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Parfois, j’ des mot. Et des “s”.
(il) Psioniste
Becky Chambers stan account (lisez l’Espace d’un An, pour commencer)

Je bloque sans réfléchir les contenu IA.

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Joined 3 years ago
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Cake day: November 7th, 2022

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  • PF2 is only better if you want tactical combat and lots of options to create builds. Sorry to inform you that’s it’s not what all tables want, so no, “All D&D groups” does not have to consider PF2.
    It’s the case in mine (and we play a lot of differents ttrpgs). PF2 is just too much, and is in the same boat as Shadowrun : ain’t nobody got time for that.

    (also, as 5e is CC-BY now, it is not “own” by anyone (only the D&D brand is), wich is not the case with the ORC licence and Paizo)






  • I’ll add that every games does not suit to everyone. So, games that might please D&D players that I like (and that nobody already talked about in this thread):

    - Cryptomancer: It’s D&D for nerds, with a simpler system (or a sort of inverted Shadowrun). Like, imagine D&D but magic works like infosec. Yeap, that’s it.

    - Monster of the Week: A PbtA game to emulate supernatural horror TV shows and it’s really easy to make it work in a fantasy setting. It might feel more like a Witcher game than a D&D game, tho (you investigate after a supernatural monster, track them to get them down). In any case, the PbtA family is rich and if players are curious of other systems, it’s probably one of the easiest PbtA to try when you come from D&D : it’s really easy to setup (30min to make a party at the beginning of the session, session 0 included), it’s one-shot oriented and it has (I think) the more D&D-esques combat mechanics if all PbtAs.

    - Outgunned: It’s a very cool game with gambling mechanics which want to emulate action movies. It’s easy to do Heroic Fantasy with it as “classes” are just “roles” and “tropes” and there is already some actions flicks (flavor-oriented optional rules) to play wuxia, swashbuckling and sword & sorcery. Also, it has the best mechanics for chases I ever seen and you may want to borrow that in you D&D sessions. Even for one session, it’s worth playing (and there is two free kickstart sets with rules, premade characters and a scenario to try it !)



  • Don’t need to go in medieval time. By my parents time, adults gave “colored water” to help keep children calm at school. And the “colored” part is wine.

    Also, 21 for adulthood is very american, it’s lower in most part of the world. And idk for the rest of the world, but it was also even younger in medieval europe than in modern europe as there was no concept of “teenager” for common folks.