The_Cleanup_Batter

joined 1 year ago

On second thought I'd probably just troll the French by moving them to the bottom of flights of stairs after they've walked up.

[–] The_Cleanup_Batter@ttrpg.network 26 points 11 months ago (4 children)

Honestly. This.

There is so much that I would want to do that requires time to be "flowing" that the only things I could probably get done would be some cleaning, reading, and some rest.

Food doesn't cook without time. Computers and other electronics need time to process inputs. If I want to get anywhere I'm walking.

The only immoral stuff might be some shoplifting, maybe. But even then I wouldn't really be motivated if I could afford whatever it was otherwise.

[–] The_Cleanup_Batter@ttrpg.network 4 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I personally only give NPC casters spells that fit them thematically or have in game reasons for having that spell. If counterspell is one of those, then I will use it to the full extent that an accurate portrayal of that NPC allows.

In your situation, if you are having the players roll to recognize spells, an easy solution, albeit one that slows things slightly, is having the NPC do this as well. I personally don't bother with using a reaction to recognize the spell I just call for the check if they ask (within reason of course). The roll can be made behind the screen, but it should help things feel more fair for the players. I know most tables will use an arcana check with a DC of 10+spell level. Some tables will just have the caster roll against their intelligence score. Roll it however you feel is appropriate.

People forget that California all by itself is larger, more populated, and has a wider variety of biomes than many countries.

As the ~~crow~~ horsey flies