Happened at our table a couple of months back.
Fun fact. I wanted to trap my level 12 party in a dungeon, one of them had disintegrate. So I engraved a reflecting effect in the door. Any direct one target spell casted on the door would bounce back. It would take 3 spells used that way to empty the magic of the door.
Sadly, he never casted disintegrate on it. Sad DM noise.
But DAM its hard to trap a high level party anywhere.
I was gonna give you advice on trapping them, but then I realized you were talking about their characters and not the actual players.
Then again, playing the odd session in an actual escape room might be fun.Wait hold up TTRPG escape room?
Tell me more!
Well I mean, next time your party needs to escape from somewhere, book an escape room that has a theme that’s close enough.
There’d be no tabletop element, obviously no weapon or spells, although your players can still kinda roleplay in there.Most escape rooms around here already have their own little backstory and an actor introduces you to their shtick and sometimes interacts with you through the thing.
If you call them ahead of time, they might agree to slightly alter their existing stuff to accommodate your story.
Semi-related fact: Knock and Speak With Animals are the best utility spells in Baldurs Gate 3, and anyone who says otherwise is a liar.
Utility ? No idea. But Speak with animals is so fucking hilarious that I will carry a class just for it because its that funny. I was sold the second I talked to the squirrels near the bard.
As far as I understand, “utility spell” is a category consisting of all spells that aren’t combat spells.
I agree 💯 btw 😁
I haven’t used knock at all but the first thing I do after every long rest is apply speak with animals to my PC. I then talk to almost every animal I meet.
Raise your hand if you spoke to the guard bear again after saving the Grove, hoping that the xenophobe had changed its mind about you 🙋🏻
Maggran, I think? Maybe it’s a question of timing? I didn’t immediately move on after the festivities and ran into him in human form on the trail to the left of the entrance to the grove.
I remember him thanking me. I more remember his mouth didn’t move when he spoke and the effect was off-putting, but I do remember being thanked. He seems to just complain now, so I have no proof
Knock wastes a level 2 spell slot while thieves tools are plentiful. You can easily unlock anything with thieves gloves, don’t even need a dex character. Speak with animals is replaced by a potion that most merchants sell for a few gold.
You don’t really need that extra spell slot for a game that’s not at all punishing in the combat department though, and having Speak With Animals memorized as a ritual is just much better QoL than having to buy and drink potions all the time IMO
I agree that speak with animals as a ritual is a QoL win, but I just sold 15 of those potions at the start of act 3 and I’ve never even bought one, you find em everywhere lol. Seeing as I don’t think I’ve even taken 15 long rests, you can probably get away with just drinking the potions you find on the ground.
Smack the door with your sword. The only ones that don’t fall to my sword are arcane locked and astarion can lock pick those.
Speak with animals gets a lot better with infinite duration.
Yeah, I use that mod and cast SwA right after every long rest 😁
You don’t need a mod. SWA just has infinite duration in BG3 (or rather until long rest)
Ah ok, I didn’t know since I’m using a mod that would’ve made it so if it wasn’t already 😁
And Thunderwave is the best combat spell in the game
Especially considering the absurd amount of cliffs is the game.
This guy thinks there aren’t ENOUGH!
Spike Growth wants a word. Although that one does pair nicely with Thunderwave, so there’s that.
Gust of wind is better. Clears out gas clouds and enemies.
Lol never once needed knock. Astarion (and later respecced roguelock Wyll) almost never failed, especially with guidance. And even if you fail, I never once had single digit thieves tools.
SwA is goddamn awesome though, totally agreed. Talking to the Rothes in the underdark blew my mind
There are some doors that are impossible to lockpick throughout the game, unless you use Knock to unlock.
I don’t recall any that could be opened with knock but could either be picked or destroyed. I do remember many that required huge amounts of damage to dent though.
There are a few that have DC 30 and can’t be broken. That’s not impossible, but it’s still hard even with a character built for it.
Oh yeah, I remember some of those. I didn’t use Astorion, so I built him up just to pick those crazy locks. They’re still tough though for sure.
Anyone who has played any of the Divinity games knows that Speak with Animals is a must-have. Pet Pal was also the best perk in DoS / DoS 2.
Pet Pal was a sure ticket to depression in DoS2. The stories of the animals in BG3 are usually quite cute.
I hadn’t, so it came as an extraordinarily positive surprise to me 😁
The wizard in my D&D group tends to be somewhat frivolous with his spell slots. As someone who looks at D&D as a resource management game (BECAUSE IT IS), this often gives me pain.
If you want to play a game where you do cool wizard shit on the regular, probably don’t play the game built entirely around “you should save your spells for the big fight.” And if wotc don’t want to induce “but what if I need it later?” anxiety they should fucking fix that, and make powers per-encounter or something.
Just because it has resources to manage doesn’t mean it is a resource managing game.
