Pathfinder 2e
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It seems to be what their audience wants. Presumably GMs rather than players. "A ton of lore for interesting characters from the setting" as one poster on their site put it.GâtFromKI wrote:What's the purpose of a game element the pcs can't interact with ? Why does Paizo pretend they're writing game while it's so obvious they want to write novels ?
Or as I'd put it, "Let me tell you about my 42 characters; it'll only cost you 35 dollars".
Seems like there will also be some crunch, "secret techniques, items, and knowledge PCs might gain from encountering these larger-than-life figures". Of course they might be a bit too busy to pass on their secret techniques to the PCs (maybe busy being dead, in some cases). It's like Paizo looked at Golarion and decided what it needed was lots of Elminster-type figures to interact with the PCs.
And you still have to roll at about 50/50 odds if you're anything but optimal - can't have you critically succeed, now can we?Iduno wrote:Yes, but not in the way you want. You can play where you don't have a stat block, and only succeed when the GM's story (which he bought from Paizo) says you're allowed to.
In Pathfinder, any craft takes (at least) 4 days.
I guess baking a cake or cooking a meal is some kind of craft (since it doesn't seem there's anything else which could handle baking or cooking). Hence it takes 4 days to bake a cake or to prepare a coffee.
In the other hand, any craft takes 4 days if you have enough raw material. So you can construct a castle, or an aircraft carrier, or a death star within 4 days.
I guess baking a cake or cooking a meal is some kind of craft (since it doesn't seem there's anything else which could handle baking or cooking). Hence it takes 4 days to bake a cake or to prepare a coffee.
In the other hand, any craft takes 4 days if you have enough raw material. So you can construct a castle, or an aircraft carrier, or a death star within 4 days.

Et tu, Histoire?GâtFromKI wrote:In the other hand, any craft takes 4 days if you have enough raw material. So you can construct a castle, or an aircraft carrier, or a death star within 4 days.

Last edited by Dogbert on Sat Nov 30, 2019 8:21 am, edited 1 time in total.
A level 1 NPC with 4 ranks in a skill and a +1 stat bonus can consistently pass a DC 15 skill check by taking 10. I'm not sure where you're getting level 8 from.Dogbert wrote: Being fair, however, dnd skill systems didn't apply to "real world stuff" even back in 3E. I mean, unless all adults were level 8+ commoners, dnd-land is a world where people fucks up three out of four times at everything they try (DC 15 being the default)
Where are you getting DC 15 as the default? The craft skill has simple items at DC 5 and typical items at DC 10. Making them takes 8 hours/(DC*check result/item price in sp). Common meals cost 3sp per day, so even an untrained cook can make their own food in 2:40 a day by taking 10. Since that's completely from scratch and includes small beer and bread, I'd say that's not horribly inaccurate.
virgil wrote:Lovecraft didn't later add a love triangle between Dagon, Chtulhu, & the Colour-Out-of-Space; only to have it broken up through cyber-bullying by the King in Yellow.
FrankTrollman wrote:If your enemy is fucking Gravity, are you helping or hindering it by putting things on high shelves? I don't fucking know! That's not even a thing. Your enemy can't be Gravity, because that's stupid.
- WiserOdin032402
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Maybe Dogbert's using D&D 5e's skill system?
Longes wrote:My favorite combination is Cyberpunk + Lovecraftian Horror. Because it is really easy to portray megacorporations as eldritch entities: they exist for nothing but generation of profit for the good of no one but the corporation itself, they speak through interchangeable prophets-CEOs, send their cultists-wageslaves to do their dark bidding, and slowly and uncaringly grind life after life that ends in their path, not caring because they are far removed from human morality.
DSMatticus wrote:Poe's law is fucking dead. Satire is truth and truth is satire. Reality is being performed in front of a live studio audience and they're fucking hating it. I'm having Cats flashbacks except now the cats have always been at war with Eurasia. What the fuck is even real? Am I real? Is Obama real? Am I Obama? I don't fucking know, man.
It seems there've corrected the pregen characters - now they follow the bulk rules. It seems there was two layers of errors in the bulk values - the values given in the crb were wrong (there's an errata), and the computation on each pregen was wrong.
And people on the official forum are still arguing Bulk is simple. The designers themselves literally make mistake over mistake when using this system, but people are arguing it's very simple. It's quite amazing.
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edit: By the way, could someone draw a gnome or a halfling with handholds? I want to create a new pathfinder meme...
long story short: bulk values are supposed to take into account not only the weight, but how convenient it is to carry something. Ie, an heavy stuff with handhold may have a lower bulk value than something lighter but without any way to conveniently carry it. So far so good.
According to the rules, a halfling or a gnome is 3 bulks; while their plate armor is 5 bulk (4 bulk if worn). ie, carrying an halfling armor is less convenient than carrying an halfling - even though the armor is lighter and can be more easily compacted (eg storing the arms of the armor in the breastplate).
My explanation: in Golarion, halflings and gnomes have handholds.
