Bingpot
Bingpot
Yeah that was at GenCon this year.
Oh gotcha. There is a community built around a D&D let’s play who call themselves, “Critters”, as a play on words with the title of said show, “Critical Role”. Thought that was what you were referring to.
Critter as in Critical Role? The CR community here is pretty small to begin with, but maybe you could try posting over there.
Starting my 2nd playthrough with a lolth sworn drow cleric(1) bard(11) build. Going dark urge, but resisting it.
I like the idea that through my character’s relationship to an evil deity, they recognize the dark urge is something wholly other than Lolth’s influence. So lawful evil in the sense that, “yeah I’ll be evil, but not because you told me to.”
My favorite thing so far had been Shadowheart hesitantly confessing she worships Shar, only for me to be like, “Oh that’s nothing. Have you heard about our Lord and Savior, the Spider Queen?”
Another thing you can do is have someone with dimension door free him, then yeet both of you to the ladder on your next turn.
“Bangs” are when the hairs are cut short in front of your forehead, while leaving the rest of your hair long.
There are some ability specific ones. There is a potion you can get in act 2 that permanently increases strength by 2.
The crazy part with the mirror is that everyone in your party can benefit from it once. You can even go back to camp, swap out new companions, and they can get it as well.
The mirror also can give a +1 to Charisma before giving you a +2, but still won’t exceed 22. (ie 20 CHA gets the +1 to 21, then gets the +2 but caps at 22)
Regarding the odd numbers, the hags hair you get pretty early. Depending on your starting stats and feat choices, you could reasonably have a 17 or 19 to round off. The mirror exists to help push characters past the normal limit of 20, which doesn’t matter unless it is by 2.
As much of a pipe dream as that is, it would be super cool.
Fun for me to hear about experiences like yours. This was my first CRPG after years of TTRPGs. Out of curiosity, would you say you are more interested now in trying D&D as a tabletop experience?
My favorite example of the reverse in recent memory has been Wizards of the Coast essentially going back completely and then some on their unpopular OGL changes after a significant portion of their DnD Beyond members canceled their subscriptions.
Nothing, unfortunately.