• jjjalljs@ttrpg.network
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    1 year ago

    Ki points should be per-encounter.

    But I really really want to kill the “adventuring day” dead. I think a lot of players would have significantly more fun if it wasn’t the core of DND.

    • Kryomaani@sopuli.xyz
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      1 year ago

      The “adventuring day” is a relic of times when your entire campaign was exploring a megadungeon and you ran from one encounter to another, back to back, all night long. But barely anybody runs their game like that these days and the rules just never caught up with reality. Some people suggest having a constant time pressure on the party limiting long rests, and while it can work, it also puts a straitjacket on your story pacing where balance flies out the window if you ever let up on the pressure. “Guys, the apocalypse is merely hours away” quickly gets old when it’s been that way for months.

      Well, that and 99% of the rules involve fighting or exploring. Anything the rulebooks have to say on social interaction boils down to “well, you just talk to the DM, and sometimes they might have you roll a d20, just figure something out”. D&D isn’t really so much a role-playing game as it is a weird dungeon-crawling boardgame with some role-play elements. Sadly, people are allergic to trying new systems so instead they’ll just try to bodge the one big-name king of TTRPGs, D&D, into doing things it was never built for, forever leaving them wondering why driving in screws with a hammer isn’t as fun as they expected.

      • blackbelt352@ttrpg.network
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        1 year ago

        I think the writers of Mage the Ascension got it best when referring to DnD as a wargame with role-playing tacked on top.

        So much of DnD the dnd rulebook and printed material is focused around combat and getting from one combat encounter to the next one.

        • PickTheStick@ttrpg.network
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          1 year ago

          Because DnD did start as a wargame, right? Before the red box came the 50 figure armies. I think there used to be a little history written by Gygax about how they started.

          Anyway, I don’t mind the focus on combat. I like that roll-playing and role-playing are separated. My favorite groups had no issue with playing their dumb fighter as a dumb fighter, and the smooth talking noble as a smooth talker. I like the approach others have taken, like the social combat in exalted, or powered-by-the-apocalypse system, but it has led to a few players in my groups just wanting to roll the dice every time and not talk at all.

    • gramathy@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Per encounter maybe with a bonus daily pool for short bursts of power that gets a partial refill on a short rest?

  • loki_d20@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Widely believed? First I’ve ever heard of it. Do people not short rest or just run through all their resources in the first two rounds of combat?

    • HardlightCereal@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Yes, the modern style of play is 1-3 encounters per day with 0-1 short rests. No more dungeons, go nova on every encounter

      • jjjalljs@ttrpg.network
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        1 year ago

        This blew my fucking mind when I learned this.

        Nothing about the game’s precarious balance works well if you don’t follow the adventuring day.

        I push my players to the limit before they can take a long rest. If you blow your spell slots on stupid shit, you’re probably going to wipe later. If you take five days to find the lost children, they’ll be long eaten.

        “Do you want to play a game that’s not a resource management game at its core?” “No we like DND”

        I need to stop playing DND.

        • HardlightCereal@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Back when I played D&D I followed the adventuring day except for during overland travel. The key thing is that not all encounters are combat. A riddle door, a trap, and a stubborn NPC are all encounters and the game is designed for you to include those too. I see kids these days saying 7 combats in a day is too much and I’m like “I agree, you don’t understand the adventuring day”. Instead of trying to learn, kids these days just ignore everything except combat and then complain combat is too slow

          • jjjalljs@ttrpg.network
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            1 year ago

            Yes, that’s true the advice is 6-8 medium “encounters” which aren’t usually fights. But D&D is kind of bad at codifying costs of non-combat encounters. It doesn’t have progress clocks so trade-offs like “let’s go around the gorge instead of using Fly” aren’t mechanically represented very well. It has shit for social rules so it’s hard to do a social encounter that taxes resources. It can be done, of course, but the rules aren’t really helping much.

            I think some people also confuse “per day” with “per session”. I’ve had multiple people tell me there’s no way they can do six combats in a three hour session, and I’m like what are you even talking about. One in-game day can go many sessions. Some people even give their players a long rest at the start of the session automatically!

