Or magic items to encourage shenanigans, looking at you Alchemy Jug

    • @Tolookah@discuss.tchncs.de
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      1110 months ago

      Sometimes you just need to apply mayo to the barbarian so they have a crispy crust when seared.

      Other times your want to fill someone’s desk drawers.

    • Square Singer
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      1110 months ago

      I’ve got an upcoming game. I’m stealing this. “Ring of infinite mayonnaise”

      • Lemdee
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        1410 months ago

        You don’t have to steal it if you use DnD, the Alchemy Jug already does this and is likely what they’re referring to.

        • Square Singer
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          810 months ago

          I’m using Mini6. That system has nothing pre-made, so all I do is invent or steal ;)

          • Lemdee
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            610 months ago

            Mini6

            Respect! It’d be too much work for me to use a system that bare bones for what I like to run but it’s nice to see love for other systems here!

            • Square Singer
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              410 months ago

              The advantage of a barebones system like Mini6 is that it effectively stops rules lawyering. If there are no rules, you can’t lawyer them.

              The core rule set of Mini6 is just a few pages, so it’s easy to remember all rules.

              It also gives you a lot of flexibility to do whatever you want, and if you as the GM make mistakes, they are just canon now.

              I honestly couldn’t be bothered with reading through stacks of books to build a campaign ;)

              A liberal framework like that means that balancing doesn’t really matter either, since I do the balancing on the fly.

              The only thing that’s kinda annoying is that I can’t just give the players a pre-made list of skills/spells they can gain when leveling up, so they always kinda have to negotiate with me about what they gain. Items are a similar story as well.

              • Lemdee
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                10 months ago

                Yeah, I can see the advantages but I enjoy the clean math of PF2 too much for that tbh. There’s so much material to work with and it’s all so balanced. I don’t mind reading that all either, I actually read the core rulebook for PF2 cover to cover over a few days when I first got it because I was enjoying it so much! Everything just works, but it’s definitely a bit more crunch than is necessary for people not running long complex campaigns. On that note, Shadowdark is a really fun system if you wanted to check something out that’s more robust than Mini6 but still super simple rules that are quick to pick up.

                • Square Singer
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                  410 months ago

                  I totally get that preference as well. It’s just different philosophies each with their own advantages. Mini6 is rather limited for very long campaigns, but then again, I never had time enough for a really long campaign.

                  Thanks for the hint about Shadowdark, I’ll check it out!

                  Btw, if you want a really great system for one-off horror games, I can recommend Dread. It is seriously good! Perfect use of game mechanics to set the atmosphere. Never had such an immersive game with any other system.

  • @nxfsi@lemmy.world
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    1910 months ago

    Welcome to nethack, where even scrolls of genocide (removes entire monster classes upon reading) are considered to be not overpowered.

    • @addie@feddit.uk
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      310 months ago

      Does help that the things you can genocide are less nasty than the things you cannot, and you don’t want to be facing 100% the things you cannot genocide. Amuses me even more that the best use for scrolls of genocide is to read them while confused, which causes specific monsters to be summoned on demand

      • @nxfsi@lemmy.world
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        510 months ago

        Do not read a scroll of genocide while confused.

        It will genocide the player race, which is generally a bad idea. You want to read a cursed scroll instead.

  • 🔍🦘🛎
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    1810 months ago

    Giving your monsters magic items so the game is in a contant powercreep snowball freefall

  • Moegle
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    1010 months ago

    We broke the Anima system in half with overpowered characters. Not that it holds together very well normally. One mage character boosting the tank’s strength high enough to lift a mountain and creating him a giant tungsten lump, another mage opening a portal directly above a bad guy’s tower, apply tungsten to tower at great speed. No more tower. The GM was too amused to be mad that we wrecked his whole plan. We used the same trick to launch a necronomicon into the sun (or near enough). Also so many magically created artefacts, creation mages are just bullshit. But I got away with it because I made some for everyone.

