T O P I C R E V I E W |
Wooly Rupert |
Posted - 17 Apr 2022 : 03:46:53 Is Dragons of Stormwreck Isle Based on the 80s D&D Cartoon?
If this is true, me getting the product is a definite thing!
Also... I'm hoping they bring back the DVDs. I had them, but now I'll be dipped if I can find them. I'd love to replace them with a new set, or maybe upgrade them to Blu-Ray. |
16 L A T E S T R E P L I E S (Newest First) |
Kentinal |
Posted - 22 May 2022 : 22:24:37 quote: Originally posted by Delnyn
Hmmm, so how does a 1st ed paladin cast magic user spells such as magic missile?
Clearly dual classed
I suspect same player talking about different PCs as more likely better answer. |
Delnyn |
Posted - 22 May 2022 : 21:18:10 Hmmm, so how does a 1st ed paladin cast magic user spells such as magic missile? |
Wooly Rupert |
Posted - 22 May 2022 : 20:58:42 quote: Originally posted by Ayrik
1E already had the common/implied/understood rule that there was no upper limit to how many magic missile projectiles you get per casting. Characters with insanely-high experience levels could get insanely-high missile barrages from each casting. No need to modify the rules. And nobody sensible would do so anyways once they realized their own characters could be hit by such barrages.
That can be scary, but even with a high-level wizard, it's still 20d4s.
But in this case, it was house-ruled that the spells could be left hanging, so instead of potentially 20d4s, it could be like 100d4s, if not more. That'll scare a lot of stuff, especially if you add in the sadly-common thing in these cases of "despite it's genius-level intellect, the monster doesn't do anything intelligent to defend itself."
quote: Originally posted by Ayrik
And 1E also had a 1st-level spell called shield which is utterly impervious to such missiles. I know this is an exotic piece of trivia that most 1E powergamers found entirely disinteresting, if they were aware of it at all.
Hmmm, wonder why they didn't care for that one? |
Ayrik |
Posted - 22 May 2022 : 20:29:18 1E already had the common/implied/understood rule that there was no upper limit to how many magic missile projectiles you get per casting. Characters with insanely-high experience levels could get insanely-high missile barrages from each casting. No need to modify the rules. And nobody sensible would do so anyways once they realized their own characters could be hit by such barrages.
And 1E also had a 1st-level spell called shield which is utterly impervious to such missiles. I know this is an exotic piece of trivia that most 1E powergamers found entirely disinteresting, if they were aware of it at all. |
Wooly Rupert |
Posted - 22 May 2022 : 16:37:33 quote: Originally posted by Delnyn
quote: Originally posted by Wooly Rupert
That's pretty common, among Dungeon Masters.
I recall one person going on and on about how his 10th-level paladin could solo a full-grown dragon, and the dude got the most bewildered expression on his face when I responded with "not if I was running the dragon."
I'm intrigued as to what this player said, in an amused way. Was this a 1st edition dragon with "small" Hit Dice and the DM rolled a low d% on the sleeping chance? Also sounds likely the DM acted as described by Ayrik.
I don't recall the details, but it was 1st Edition. And I recall the guy telling me about a house rule they had where magic missiles could be cast but not actually used until later, so a spellcaster could have dozens of castings of the spell ready to go off at once, when he unleased the entire "missile rack" in one round, killing even powerful monsters in a single attack.
There's a reason I didn't take this dude up on his offer to join his gaming group.
quote: Originally posted by Delnyn
Back to the cartoon. I always wondered why Optimus Prime Venger did not simply telekinese the six weapons from the kids.
He could have also hired some thieves to steal them, or taken hostages and demanded the weapons in exchange, employed an assassin to poison the kids... The list goes on. But none of that happened because it was a kid's show in an era where TSR rules were explicit that in fiction, the bad guy couldn't win, even temporarily. |
Delnyn |
Posted - 22 May 2022 : 16:01:03 quote: Originally posted by Wooly Rupert
That's pretty common, among Dungeon Masters.
I recall one person going on and on about how his 10th-level paladin could solo a full-grown dragon, and the dude got the most bewildered expression on his face when I responded with "not if I was running the dragon."
I'm intrigued as to what this player said, in an amused way. Was this a 1st edition dragon with "small" Hit Dice and the DM rolled a low d% on the sleeping chance? Also sounds likely the DM acted as described by Ayrik.