            • Kryomaani@sopuli.xyz
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              1 year ago

              Yup, it’s so hard to make resource expending non-combat encounters without effectively sidelining some of the party members. If you build an encounter that effectively requires spell slot expenditure, the martials are basically relegated to an audience position. And if you build an encounter where spell slot use isn’t absolutely necessary, the party will try every imaginable way of conquering it without using up resources first, defeating the whole point of forcing resource expenditure.

              I guess one key part of this issue is that generally speaking, caster resources (slots) have universal uses in combat, exploration and social interactions, whereas martial resources only ever have combat applications. This, in presence of resource expending non-combat encounters, kind of creates a situation where your choice of caster or martial decides whether you want to participate in the game the entire time or just half of it.

            • smeg@feddit.uk
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              1 year ago

              Some people even give their players a long rest at the start of the session automatically!

              Bloody hell, no wonder you see so many posts and maymays about the game being broken, none of these chumps even know how to play!

      • Barbarian@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        I can understand strongly limiting long rests. Letting players long rest between every encounter makes difficulty non-existent. Short rests though… classes that get resources back on short rests are balanced around the fact that they’ll likely get them frequently.

        • HardlightCereal@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          It’s a big reason for why martials are losing relevance. If everyone’s going nova all the time then consistent damage per turn can’t keep up

      • SourceOfMistypes@discuss.tchncs.de
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        1 year ago

        Yeah, that is so frustrating as somebody who plays a character that requires short rests. Our sorcerer throws out her 5th level spells every encounter and I have 2 spell slots as a warlock…

      • Hazama@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Yeah, that’s why I’ve started liking the idea of long rests are a week of rest, with short rests being a single night.

        Really makes the resources a lot more precious if you’re not getting them back during the same session. So many times of players being like, “whelp, I just burnt five spells, let’s long rest”

        What I should be doing is if you’re long resting in the dungeon is having monsters show up, but I can literally see my players eyes glaze over when it’s a random encounter like that.

        • jjjalljs@ttrpg.network
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          1 year ago

          I feel like that’s going to do weird things to your story pacing, and possibly put your players in an unwind position.

          Like maybe they’re idiots or unlucky and use a lot of resources, and need a rest. Does the plot allow a full week of the bad guys/natural disaster/whatever to do ita thing unimpeded?

          The solution remains kill the adventuring day. It’s not how most players actually want to play the game.

  • Ahdok@ttrpg.network
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    1 year ago

    Hear me out:

    Double the number of Ki points. Double the cost of Stunning Strike.

  • gerusz@ttrpg.network
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    1 year ago

    Or: Monks have 3 stances: aggressive, defensive, and mobile. Switching stances costs a bonus action, and you can assume one stance freely when you roll initiative.

    In aggressive stance Flurry of Blows is free.

    In defensive stance Patient Defense is free.

    In mobile stance Step of the Wind is free.

    This way monks are not just a worse rogue, their basic abilities are now actual basic abilities.

    • jjjalljs@ttrpg.network
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      1 year ago

      That’s very cool but DND will never have that kind of tactical depth without tying it to per-rest.

      The adventuring day is garbage and it strangles cool ideas like this.

      • gerusz@ttrpg.network
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        1 year ago

        It could be tied to per-rest. Similar to the fighters’ weapon mastery in OneDnD, switching stances could be tied to a long or short rest instead. Just call it something else, like katas. (Yeah, yeah, they are trying to move the monk away from the strictly Eastern roots, but they could give this as a flavor option.) You drill one of the katas in the morning and then you can use the basic ability associated with it for free:

        • Kata of the Wildfire: aggressive stance,
        • Kata of the Mountain: defensive stance,
        • Kata of the Zephyr: mobile stance.
        • jjjalljs@ttrpg.network
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          1 year ago

          Yeah, but that’s way less fun than the original. The original invites making tactical decisions every round.

  • Aegeus@ttrpg.network
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    1 year ago

    Not-thought-through 1 Minute Solution #2: Using the one higher die for Martial Arts from the class table (always d6 instead of d4, d8 instead of d6 etc.)