The Wizard would be classic Vancian. Thing is, for alternative casting systems, the Wizard would have guidelines that would be something on these lines:
“They always prepare spells from the list of know spells. In alternative spellcasting modules, he can prepare a number of spells equal to 1+ Wizard’s level, and the number of spells slots or equivalent is equal to the number of spells per level per day.”
This is not something that will have problems of text space. All that you need is some short guidelines about which spells they can chose to cast and how much spells they cast. The rest of these mechanics would be stated only once, in the module of alternative magic system.
The good points:
•    Not only every Vancian class would have an option to be non-Vancian, but also the non-Vancian classes would have the options to be Vancian. Why some classes in default would be Vancian while others not? Add some variety for the new players and players of things like RPGA and Encounter. That and many of the editions of D&D had it like that.
•    It manages to both being classic with classic Vancian and satisfy the non-Vancian fans with flagships and modules.
The bad points:
•    Using alternative magic systems do not raise your raw power but make casters more flexible. The classes that are already flexible (such as Sorcerer) would need some more flexibility to keep up. No idea how to handle martial characters, although.

We should get rid of at-will cantrips. Spoiler: Show

Okay, now that you’ve got the first panic reaction, let me explain it. Yes, many people like at-will cantrips and they are popular. They have everything that it takes to be popular. However, I think we should remove them from the game, at least as an assumption to all caster classes.
First: At-will cantrips blur up the distinction between casters and martial characters, and makes being a gish useless.
Basically in non at-will cantrips systems there is an advantage in martial characters: the fact that they have abilities that they can always use. But if we give every caster at-will cantrips this blurs up the difference between classes, take out a huge advantage of martial classes. There is also the gish issue. Basically in non at-will cantrips systems, there is a huge advantage of being a gish over being a full caster. The advantage of have some reliable action when out of spells. At-will cantrips weakens that advantage. Just for you to have some idea I was talking previously about the possibility of the Wizard being weaker than the Cleric (some time ago), and when I quoted the fact that the Cleric is a gish, people talked that this is not important, that it doesn’t have such impact because it will use its at-will cantrips. Being a gish should matter. Of course when being a gish actually matters, we can rebalance the classes but it should matter.

Second: At-will cantrips go into the opposite direction of trying to balance casters.
Really when we are trying to balance classic or neo Vancian casters, why give to all of them at-will cantrips? Why we cannot use the absence of at-will cantrips to provide a drawback to balance casters?
Third: At-will cantrips weaken the challenge of resource management.
Really when you always have magic a great part of the challenge goes away. The possibility in being out of magic is not a bug, it is a feature It is part of the system, and this challenge don’t have to go away because it is fun. The challenge of running out of magic is part of the system, and fun.
Fourth: At-will cantrips do not fit properly under every system.
Really is not that I don’t like at-will magic, but I don’t think we should bake in every spellcasting system. In 4e it worked because it was part of AEDU, but now, they don’t feel part of anything. They seem to be an arbitrary addition to the game. The 3.5 Warlock was special because it was a class with at-will magic in a game where it doesn’t exist, otherwise, at-will magic. We can have at-will cantrips but it should be done it right, and not being a default assumption for every caster class. I’m worried if they are going to launch a mana spell-point based magic system for spellcasters. This system should not have at-will, no mana cost magic as default for every caster class, because running out of mana is part of the mana system. In Final Fantasy they even have no MP cost magic, but they do it right, and when they use no MP cost magic, it is special because it is in a game that is otherwise MP based.
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4 months ago  ::  Feb 03, 2013 - 9:58AM #49
malcapricornis
Date Joined: Jun 15, 2008
Posts: 1,791

Feb 2, 2013 -- 3:27PM, MeCorva wrote:

Everyone wants a different game, and so wizards should be working on a sidebar that explains what happens if you choose certain options. For instance: 1). No ressurection: pro: death is very serious - gives the opportunity for heroic sacrifices. Con: can make players feel a beloved character died before the story is complete. Best used: when creating characters is fast, and when shorter campaigns mean less time for complex stories. 2). Gold only, or temporary setbacks. Pro: players can choose when their characters story ends. Con: some people find death is too temporary, leading to reduced interest/engagement. 3) permanent drawbacks: pro: Keeps death a disincentive, increasing "edge of seat feeling". Con: Permanent drawbacks can feel like the player is being permanently punished for bad rolls or bad decisions previously. IMHO, permanent drawbacks seem the worst of all worlds - cheapening death compared To "no resurrection" and punishing players. But, as long as the dm who is makin the permanent drawback understands the players who like that kind of thing, I'm happy.





People's characters may die 50+ time in a session in World of Warcraft. World of Warcraft has over time lessened penalties on death. World of Warcraft has 8-10 million paid subscriptions which approximates $90,000,000+/month revenue from subscriptions.  D&D may want to take notes. These forums and surveys are such a small, self-selected sample that I think it's counter productive to listen to 90% of them, if WotC wants to increase market share.

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4 months ago  ::  Feb 03, 2013 - 12:41PM #50
Qmark
  • vitriol and virtue
Date Joined: May 18, 2002
Posts: 16,528

Feb 3, 2013 -- 9:58AM, malcapricornis wrote:

People's characters may die 50+ time in a session in World of Warcraft. World of Warcraft has over time lessened penalties on death. World of Warcraft has 8-10 million paid subscriptions which approximates $90,000,000+/month revenue from subscriptions.


I bet I know where this is going.


...excuse me while I get some popcorn.

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