  • Lemdee
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    10 months ago

    As a GM this has always irritated me about other GM’s complaining their players are too powerful. My dude, you’re literally omnipotent. Your players cannot be too powerful, because you are all-powerful. Just throw bigger baddies at them. You only have to worry if one player starts getting way more powerful than the rest of the party. Then you either have to make sure everyone is cool with that asymmetrical dynamic or buff everyone else up to their level. But a party cannot be too powerful, it’s just a lack of GM creativity. /rant

    Edit: Dear GMs, downvoting this won’t make it less true. Relax your grip on the narrative and you’ll be surprised how much more fun everyone has.

    • @Eagle0600@yiffit.net
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      610 months ago

      A party can definitely be too powerful for the narrative you want to tell. If you’ve got a specific story with specific challenges in mind, then players can have abilities that can render those challenges moot.

      Using Pathfinder as an example, but this would apply to several related systems too: You have some kind of ravine or other traversal challenge. Prior to gaining access to fly, the players need to use their skills to find whatever solution you’ve seeded into the world or come up with some creative solution you haven’t thought of yet. After gaining access to fly, they can simply fly across, nullifying the challenge.

      All this is to say that in certain systems, it’s not simply the numbers but the nature of challenges that change as you gain power. A high-level party tells different stories than low-level parties (this isn’t an accident, it’s a feature), and if that’s not the kind of story the GM wants to tell, it can be a problem. Arguably, however, that’s something the GM should have been aware of when going into a system like DnD or Pathfinder and been prepared to raise the stakes to entirely different kinds of challenges.

      • Lemdee
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        410 months ago

        Arguably, however, that’s something the GM should have been aware of when going into a system like DnD or Pathfinder and been prepared to raise the stakes to entirely different kinds of challenges.

        Which is the point I was going to make! I still say it’s on the GM to properly calibrate the story and/or player powers in the scenarios you outlined but overall I agree with you. I just think if a GM is trying to tell a very specific story/narrative then they should outline when each power rise occurs but that enters into railroading imo. Which at that point my advice would just be to write a book if they want THAT much control over the narrative since the players would have very little agency to alter the world around them. That’s just not fun for most players I’ve ran games for, they always want that extra agency to get wild and as a GM it’s always fun to see the unexpected and it keeps me on my toes.

        GMs! Let your party be powerful if they figure out creative ways to achieve that power! It’s more fun for everyone!

        • @shani66@burggit.moe
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          210 months ago

          Dude, this is a pretty bad outlook. Not the power creep stuff, although I’d hate that super hero nonsense at our table in any of our serious campaigns, but the idea that trying a story is rail roading. everyone, dm included, has a say in the kinda campaign you’re getting into and, once you’re in, you should stick to the kinda game you all agreed on.

  • Narrrz
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    410 months ago

    I suspend the tarrasque between dimensions to incapacitate it and prepare to create a post-scarcity society based off its infinitely replenishing flesh, blood and bones.

  • Lazerbeams2
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    10 months ago

    I’m working on a Tome of Forbidden Spells just to see what my players will do with weird magic

  • VagabondShadOP
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    410 months ago

    Wow, all this wonderful discussion off a silly meme, it warms my heart. Happy gaming everyone, just remember as long as everyone is having fun (GMs too) you’re doing it right.

  • Vhostym
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    410 months ago

    For me, balance issues are never the party vs. the monsters. I can tweak the monsters to make the encounters more challenging. Players want to feel powerful! Give them the tools over time to build the character they want to build.

    It’s power disparity within the group that has always been the biggest problem. If you have players that are very knowledgeable about the game and know how to build optimally, other players may feel like their character isn’t good at anything because the more purposefully built characters will seem to be able to do so much more.

    I usually have to balance that with custom feats or items to even things out. Disallowing multiclassing in 5e in my new campaign also helped. Too much front loading that encourage dips for the sake of dipping.

  • @TheConsulate
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    210 months ago

    The coolest magical items don’t “break the scaling” anyway, because they do cool weird stuff, rather than just giving you spells or numbers.

  • The Giant Korean
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    10 months ago

    My players need golf bags and caddies for all the shit they have. I love handing stuff out. It’s fun.