klionjs.blogg.se

3.5 rules compendium
3.5 rules compendium











3.5 rules compendium

Grease can also target a weapon, forcing a reflex save each round to avoid dropping it. However, Grease demands a reflex save each round for people standing on it to avoid falling down. The default orc warrior has a reflex save of +0, so he has a better chance of making the save for Grease than Sleep. It affects a 10ft square, and forces a reflex save to avoid falling down. So, if your level 1 party is attacked by four MM orc warriors, your wizard has a statistically good chance of shutting down most, and possibly all, of them with one spell.

3.5 rules compendium 3.5 rules compendium

An standard MM orc warrior has a will save of -2, whereas a first level wizard with 16 Int can have a save DC of 14, which means that an orc has to roll a 16 or better to resist sleeping. Capped by HD (4HD of creatures can be affected in all) but absolutely deadly at first level. Sleep: Will save or fall asleep for 1 minute/level. Using late-edition monsters in such a game is likewise quite telling - they're generally designed assuming they're being used against the ultra-specialised PCs that became common as that edition went on (and that the Dungeon APs generally assumed and encouraged), and so they're significantly more powerful than creatures of equivalent CR in the first Monster Manual.ģ.5e really did become a bit of a mess. Using the "Spell Compendium" as the only supplement to an otherwise "Core Rules only" game was really quite an eye-opening experience. As it went on, 3.5e became progressively less balanced. That's not entirely the fault of the MIC, though. It's a real shame, because it should be a must-have supplement for the game. This leaves the game with two half-systems for pricing items, neither of which is entirely satisfactory, and the incompatibilities between the two create merry hell for me dealing with the Artificer in my current campaign. While that's true, unfortunately the MIC doesn't fix those items.













3.5 rules compendium