I'm wondering what are some of the main reasons for this change, and which edition did the change occur? Please note that I am aware the old method can be applied in any edition, but I am curious about when it stopped being 'taught' that way in the rulebooks. dnd-5e-2014 ...
I've prevented a whole civil war in a game of mine with a single well-placed illusion spell. I did have to roleplay the scene to bring it to a convincing resolution. But the DM was foreshadowing the war for a few weeks, and I apologized after I'd done it. But I think it ...
I tried creating examples that just threw exceptions, but they did not leak. Nonetheless I have had the sense that the problem might have something to do with the exceptions, so I guess it's specific to the WebProxy. Contributor nealef commented Jul 27, 2018 We modified the test to ...
Therefore, we have option 3, which makes sense enough as it doesn't increase your movement rate by employing a glitch where jumps are counted outside of regular movement, it doesn't curtail your jumping distance based on the game world enforcing an arbitrary "you may only jump th...
I was trying to play a supportive-type character, even if I'm playing a Fighter - I'm mostly shoving people so they can attack with advantage and playing with the Polearm Master feat (and the Sentinel feat in the future) so I can zone out monsters and protect our Sorcerer...
5e is a great ruleset, but there are many inconsistencies. This is one of them. In this setting, the portable hole works like rope trick, (see Gael L's comment) in that "attacks and spells can't cross through the entrance into or out of the extradimensional...
How did you die? (Method of Murder) When did you die? (Time of Murder) What are the last things you remember? (In case nothing else is working) It is probable that not all the answers to these are known. But some of them may be and would be helpful to...
As Dale M points out, the spell text relating to the forced movement itself is unfortunately ambiguous, and either interpretation is possible. So let's look at the part of the spell that AncientSwordRage did not quote: You whisper a discordant melody that only on...
Do you only use Perception, as you would if a character did not have proficiency in either skill? Or, if a character is proficient in Investigation but not Perception, would you then use Investigation instead? Which leads me to my last question: What if a character is alert to...
This option is perfectly fine as well, but I did kind of like the unknown risk of my first option. What about working as a team? Another potential option is have two players work together. One player uses their reaction to identify, and then once identified, the 2nd casts counters...