Back to the cartoon. I always wondered why Optimus Prime Venger did not simply telekinese the six weapons from the kids. |
Wooly Rupert |
Posted - 30 Apr 2022 : 18:55:03 quote: Originally posted by Ayrik
And he played his aggressive, fast, 5-headed "genius" monster like it was a half-scared clumsy mentally-incompetent animal.
That's pretty common, among Dungeon Masters.
I recall one person going on and on about how his 10th-level paladin could solo a full-grown dragon, and the dude got the most bewildered expression on his face when I responded with "not if I was running the dragon." |
Ayrik |
Posted - 30 Apr 2022 : 18:33:04 quote: Pretty sadistic of Dungeon Master to introduce newly arrived teenagers to a hostile encounter with Tiamat.
quote: I think it was more like it was with Obi-Wan, Yoda, and Luke Skywalker: someone needed to face Vader, and Luke was the only one handy.
The Dungeon Master did equip his inexperienced PCs with overkill magic items they never earned. A very high-magic, Monty Hall campaign.
He also displayed a lot of poorly-disguised favouritism towards certain members of his group. Along with a little fudging of rules and dice rolls. His faves would simply never lose and never fail.
And he played his aggressive, fast, 5-headed "genius" monster like it was a half-scared clumsy mentally-incompetent animal. |
Wooly Rupert |
Posted - 29 Apr 2022 : 01:57:38 quote: Originally posted by Delnyn
Pretty sadistic of Dungeon Master to introduce newly arrived teenagers to a hostile encounter with Tiamat.
I think it was more like it was with Obi-Wan, Yoda, and Luke Skywalker: someone needed to face Vader, and Luke was the only one handy. |
Delnyn |
Posted - 28 Apr 2022 : 23:39:23 Pretty sadistic of Dungeon Master to introduce newly arrived teenagers to a hostile encounter with Tiamat. |
Wooly Rupert |
Posted - 28 Apr 2022 : 23:27:43 quote: Originally posted by Gelcur
Definitely two of the kids.
Which "canon", the unproduced final script? Or BG2 rumors that Tiamat ate them?
Either way I think its open ended what happened to them. If anything BG2 appearance technically places them in the Forgotten Realms.
There was an episode where they encountered another kid from Earth. She was a girl, about Bobby's age, and she could see the future in her dreams -- which would come true.
The kids managed to get her back to Earth, but couldn't go there themselves for some reason. She had grown close to Bobby, and as she was going into the portal, she tossed him her necklace.
Later, upset about being separated from her, Bobby is about to chuck the necklace. The Dungeon Master shows up, and shares with Bobby the dream the girl had the night before going home. In the dream, she's walking through her school, minding her own business, when a familiar voice says "Hey, didja lose something?" She looks up and Bobby is standing there holding her necklace, and wearing normal clothing.
So, if her dreams always came true and she dreamed about Bobby being back on Earth, then it establishes that the kids would make it back while still roughly the same age. |
Gelcur |
Posted - 28 Apr 2022 : 21:11:03 Definitely two of the kids.
Which "canon", the unproduced final script? Or BG2 rumors that Tiamat ate them?
Either way I think its open ended what happened to them. If anything BG2 appearance technically places them in the Forgotten Realms. |
Wooly Rupert |
Posted - 26 Apr 2022 : 22:18:45 I doubt they'll do a full-on setting of it; I expect we'll get the kids, now as young adults, in an adventure (which would violate the cartoon's canon*), with fuller write-ups than what we saw in 3E.
(*not that canon is a concern for WotC) |
redking |
Posted - 26 Apr 2022 : 16:28:21 I wouldn't mind a treatment of the D&D cartoon setting. It seems like a rather terrible place, a points of light setting. |
Wooly Rupert |
Posted - 26 Apr 2022 : 02:13:47 I stumbled across the clean artwork for the cover.
The acrobatic young lady isn't wearing the fur bikini of the cartoon, but this otherwise looks a lot like Hank and Diana -- especially that bow. |
Ayrik |
Posted - 17 Apr 2022 : 05:24:25 But then the internet would have to invent a new word. The animated-cute-talking-unicorn equivalent of "brony"/"bronies".
So count me out unless they chop the unicorn. Or maybe make the DM more Yoda. Or add a few more heads onto Tiamat. |