@Lyroschen@DKagemann I mean that's really kind of worse though, right? How does it make sense that any of the PCs survived dropping a fireball in an enclosed space if there's no possibility to dodge or minimize their exposure.
They should all be dead.
The HP loss not bumps and bruises, incineration
@DKagemann@Grimcleaver I had a PC cast fireball in a closed room smaller than the AoE, and told them they didn't get a dex save, because there's no way to avoid the fireball even a little bit.
The good news is, neither did the monsters.
The funny thing about traps in D&D is how wizards contract some Rube Goldberg type to build numerous elaborate mechanisms that inflict mild damage in grandiose fashion when it probably would have cost the same to have a stone block fall on the entire party and kill them.
@SkylarSkye3 A lot of middle to upper class parents had full dental coverage for their kids so from an early age we got frequent dental visits, braces and whatever else we needed. In a few years I think that will change, unfortunately, since modern families don't tend to have as plush lives.
@sakebu_cheese_ I agree. There is a reason for it though. The idea is to keep the cold items on one side and the hot on the other to keep the cheese and burger from getting cold and the veggies from wilting.
But it just ends up with a bite that is both too cold and too hot at the same time.
@memeslich They are the easiest fit into any setting. No matter how zany, no matter how gritty, no matter how historically accurate--fighters make sense.
@japan_nobunaga Every society gets to decide among themselves their own rules. Neither side is being unreasonable. They're just different traditions. Differences are wonderful.
Japan: a baby is Japanese only if a parent is Japanese.
South Korea, China, India: roughly the same.
Germany, France, the UK: roughly the same.
The United States: any baby born on the soil is a citizen for life. Tourist mother, undocumented mother, it does not matter.
If the rest of the developed world does it the other way, which side is being unreasonable?
@isfjcutebear That's weird.
I guess it depends on what you think is necessary to leave behind a beautiful Japan?
Clean the beaches? Make beautiful art? Can't imagine that would make people think Ill of you.
If you meant it as an excuse to attack vulnerable communities I could see judgement.
🇯🇵 I am Japanese.
Question for people all over the world.
When I say I wanna leave behind a beautiful Japan for my grandchildren, that resembles the one I grew up in.
I am getting called far right extremist.
Have you also experienced the same? Why is this?
@japan_nobunaga I've gone shooting a few times but I don't yet have a gun. I'd like to at some point. I feel like it's part of my patriotic duty in case there's ever a serious need to be trained and ready with a firearm to be able to help protect people.
Be honest with me, Americans 🇺🇸
Do you actually own a gun?
In Japan, I have never seen a real one. Not once.
Not at a friend's house. Not in a drawer. Never.
But online, every American just goes
"oh, mine's in the nightstand"
like it's a phone charger 🔌
So now I'm genuinely curious:
What's YOUR gun? The very first one you ever got?
Is this normal everywhere in the US?
Or just some states?
@ApexSeeker_ I mean it's kinda' gotta be both, right?
But people just don't seem to be in the same kind of deep life-commited relationships where they want to set down roots and live a life together. It's more casual people sharing an apartment fretting about expenses.
Seems like, at least.
🇯🇵 I am Japanese.
Question for people all over the world.
Is the declining birth rate caused by men?
By women?
By both men and women?
Or is it nobody’s fault?
What do you think?
@stephenRB4 Start trying to solve world problems. Try and fix government. Make people's lives easier.
As a creative side project produce sci-fi, fantasy and horror movies.
Also probably travel quite a bit.
@bestofStarTrek Hence you end up with lots of humanoid aliens, quite a few fully human looking aliens (like betazoids) and even a fair number of races that seem to model cultures and folklore identical to what developed on Earth.
@bestofStarTrek So according to Trek lore there's a thing called Hodgekin's Law of Parallel Planetary Development that states that similar planetary conditions result in different species independently evolving in very similar ways. Not just physically but societally.