You don’t even need a special die for this. Just roll a d8 and subtract 4 if it’s 5-8. Just like using a d6 as a d3.
You don’t even need a special die for this. Just roll a d8 and subtract 4 if it’s 5-8. Just like using a d6 as a d3.
“Train pirate” has got to be one of the steampunkiest job titles I’ve ever heard.
Also taking legal action against people who helped your customers resolve the consequences of such an attack seems perfectly normal and not at all contrary to that narrative.
Could magic overcome, resolve or undo a disability?
Some, certainly. Assuming D&D, mid-level clerics can restore missing limbs (and, though the spell description doesn’t mention them specifically, I would argue ocular, auditory, and spinal injuries as well). So disability due to injury should at least be less common than in the real world.
Congenital issues, on the other hand, are much more difficult. Wish would work, but that’s not exactly accessible.
That said, there’s considerable potential for the magical equivalent of prostheses and other accessibility devices to be more effective than their real-world counterparts.
Cause fantasy games with dragons are famously known to all contain interstellar travel.
Well, Ultima did, so it is technically an early feature of the genre.
As an aside, I would love to see the concept of “high fantasy space opera” get more love.
(laughs in maths)
D&D math jokes? Let’s go!
Q: What phases through stone and is equivalent to the axiom of choice?
A: Xorn’s Lemma
Note, too, that there is value in being rigorous about “common sense” assertions.
Some of the most exciting discoveries happen when something everybody assumed they knew turns out to be wrong.
Not to mention that Oblivion’s interpretation of Cyrodiil is just so bland compared to Vvardenfell.
Which is only exacerbated by how weird some of the Daggerfall/Morrowind-era lore about the imperial province was.
Or replicate the parts needed to assemble an exact copy.
The Enterprise’s computer is Hex, confirmed:
++?????++ Out of cheese error. Redo From Start
Sometimes I wonder if I was around in the 60s if I’d hear more people bitch about her being a woman or her being black.
Not really important in the broader context, but I think Pike was talking about Una here.
*Consuming raw or undercooked the rich may increase your risk of foodborne illness.
I would go so far as to say that DRM only affects paying customers.
It took them years to implement a shopping cart. A basic feature that literally every online shop has had since forever.
They are not good at e-commerce.
The term “warlock” comes from a root (Old English, wærloga) that literally means “pact-breaker”.
So I’d say it’s very much in the spirit of the class to eventually betray one’s patron.
IIRC there were builds in 3e D&D that could crit on something insane like 11 or 12.
Not voting is mathematically equivalent to a half vote for genocide deluxe.
So, yes, your (refusal to) vote does matter, in that it makes the situation a bit worse.
don’t give me that “oh, they can’t win” bullshit
Unfortunately it’s not bullshit, but a mathematical consequence of first past the post elections. Voting for a third party is equivalent to not voting in terms of getting your most hated major candidate into office.
The only way out is election reform.
You could do something like ((d6-1)*20+d20)/15.
But that’s an awful lot of work just to avoid having a d8.