Anyone seen it? Is it awful?

  • frozen
    link
    fedilink
    132 years ago

    “Feeling the die rolls” is very accurate. My group of friends plays 5e pretty regularly, and we all enjoyed the movie a lot.

    • FaceDeer
      link
      fedilink
      112 years ago

      Not just feeling the die rolls, I could also feel the DM going “oh crap, the bridge is gone now, how will they get across? I know, I’ll give them a portal gun.” And then for the rest of the movie the DM going “oh crap, they have a portal gun now, how am I going to stop them from bypassing every challenge with it?”

      • Derrek
        link
        fedilink
        5
        edit-2
        2 years ago

        In my campaign the dwarf decided to nose dive dive into a mosh pit full of thousands of kobolds. The ranger failed to pull him up and went down with him.

        The only reason they got out was I had planted hints an eldritch god needed them which was the hail Mary In case them or I did something so stupid and needed a way out 😂

        • FaceDeer
          link
          fedilink
          52 years ago

          I had a campaign where the climactic key moment to “win” involved the party fighting their way up to a portal to hell and then casting a gate spell from a scroll to permanently close it. Gate is 9th level, though, which was above the level the party wizard was capable of reliably casting. Rather than let the resolution of the campaign hinge on random chance, I provided the party with an NPC who was capable of casting 9th level spells, but who had various reasons for being incapable of simply blowing through enemies for the party. I thought of him as my “Gandalf” character.

          In the final battle the party wizard managed to reach the portal, and walled himself in with a resilient sphere so that he’d be able to use the scroll in his next turn without being disturbed. Fortunately my Gandalf still had a teleport spell available to him and teleported into the sphere next to the party wizard, offering to take the scroll and use it to save the world.

          On the party wizard’s next turn he used telekinetic shove as a bonus action to shove my Gandalf through the portal to hell, and then once the Gandalf was through he tried casting gate to permanently seal the world off from hell. Turns out he’d never trusted my Gandalf, suspecting him all along of being secretly evil, and so he backstabbed him at that crucial moment before my Gandalf could backstab him. There was literally nothing in my Gandalf’s repertoire of remaining abilities that would have allowed him to overcome this, so off to hell he went.

          And then the party wizard flubbed his attempt to cast gate, using up the scroll in the process. :)

          Fortunately I’d prepared a backup cinematic for that outcome, the flubbed casting was still able to collapse the portal to hell and ruin the bad guys’ plans. It just left the world in a much more “interesting” situation than the party had been aiming for. I frankly preferred that outcome anyway, so I’m not even mad. Though my Gandalf was rather peeved.