ace rooster
2016-01-21, 02:06 PM
"Why on earth would you have potions of hide from undead? we were chasing a druid!"
"Well I saw them and thought they might be useful."
Checkov's gun is the principle that it is bad storytelling to include items that are never used. This is part of the reason I dislike seeing characters with pages of items that they have 'just in case'. This feat is intended to avoid that.
I might need that.
prerequisites: any two luck feats
When the character can buy equipment the character can put gold into a 'I might need that' pool, that represents the character being exceptionally lucky in their random buys. At any point after the character can spend twice the value of an item from their pool, to represent that they had it on them this whole time. This costs a use of a luck feat, but can buy up to the party number copies of any item as one use. Because the item has been on them this whole time, the party needs to have been able to transport it to be a valid target, but size is not inherently limited.
For example; when the party discovers A large supply of giant's mead, the party rogue can be very glad he brought those wagons that they left outside the dungeon :smallbiggrin:.
Thoughts?
"Well I saw them and thought they might be useful."
Checkov's gun is the principle that it is bad storytelling to include items that are never used. This is part of the reason I dislike seeing characters with pages of items that they have 'just in case'. This feat is intended to avoid that.
I might need that.
prerequisites: any two luck feats
When the character can buy equipment the character can put gold into a 'I might need that' pool, that represents the character being exceptionally lucky in their random buys. At any point after the character can spend twice the value of an item from their pool, to represent that they had it on them this whole time. This costs a use of a luck feat, but can buy up to the party number copies of any item as one use. Because the item has been on them this whole time, the party needs to have been able to transport it to be a valid target, but size is not inherently limited.
For example; when the party discovers A large supply of giant's mead, the party rogue can be very glad he brought those wagons that they left outside the dungeon :smallbiggrin:.
Thoughts?