

The irony here, is that is exactly what you are doing - you're saying that the investment they made into their character has paid off because now there is no chance of failure. Im all for rolls and its not to trivialize or ignore the things the people are good at, but rather when something is either so common, or their skill level is so above what is asked for that is what im talking about.Īs /u/The-Magic-Sword and /u/Sporkedup say, when a player invests in something on their character, they want to be able to use that and see that the investment paid off. I often hear about how dm's "ask for too many rolls" but the opposite experience for me has been that the players feels all confused when they aren't required to roll, is that just table specific? do you have players who tries everything they can to avoid rolling, or do they also prefer to roll more dice.ĮDIT: since it was unclear, i like assurance and often recommend people take it, but it things like opening simple locks with people who are +12 in lockpicking, or they decide to bribe a guard 2 gold and then ask if they need to roll something like "No you just more or less paid him over a month of salary to let you through he isnt going to ask questions". It came about from the fact that every time my players makes a good plan or is more than skilled enough to do something I tell them that they succeed without rolling and they look up at me like I just told them the pizza for the game night has pineapple and shrimp on it. Hey, hi, hello, i just wanted to put this out here to ask what the experience of other dms has been about this particular subject. Pathfinder Society Subreddit /r/Pathfinder Pathfinder General Subreddit /r/Pathfinder_RPG Homebrew and Pathfinder Infinite /r/Pathfinder2eCreations You must also credit the artist: images that are uncredited or AI generated will be removed. This could be a campaign summary, ABC and build, or character profile, as appropriate. Only verified content creators can promote posts that may require purchases, sign-ups, commission information, or provide incentives for participation.Īrt posts must include a follow-up comment relating them to Pathfinder 2e. Verified content creators may promote their content regularly. Only 1 self-promotion post per week is allowed. This subreddit is a community and we welcome your content but we expect your participation in this community in return. Meme's purely for humor should be posted on r/PathfinderMemes Low effort EX: the cover of a rulebook, unconstructive complaints such as "I hate." or "X sucks," does not relate to Pathfinder 2E. Prompts, text, or other AI-generated content is considered low-effort. Quality EX: homebrew rules, analysis, something you discovered/encountered, memes that teach mechanics, stuff with a story. Posts should be able to spark dialogue, add interesting perspectives, educate, and otherwise contribute to the 2E experience.
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