I'm Layne, resident late 20s transmasc goth / metalhead hybrid from Germany, queer as heck, disabled and ND in various ways. Library assistant by day, utter nerd 24/7. I love ttrpgs, space, science and bunnies.
In this context, he takes apart the (outdated) concept of #alignment. Interestingly, he confirms my statements about the "good old days" (late 80s / 90s).
Somebody told me recently that I would enjoy #pf2 but then couldn't tell me why
After spending a lot of last year trying to connect in any way to it, I think I would need a very personal pitch of pathfinder to even try it
I think it's good and smart, but I don't see it fitting me. So when somebody says I personally would like it, I get really interested into why they are saying that
Basically wondering if someone else has already done the calculations to work out when a lower damage attack with the Agile trait is better than a higher damage attack without it. Is there a good rule of thumb here?...
Aventura para Pathfinder 2e de 15 páginas para un one-shot de nivel 3. Cuatro plantas animadas (druida, barde, bárbara y pícare) deben rescatar a unos pequeños retoños de lavanda secuestrados.
Está curiosa, mucha personalidad, es gratis, 10/10
Una versión más compleja (pero no más difícil) de D&D. Tener 3 acciones por turno abre muchas opciones en combate. Los centenares de dotes permiten diseñar PJ con precisión. 650 páginas tiene el tocho.
How does the maths work out with Agile attacks?
Basically wondering if someone else has already done the calculations to work out when a lower damage attack with the Agile trait is better than a higher damage attack without it. Is there a good rule of thumb here?...
OC Nothing to see here, just a group of regular human adventurers