Spyke
lemmy.world

I'd argue that's more of a wisdom roll. INT would be a attempt to decipher it without magic, WIS would be knowing not fuck with creepy book or to at least cast detect magic first

137
Dalvoronreply
lemmy.zip

It depends on game and edition. Newer d&d for instance, wisdom is all about senses and willpower. It would apply if the book has bad vibes or some sort of "do not read aloud"/"danger" markings or something. Int would be more appropriate for common sense and knowledge of how to handle possibly cursed items.

7
[deleted]reply
piefed.world

Wisdom being used for both senses and willpower is an odd combination when sensory processing disorders exist.

10

"You feel strangely compelled towards the text and begin to read it in a sonorous chant"

"Up pup pup! Check my character sheet, I'm illiterate!"

"You said you were playing a journalist who could speak seven languages."

"A photojournalist! I'm illiterate in all of them."

77
piefed.social

Ok. What does my character do next, GM ? Paint my scene for me.

22
midwest.social

I'm no artificer, but surely, whatever trigger is activated by reading the text would require it to be in the original language, not the player's

15
Siethronreply
lemmy.world

Nah, it's the intent of the words not the words themselves. If you have an understanding of the words then you naturally supply the intended intent.

8
ngdevreply
lemmy.zip

if i read the words "eat shit" i dont necessarily have the intent to eat shit

1
Siethronreply
lemmy.world

Not YOUR intent. The word's intent. The meaning the words impart. If you read 'eat shit' you know it means to eat shit, not that it makes you want to eat shit.

3

seems dumb. makes more sense that reading the scroll aloud would do it. knowing the lexigraphs and being able to put syllables to them, not translating it into whatever language

2
lemmy.world

Wait, isn't INT the primary stat for an artificer? Rolling that low seems like really bad luck.

8

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