and in fact it works! I can take an LDR file, process it into a packed mpd file, and then display that file in interactive (draggable-around) 3d with threejs!
hang on, CritRoleStats has retired? That's sad news; they're great. Thank you to all of them for all the work they've done up to now; it's been an invaluable resource and one I enjoyed reading. Best of luck in whatever you're doing next, CritRoleStats team.
#CriticalRole
nice, generated an image of a character I'm creating by using AI art tools. I have some issues with the ethical nature of such things, but I'm not sure it's significantly less ethical than "google image search for a description of my character and then just pick my favourite image and claim that's my character" which is what everyone does anyway! It's useful to help my imagination, anyway, I must say.
Taking an action (attack, cast a spell, etc) means you automatically fail the dex check (but you get to do that thing).
Each round, everybody rolls on the "complications" table, and then that complication happens to the *next* person in initiative order! That's a lovely wrinkle. (Table attached, but making up one's own would be fun.)
I think this is a neat mechanic. It suggests using common sense: if someone's got a very fast fly speed, let them catch up 2 steps, frex. Now I wanna use this.
Letters (from The Fall of Silverpine Watch) redone with more handwriting-ish fonts, given more natural edges and (some) more crumpled paper, and then tea-stained and baked or air-dried at various stages. They look pretty cool to me; just the vibe I was going for. Not ancient, but written on whatever scraps of paper an obscure military fort in the badlands would have to hand.
Makin' magical items 🙂
Perdition's Ransom
Wondrous item, rare (requires attunement)
While wearing this, when you or anyone you can see within 15ft of you take necrotic damage, the scarf will reduce that damage by 2d6. You must then choose a creature you can see within 15ft of you to take those necrotic damage points instead. The target can be the creature that initially inflicted the damage, or yourself, or any other creature within range except the one that was the original target.
Today's slightly unexpected DM thing to do: create a stat block for a balloon with a tiger's face on it.
Weekend of actual D&D! And my dungeon tiles were a hit, which is cool.
Stuart's 2.5D dungeon tiles. They came out looking OK, I think, so my approach works, hooray! This is only the first seven, though. Now I gotta make, like, a hundred more.
Mad idea for a campaign setting from a D&D homebrew competition I entered: the Octagem. Six crystal spheres each half-full of liquid gemstone that enhances magic, in which the people live in vast floating cities of tethered boats and occasionally go to war with one another.