D&D is a narrative game first, a strategic boardgame second. (That is why it is an Role-Playing first, Game second)
The point is to create awesome stories and memories with friends at the table. If this involves spending resources on frivolous shit, then so be it.
I’d bet you will remember stupid shit that Wizard got you in longer than when you tactically defeated a boss.
Lol. This just is not true in the slightest for earlier D&D. Sure, 5E is mostly focused on narrative, and everyone ignores food, water, etc. This was not always the case though. It was a role playing game, but the role was that of a person who had real needs and desires. It was mostly about dungeon crawling, and often even competitive-ish. Players would frequently try to get one up on each other, like sneaking off to steal all the loot from a dungeon before anyone else got there. There was also almost nothing done in cities and stuff. You’d purchase your equipment and move on to the next encounter.
I agree this isn’t what the game has become, and it also isn’t the way it “should” be. To pretend like resource management and survival aspect were never part of the game though is ignoring a lot of history.
DND is not a narrative game first. It has very few rules for narrative stuff. The bulk of its attention is spent on resource management and combat. Because the bulk of the game is centered around managing resources (spell slots, HP, sometimes gold), I say it is a resource management game.
It’s not very good at facilitating good stories. It’s just missing a bunch of tooling like you’d find in Fate or other games. You can still play make believe but you can do that with anything. The rules aren’t really helping very much. They often don’t care at all about the narrative.
I’ll remember stuff like him blowing hold person on a retreating mook when the expertise-in-grapple rogue could have just grabbed him, sure, but not happily.
This is what BG3 fucks up in my opinion. Occasionally places will be created where you can’t go to camp for a long rest, but usually you can leave and come back trivially. There’s almost no need to save spell slots. You can easily long rest after every encounter and just blow all your slots as soon as possible. I enjoyed playing it how tabletop is played. You actually need to manage your slots. If you decide to just long rest somewhere dangerous you’re probably going to have some kind of encounter in your sleep, and your armor won’t be equipped and it takes time to put on.
Sadly, BG3 doesn’t have a dungeon master to see you cheesing something and counter it. I agree the best part of D&D comes from managing resources and making do when you’re running low. The fear after you’ve blown all your spells after a big fight and need to get to safety with low HP is when there’s the most tension. It makes for good storytelling.
I too tried to play it ‘right’ and only rested sparingly. I made a point to never leave a dungeon or major quest sequence to rest, and generally burned through every last slot and ability I had before I chose to go back to camp. Highly recommend. Actually used my damn potions. Only issue is trying to figure out how to catch up on the rest cutscenes. I tried to squeeze them in all at once but I’m sure I missed some here and there.
To be fair though, my first Tav was a warlock. Even after my party was drained of everything, Eldritch blast goes pew pew and tosses enemies off cliffs (if Karlach didn’t get to them first)
Add a homebrew spell slot potion
What problem is that intended to solve and how does it solve it?
The big boss had just walked upstairs and we were spying on him. I didn’t want to be lured into a trap because we had no idea what was upstairs so I just wanted to look in through the window and see if they had guards posted or something.
That doesn’t seem to describe the spell slot restoring potion so now I’m confused what you’re talking about.
Oops wrong comment. Just add a potion that can restore spell slots
Right, I read your original post but that has a number of downstream consequences. Which ones do you see and how do you plan to address them?
“I cast Disintegrate on the wall”
“The small brick you hit is gone, but it seems there are more bricks behind it.”
Long rest. Repeat as needed.
I just smack the door with my sword. I keep a maul or war hammer ready for metal doors.
I just smack the door with my sword
Axes: am I a fucking joke to you?!
I like greatswords.
You’re gonna dull the blade!
“Doesn’t the Building has windows?”
“Okay, I jump inside and pull from the other side.”
In my campaign recently I just unlocked a flying ability so I fly to the second floor and look for windows and the DM says “no there are none”. I’m like bullshit. What building doesn’t have windows?
Sounds railroady and yeah BS, but I know some that don´t have buildings. Like a Dungeon, a Turret with just arrow slits same with the Burgfried. Or a Barn, maybe a church that abhorres the Light and or Sun? Just spitballing :)
A building built with protection in mind in a world that has Wizards with the ability to fly in it, and Druids that can turn into birds.
Exactly, when there are Wizards with flying, and Druids that can turn into birds or bats, how would architecture look like to prevent especially that usecase?
I prefer Enlarge/Reduce over Knock, way less noise.
If you shrink a door does it pop off the hinges loudly? Or are you shrinking yourself and hopping in the keyhole?
DM Fiat imo for the first way, that will get the whole party through.
this meme gave my rogue depression
Punch the lock.
Seduce the lock
I don’t think that works. Locks are dumb by nature.
As if intelligence prevents seduction. Ogres arent very smart but I seduced one
Removed by mod
Ok, but if there’s something bad on the other side of the door you can’t close it again now. 🤷🏻♂️