And people on the official forum are still arguing Bulk is simple. The designers themselves literally make mistake over mistake when using this system, but people are arguing it's very simple. It's quite amazing.
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edit: By the way, could someone draw a gnome or a halfling with handholds? I want to create a new pathfinder meme...
long story short: bulk values are supposed to take into account not only the weight, but how convenient it is to carry something. Ie, an heavy stuff with handhold may have a lower bulk value than something lighter but without any way to conveniently carry it. So far so good.
According to the rules, a halfling or a gnome is 3 bulks; while their plate armor is 5 bulk (4 bulk if worn). ie, carrying an halfling armor is less convenient than carrying an halfling - even though the armor is lighter and can be more easily compacted (eg storing the arms of the armor in the breastplate).
My explanation: in Golarion, halflings and gnomes have handholds.
Last edited by GâtFromKI on Mon Dec 02, 2019 2:40 pm, edited 3 times in total.
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Pregen characters are often really really bad. They are often created while the rules are in flux, and even when they are penned after the rules have cooled and congealed they are written by people who remember alternate proposals for the rules. Making rules errors under those circumstances is very easy, and it's why the pregens in games like Shadowrun almost never have their point totals add up properly. It isn't just that people are uninvested in getting the editing done properly - it's that they are often written with respect to rules and costs that changed at some point during the design and development process.
Of course, the PF2 Bulk rules are a war crime, but pregen characters not using them as written isn't much of a data point to prove that.
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Of course, the PF2 Bulk rules are a war crime, but pregen characters not using them as written isn't much of a data point to prove that.
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... I guess I think to much as an programmer and not enough as a RPG designer.FrankTrollman wrote:Pregen characters are often really really bad. They are often created while the rules are in flux, and even when they are penned after the rules have cooled and congealed they are written by people who remember alternate proposals for the rules. Making rules errors under those circumstances is very easy, and it's why the pregens in games like Shadowrun almost never have their point totals add up properly. It isn't just that people are uninvested in getting the editing done properly - it's that they are often written with respect to rules and costs that changed at some point during the design and development process.
Of course, the PF2 Bulk rules are a war crime, but pregen characters not using them as written isn't much of a data point to prove that.
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When you program, you have to test your code after each (publishable) change. (i won't define "publishable" here, but obviously the published version should be a publishable version). When you apply this principle to RPGs, it means you have to recreate PCs from scratch after each (publishable) modification. You can't just take a part of the numbers you've got with another version of the rules, somehow merge it with another part of the PC you've got with another version, and call it a day: you have to do everything from scratch - you just read the last version of the rules and do what the rules tells you to do.
If you don't do that... Well, I can't say it's a big surprise if your game is unplayable as-is and it requires a patch from day one.
It's a common issue we have. For perspective, imagine somebody desk checking some code they wrote, but not bothering to look up another module they used in it. That second module has been changed in response to a shift in the whole project, and some functions actually do different things now.GâtFromKI wrote:... I guess I think to much as an programmer and not enough as a RPG designer.
That's what happens in RPG development "testing". People say "oh, I know how that bit works, I don't have to look it up." But somebody else has changed that bit, so now the first guy's work is invalid and nobody knows.
Koumei wrote:...is the dead guy posthumously at fault for his own death and, due to the felony murder law, his own murderer?
hyzmarca wrote:A palace made out of poop is much more impressive than one made out of gold. Stinkier, but more impressive. One is an ostentatious display of wealth. The other is a miraculous engineering feat.
I've read this awesome though on the Paizo's forum :
I think this Paizil guy has understood the only quality of the game: by the rule of PF2, there is basically no benefit to attempting anything - hence the GM can resume his railroad without any PC interference.
A bit of context: no one understand how the transition from exploration mode to encounter mode works, especially when surprise is involved, so there's a new thread about every 2 weeks.some paizil wrote:By the rules of PF2, there is basically no benefit to attempting to surprise someone.
And honestly, I'm glad for it.
I think this Paizil guy has understood the only quality of the game: by the rule of PF2, there is basically no benefit to attempting anything - hence the GM can resume his railroad without any PC interference.
It's maddening. A friend of mine pulled the friend card to get me to play in his 5e game which I'd rejected multiple times and now having sat down and made a character I hate 5e more now than I did before. There is nothing in this game and the reasoning he has for liking 5e is the same 'less is more' story's attitude.
Specifically, you being able to do less allows me to tell more of the novel I've written.MGuy wrote:It's maddening. A friend of mine pulled the friend card to get me to play in his 5e game which I'd rejected multiple times and now having sat down and made a character I hate 5e more now than I did before. There is nothing in this game and the reasoning he has for liking 5e is the same 'less is more' story's attitude.
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- saithorthepyro
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Bit of a late news spoiler, but according to people with early copies of the GameMastery Guide, Gestalt is now a legal thing you can do in Pathfinder 2e, and the book says that to adjust encounter difficulty for it the most you might need to do is bump the level up by 1, and only if your group is hardcore optimizers.