@enrikisingerIf I cast hold person in aao with war caster, does the target roll the saving throw twice in his turn if he pass the first? Yes.
— Jeremy Crawford (@JeremyECrawford) June 11, 2016
Ed Greenwood fantasy setting: Stormtalons!
And….the word is out! Welcome to STORMTALONS!
https://t.co/wo8XVylhIU…/stormtalons-the-realms-youre-look…/— Ed Greenwood (@TheEdVerse) July 8, 2016
Come closer…immerse yourself… pic.twitter.com/xNhVfjgiSu
— Ed Greenwood (@TheEdVerse) July 8, 2016
@mattaccount System?
— Ed Greenwood (@TheEdVerse) July 9, 2016
@mattaccountyeah, sorry. Just noticed this was fiction, not RPG. Looking forward to it, still! Oh, RPG adventures are coming! Details later…
— Ed Greenwood (@TheEdVerse) July 9, 2016
Stormtalons! The realms you’re looking for
The Ed Greenwood Group (TEGG) is thrilled to announce its second setting, Stormtalons, which is the first comprehensive high fantasy world created by Ed Greenwood since the Forgotten Realms®. More than a hundred Creatives have come together to play in this new setting, fashioning their unique tales and giving life to it through words, art, leatherworking, music, and a variety of other skills.
“I have crafted many worlds, some for myself, and some shared with many. Stormtalons is important to me because it’s my chance to explore working with writing and gaming friends, and talented people new to me, so we can all play together in a big sandbox designed to accommodate all of us—AND give every reader, listener, viewer, and fan a chance to partake in all the fun.” — Ed Greenwood
With at least one new work being released every month, even the most avid gamer and the most voracious reader will find plenty to devour in this lore-rich setting riddled with adventure. Published through Mr. Greenwood’s new publishing venture, TEGG, works will never go out of print and will be available in a variety of formats for readers. Confirmed Stormtalons Creatives include fan favorites such as Chris Jackson, Julie Czerneda, Richard Lee Byers and Rosemary Jones.
Mr. Greenwood’s first novel, Words of Unbinding, will launch on August 31, 2016.
Until then, online announcements will be shared right here on Onder Librum.
… what’s that? You want to know more about the world? Well then, friends… follow us, and watch the mists rise over the next few weeks…
Don’t attack rolls against a blinded creature have advantage?
@JeremyECrawford That's logical, but don't Attack rolls against a blinded creature also have advantage (PHB 290), which cancels out (p.173)?
— Carl Jonard (@carljonard) June 15, 2016
If you have advantage and disadvantage on the same roll, they always cancel each other out. #DnD https://t.co/N9vmkINskl
— Jeremy Crawford (@JeremyECrawford) June 15, 2016
@NoTMockBut wouldn’t the advantage granted by your target being unable to see you cancel out disadvantage? Yep
— Jeremy Crawford (@JeremyECrawford) June 15, 2016
Will a NPC be able to make a Charisma Check to affect a PC behavior or emotions?
@mikemearls @JeremyECrawford By RAW, in a Social Iteration will a NPC be able to make a Charisma Check to affect a PC behavior or emotions?
— Wolf Hunter (@WolfHunter83) June 21, 2016
NPC ability checks can't force a PC to think/feel something, but they can affect how the DM describes the NPC. #DnD https://t.co/uSbOljwILB
— Jeremy Crawford (@JeremyECrawford) June 21, 2016
@JeremyECrawford But an NPC Ability Check can force The PC to act in some way?
— Wolf Hunter (@WolfHunter83) June 21, 2016
I'll state it another way: an NPC ability check can't force a PC to think/feel/do/sense something #DnD https://t.co/Gcy8D6o7us
— Jeremy Crawford (@JeremyECrawford) June 21, 2016
@Cybren @WolfHunter83PC on PC ability checks shouldn’t do that either; that’s what roleplaying is Bingo
— Jeremy Crawford (@JeremyECrawford) June 21, 2016
@MtS_Designer @Cybren @WolfHunter83 Nope
— Jeremy Crawford (@JeremyECrawford) June 21, 2016
@JeremyECrawford Can a NPC force a PC to fart?
That seems to be the next question.
— John Appleton (@jaa0109) June 21, 2016
Farting—that's another matter. An NPC can feed a PC a steaming plate of beans … #DnD https://t.co/aMJyfZv3d9
— Jeremy Crawford (@JeremyECrawford) June 21, 2016
@JeremyECrawford @Cybren @WolfHunter83 Just to be clear: A PC can't ask for a Insight check against another PC's lie right? Only against NPC
— Matheus Ferreira (@MtS_Designer) June 21, 2016
You can ask for a Wisdom (Insight) check against anyone. The DM describes what you sense based on the result. #DnD https://t.co/wVQod1u877
— Jeremy Crawford (@JeremyECrawford) June 21, 2016
@MtS_DesignerBut I don’t understand why let Insight vs Deception against a lie, while not Insight vs Persuasion against a decision. Insight isn't limited to discerning duplicity. It's for when you're trying to get a read on someone.
