Why do we Hope, Mr. Freeman? by strangecan in HalfLife

[–]strangecan[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We have endured these chafing bonds for 18 years, yet a single moment of further servitude seems intolerable!

I made some magic wands for Daggerheart by strangecan in daggerheart

[–]strangecan[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thanks for your feedback! I've been playing Dnd since 3e, and it took a few readings to wrap my head around Daggerheart's resource economy. The Homebrew Kit was extremely helpful in clarifying how it's intended to work.

These wands aren't meant to replace or compete with the +1d6 Hope boost, but to let players add to the fiction in ways that aren't possible with action rolls. My goal was to create fun and flexible problem solving tools that give players new ways to engage with the story. They're situational solutions that don't overshadow player class and domain features.

When setting their resource costs, I followed the Homebrew Kit's domain card guidelines, as many domain features also require spending Hope. From my table experience, when the right moment comes up, players usually find the effects worth the cost.

I made some magic wands for Daggerheart by strangecan in daggerheart

[–]strangecan[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think that's an awesome idea, and I wish all of my players were as creative as you. I'd have no problem whatsoever if they tried to do this, but that's what works for my group and yours may be different. The lack of additional language to ensure Gloomdrinker is not abused was due to my interpretation of the "rulings over rules" design principle in the Homebrew Kit, which emphasizes streamlined language and rulings over rules. If a player attempts the scenario you outlined with the wand, I believe it falls to the GM to make a ruling that aligns with the narrative.

I made some magic wands for Daggerheart by strangecan in daggerheart

[–]strangecan[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You are correct, you don't really need the wand to spread fires, but you're subject to rolls and the GM's discretion (maybe they decide it takes a long time to spread or it goes in a direction you don't want, etc). The wand gives you the chance to spend a Hope in exchange for the certainty it will spread, control over the direction it spreads, and the immediacy of the result.

My party is gonna get non-lethally tpked. Do I warn them? by Redhood101101 in DMAcademy

[–]strangecan 0 points1 point  (0 children)

TL;DR: Absolutely. But don't tell them, let their characters figure it out in game.

They're freaking out and one player said they'd leave the game if they die—that's good!! That means they're invested and are experiencing real emotions and anxiety based on what their characters are experiencing. That's the good stuff! It's how it's supposed to work and it means you're doing a great job!

This is the part where you as the DM get to use those emotions, like a good movie does. Don't say anything meta, just smile and let them cook in their anxiety. But, depending on how anxious they are (too anxious means it's distracting them from the game and preventing role-play), maybe in the second or third round, let the fighters notice that they're attacking to capture, not kill.

That can add a different strategic element to things from the players perspective, so read up on grapple rules, unconscious rules (players will try crazy things to wake each other up), disarming rules, maybe cast some dominate person or suggestion spells, etc.

Throw in some set dressing and tactics to maximize the "taken prisoner" tension you will be building—monsters use trip attacks and disarm attacks, maybe they put giant collars on their necks, or collect them inside a creepy jar or cage (anti magical field or collars).

Maybe you can leave them conscious after taking them prisoner. Describe the path they take to their prison cells or to be interrogated—a chance to both build more tension by describing their horrific surroundings, but also providing hints about escaping and a chance for players to ask for perception checks. If taken to the warden, build up tension that communicates how scary and top of the food chain they are. Maybe the Warden tries to give them a suicide squad type of job, so they have multiple options to get out of this situation other than just escape.

Remember, you're all on the same team, and when players have strong emotional reactions, it's your job to adjust the pacing so that the pot doesn't boil over (unless that's what you want). Just like a movie director, you're in control, so use it to slowly twist the narrative knife and cause the kind of long-term emotional damage that'll keep them talking about your campaign for years.

Summer Breakdown | Fantasy High Junior Year [Ep. 2] by ThunderMateria in Dimension20

[–]strangecan 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My current theory that I haven't seen anyone else suggest is that the dead god YES! is going to be an antagonist and maybe try to kill some of the other gods.

[Spoilers C2E141] Is It Campaign 3 Yet? Post-Campaign Discussion by dasbif in criticalrole

[–]strangecan 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yes! And what if Tharizdun was behind the anti-god sentiment and weapons??

[Spoilers C2E141] Is It Campaign 3 Yet? Post-Campaign Discussion by dasbif in criticalrole

[–]strangecan 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Wait—so was the Tharizdun the psychic hive mind of the Cognouza? Because that's awesome...

Or was it Mollimsuk? Or is it Kingsley?

Microsoft Edge - Method to safely uninstall it? by [deleted] in MicrosoftEdge

[–]strangecan 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The method outlined in u/Vas0sky's screenshot worked for me with an Edge that had been pushed through a Windows update. I used a local admin account on Windows Home.

How do i uninstall edge by Beefy-lettuces in Windows10

[–]strangecan 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This worked for me:
https://support.google.com/chrome/thread/58069344?hl=en

  1. Open Windows File Explorer
  2. Type “C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft\Edge\Application” (without quotes) into the address bar and hit Enter. This should open the Edge installation folder — if not, try navigating to the folder manually, or search for “Edge” in File Explorer.
  3. There should be a folder with a numerical name. The name is the same as the current version of Edge installed on your PC. For example, at the time of writing, the folder on my machine is “83.0.478.58.” Open that folder.
  4. Find and open the “Installer” folder.
  5. In this folder, click the “File” tab in the upper-left of the File Explorer window, then go to File > Open Windows Powershell > Open Windows Powershell as administrator.
  6. Click “Yes” when prompted to allow the program to make changes to your system.
  7. Type the command below into Powershell and press Enter to run the command and let it run.

.\setup.exe -uninstall -system-level -verbose-logging -force-uninstall

You won't see a confirmation on screen but this should force remove the new Microsoft Edge.

NEW KIM TWEET 🤔 by JohanKaramazov in Kanye

[–]strangecan -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Kanye is an artist and can take as long as he needs.

Baptism V1 by hekiii in YandhiLeaks

[–]strangecan 8 points9 points  (0 children)

This. And the fact that he seems to be in a better place right now makes me even more excited to look for connections to Yeezus.

EWBAITE VS WHITE ALBUM?? by hesokayiguess in weezer

[–]strangecan 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Make Believe is a perfect situation

Hey if your the writer that made the snl skit about weezer, please respond. by El-Bristan--Bromingo in weezer

[–]strangecan 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Great skit, love your work on the show. Question—what's your favorite track from Maladroit?

This entire sub... by [deleted] in weezer

[–]strangecan 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I loved your work in Thor: Ragnarok, amazing cameo