He still only has 25hp and magical healing will only bring him to 30hp. Death, but makes the CON check, his new maximum HP is now 30hp.
TAVERN TROVE PC
a 6th level Fighter PC currently at 25hp, but has a maximum of 60hp, fails the Save vs. Otherwise, the PC's hit-point maximum is halved, and increases back to normal at the rate of level per day (i.e. If you fail the initial Save, do a 3d6 CON check. At a minimum I'd add in another die roll. Death shouldn't be just straight up death. Harkening back to my earliest experiences, I think that the results of a Save vs. My thoughts on this aren't just to complain, otherwise this would be just a whiner post. Thing is it's not the PC loss that bugs me, it's the unexpected sudden and seemingly randomness that gets me. Now I'll admit I didn't have a huge attachment to this PC, so death was no big deal, and even if I had said attachment.I know I should have taken my own advice and reached for the d6's. Statistically it should have killed half the party and I don't think he expected that. Half of the party died, well would have if the GM didn't roll it back. My group was fighting some plant-based monster and it had a spore attack that was Save vs. OK, clearly something happened in last night's game. A monster has to hit and has to roll high enough to do the PC in, but some random creature has an overpowered effect and your PC just happens to be nearby? Roll that d20 and hope it rolls high.
TAVERN TROVE SERIES
Years of me playing this guy and some event comes down to a single die roll? Sure lots of crap comes down to a single die roll, but usually it's really more like a series of die rolls. Death is 10.so outside of having a Ring of Protection or some magical aids, he's got a 50/50 shot at surviving. Seriously? I've got an AD&D 20th level Magic User and his Save vs. Right up there is the whole idea of Save vs. Now if a PC jumps off a big-assed cliff unprepared and plummets hundreds of feet to the ground.splat-city and no sweat off my ass. That was actually good times as a GM, but the player did that to his own PC.as that interaction was completely avoidable.Īll of this is more of a related side-note to a larger issue I've always had with essentially instant-death. Both times I telegraphed it's presence big time and the best I did, adversarial-speaking, was get a Magic-User to voluntarily have the Ranger lop off his (MU's) hand at the wrist. well I've NEVER liked Green Slime and I've only used it a couple of times as a GM. In retrospect a good idea to not kill off a newb's character in the first session, but. The GM was rather gracious and treated the slime attack more like a degenerative disease and allowed my PC to continue adventuring as the slime slowly overtook his body. My first PC was an Elf and he should have died in the first adventure when some Green Slime landed on him. If you have any questions, or would like to sell or consign text Erik at 91.While I technically started playing something akin to D&D in the winter of 78/79, I'm probably better off saying that my first "real" D&D experience was in 6th grade.so spring 1983? We had some weird elective period thing where I elected to sling dice out of the Magenta box. We'll ease into it for the first few auctions, then by the fall of 2021 things will really start to get going.
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