— Jeremy Crawford (@JeremyECrawford) June 21, 2016
@JeremyECrawford So, considering the 2nd dot of the Charmed Condition, the NPC gains Advantage in checks…to let the DM make a description?
— Wolf Hunter (@WolfHunter83) June 23, 2016
Being charmed by a spell or another effect is a different matter than being subject to a simple Charisma check #DnD https://t.co/D3LxzPtbSY
— Jeremy Crawford (@JeremyECrawford) June 23, 2016
Is superiority die maneuver doubled in a critical hit?
@JeremyECrawford Is superiority die maneuver doubled in a critical hit? Thanks for atention!
— Wesley Buck Rosa (@Wesleywbr1) June 7, 2016
When you score a critical hit, roll all of the attack's damage dice again, no matter the source of the dice. #DnD https://t.co/UHzDPiTXkx
— Jeremy Crawford (@JeremyECrawford) June 11, 2016
Why are rangers spells known casters instead or prepared each day?
@JeremyECrawford @mikemearls Why are rangers spells known casters instead or prepared each day? #dnd CC: @Dan_Dillon_1 @Umbralwalker
— (((JamesIntrocaso))) (@JamesIntrocaso) June 8, 2016
Spells known v. prepared—preparation is a flexibility feature that not all spellcasters are meant to have. #DnD https://t.co/haH7wSBRpe
— Jeremy Crawford (@JeremyECrawford) June 8, 2016
@Dan_Dillon_1 @JamesIntrocaso @mikemearls @Umbralwalker was there any deliberate decision that led to pally getting that flex over rnger? Spell prep lets a paladin change emphasis (damage/defense/healing)—intentional.
— Jeremy Crawford (@JeremyECrawford) June 9, 2016
@Dan_Dillon_1 @JamesIntrocaso @mikemearls @Umbralwalker was there any deliberate decision that led to pally getting that flex over rnger? A ranger is meant to have a few signature magical abilities represented by spells.
— Jeremy Crawford (@JeremyECrawford) June 9, 2016
@Dan_Dillon_1 @JamesIntrocaso @mikemearls @Umbralwalker Thanks very much for the design insight. We really appreciate it!You're welcome!
— Jeremy Crawford (@JeremyECrawford) June 9, 2016
@JamesIntrocaso @JeremyECrawford @Dan_Dillon_1 @Umbralwalker they're not really bookish or studied in the way I see preparers
— (((Mike Mearls))) (@mikemearls) June 8, 2016
@Umbralwalker @Dan_Dillon_1 @JamesIntrocaso @JeremyECrawfordYet bards can’t be argued to be Non-Bookish. (thanks for jumping in Mike). they have the vagabond thing going, though
— (((Mike Mearls))) (@mikemearls) June 8, 2016
@Umbralwalker @Dan_Dillon_1 @JamesIntrocaso @JeremyECrawfordAs Dan said, it’s likely a flavor issue. Prep doesn’t need to mean “books” to me. yeah, it can definitely shift depending on how you tilt things
— (((Mike Mearls))) (@mikemearls) June 8, 2016
@Umbralwalker @Dan_Dillon_1 @JamesIntrocaso @JeremyECrawford for instance, bard to me feels more like "I've picked up a few tricks"
— (((Mike Mearls))) (@mikemearls) June 8, 2016
One of my players encountered a ghost and aged 30 years!
@JeremyECrawford one of my players just encountered a ghost in CoS and aged 30 years (now 50) are there any mechanical effects?
— blackwarder (@blackwarder) June 27, 2016
The main effects of aging: need to watch calorie-intake a bit, might feel sore more often, prone to taking naps #DnD https://t.co/ikfpoanb9L
— Jeremy Crawford (@JeremyECrawford) June 27, 2016
@JeremyECrawford Well this was a sobering Sage Advice answer.
— Rodney Thompson (@AntarianRanger) June 27, 2016
How would you articulate ability damage?
@ChrisPerkinsDnD How would you articulate ability damage? Like wisdom?some stats seem very simple to explain, but that one has me stumped.
— Khalid McPherson (@SpookyKPac) June 22, 2016
Wisdom loss is like getting sh*tfaced. Your judgment and perceptions become seriously impaired. https://t.co/oIgrRBIBHE
— (((Chris Perkins))) (@ChrisPerkinsDnD) June 22, 2016