You'd be amazed how many people forget that the Sun is a star.OK fine. The Sun.
grrr...
Wait, maybe you wouldn't.
--Patrick
You'd be amazed how many people forget that the Sun is a star.OK fine. The Sun.
grrr...
You can't KNOW that, technically.
The sun is a miasma of incandescent plasma.You'd be amazed how many people forget that the Sun is a star.
Wait, maybe you wouldn't.
--Patrick
If you want that...Inside this circle are all of the universe's pedants.
I still like the original better, catchier tune.The sun is a miasma of incandescent plasma.
That turtle's like "Brah, get your balls off me."
That should read "thrilled" instead of "amazed"
@jwhouk
Well, maybe you play different, but I've never had a DM who didn't roll their own for the Random Encounter Table.The random encounter thing is pretty much by DM discretion and can go either way. The players don't have to know what numbers trigger the encounter/choose enemies.
If you let the player roll, you can't then change it if you decide you don't like it... that's madness!Well, maybe you play different, but I've never had a DM who didn't roll their own for the Random Encounter Table.
Changing from hunter to hunted doesn't necessarily mean that the former prey is now the hunter. Could be that bigger/badder has entered the picture and your prey isn't what the new hunter is interested in.Yeah, but since when does the PLAYER roll a random encounter check? And furthermore, if the situation is one of changing from hunter to hunted, wouldn't you already know who your hunter was, because you were just hunting them?
My favorite parts were the die rolls that were for ABSOLUTELY NOTHING. Just to make the sound of a die rolling to keep the PCs nervous.Well, maybe you play different, but I've never had a DM who didn't roll their own for the Random Encounter Table.
This is the ultimate evil.My favorite parts were the die rolls that were for ABSOLUTELY NOTHING. Just to make the sound of a die rolling to keep the PCs nervous.
--Patrick
I love making my players roll random spot checks. It leaves them questioning their results.My favorite parts were the die rolls that were for ABSOLUTELY NOTHING. Just to make the sound of a die rolling to keep the PCs nervous.
--Patrick
Thanks. I didn't get it either. I understood the first three, but was lost on the fourth.@jwhouk
Panel 1: Gary Gygax, creator of D&D
Panel 2: Edward (vampire) from Twilight
Panel 3: D20 rolling a 1, a critical fail
Panel 4: the Winchester brothers from Supernatural, experienced demon hunters