"A commercial told me to forget everything I know about slip covers. So I did. Then they tried to sell me some, but I didn't know what the hell they were!"
If it’s like other games from this dev, then treat quests like table top rpg quests and don’t feel bad about cheating anyway you can. Their games are like D&D without a DM to get mad at you because you cheezed your way around a huge set piece battle that they worked on for an hour.
"Trust the dice" is terrible advice. The expression is "trust your GM/DM". The dice are the fly in the ointment and the GM's job is to turn their chaos into a satisfying story.
"A commercial told me to forget everything I know about slip covers. So I did. Then they tried to sell me some, but I didn't know what the hell they were!"
If it’s like other games from this dev, then treat quests like table top rpg quests and don’t feel bad about cheating anyway you can. Their games are like D&D without a DM to get mad at you because you cheezed your way around a huge set piece battle that they worked on for an hour.
No worries there, can’t win a single fight after the first five
Got to the end of the zone, now what?
Always struggled to remember my Tincture of Whatevering and Bag Of Holding
I’m told I’m dying in 5 days unless I find a cure
LOL
Right @ “trust the dice.” Those dice have effed me over with Nat1s more than once already 🤣
"Trust the dice" is terrible advice. The expression is "trust your GM/DM". The dice are the fly in the ointment and the GM's job is to turn their chaos into a satisfying story.
Yeah, I honestly had to Google it because it sounds like such pointless advice. In combat especially, how does “trusting the dice” help at all?
I think what they mean is “trust that the game will turn a lot of failing dice rolls into something interesting in a way a GM might.”