As
I mentioned in an earlier post I am embarking on my first adventure using D&D 5th Edition and I'm going to chronicle my journey (and that of my character) as a series of blog posts. The format will be character journal entry and then my take on the rules.
This being the true and reasonably accurate account of the misadventures of Forest Gnome Barbarian Hermit Tynka Azolla.
The tribe have left me to look after the old hermit Klandgnor and the egg of Khan Arge in the ruins of Montnorad
He's insane but harmless and cries out in his sleep when troubled by
the dreams of the 52 black birds and the missing Iles of Cruise, visions of the
war between the hawk men of the Capitol and their enemies the Coh Mees
of Uesesah. He rambles prophetically about The End of Days when the high priest of Potus spoke to the
the amureeckans and told them to go forth and shelter from the fall.
I was out picking berries to make a poultice to calm his dream time when
a great black shadow passed over the forest, followed by a raucous
cawing. When I got back to the ruin it was a shattered mess. There was
no sign of the old man or the egg, but in the sky I could see a great
bird travelling South.
I grabbed my travelling pack, glad that my father had trained me well to
always be ready to move at a moments notice and headed South. On the
third day I found the hermits body among the flat rocks at the bottom
of the waterfall. He had been split open and his insides torn out,
great claw scratches littered the rocks among the blood, feathers and
viscera. Whatever swooped down and snatched him up had decided to eat
him. The egg was nowhere to be seen, so I blessed the old man's corpse and continued South.
The hermit had taught me that a great evil resided in the egg and should
it be released it would consume the world in destruction, my mission to
find the giant bird and retrieve the egg.
Eventually coming to a great coastal settlement I found many people who
had seen the great bird always heading south. Some said that it must be
headed to the Isle of dread. I found a merchant who was assembling a
trade ship bound for the Isle. I lied to him about my past but he
believed me and I am now one of his bodyguards.
We set sail on board a
ramshackle ship bound for the Isle. 10 days later we approached the
archipelago when an ungodly storm came out of nowhere smashing our ship
to pieces and I jumped overboard to save myself. We woke up in the
beach battered but alive, a heavy mist obscured the horizon so I went
inland in search of fresh water, food and foliage. It was then that the giant crabs attacked, I killed one with my
javelin and almost killed two others who were attacking Kendrick the
merchant and some of the other survivors and sailors.
|
Giant Crabs attack the PCs (yes the pencil sharpener is a PC) and survivors on the sample file beach. |
When the mist cleared it was clear that we were on a sandbar and the
ship had hit a reef a sort distance away. It was heavily damaged but
intact if we are to survive we must construct a raft from the flotsam
washed up on the sandbar and make our way back to the ship to gather supplies.
My Thoughts on Character Generation
My character is a truly random creation. Race & Class were randomly rolled and Attribute scores were determined from a best of three sets (using 4D6 drop lowest method) then placed appropriately and Race/Class modifiers applied. This resulted in above average STR, INT and DEX scores but a truly awful WIS.
The use of predefined "packs" is an excellent answer to long complex equipment lists and gets you up and running in no time. Similarly, I really liked the background aspects of the new character gen system (Personality Traits, Ideals, Bonds, Flaws) which will be of immense help to new players and create some really interesting combinations.
I'm a big fan of the way Castles & Crusades / SIEGE system resolves Skill/Attribute checks so I feel quite at home with the new slimmed down skills list and proficiency modifier system. Gone are all those horrible 4e Powers which made even a low level game sound like you were in an 80s anime and drove you nuts tracking Class Feature / Race Power / At Will / Encounter / Daily usage.
In play
Coming around after the shipwreck encounter, I received my first
Disadvantage token, which was a real shock. Although it only applied to skill checks it really had an adverse effect on my play. I could not catch a break and I failed all subsequent skill rolls. I'll reserve judgement on this until I've benefitted from
Advantage but I'm leaning towards favouring a static positive/negative modifier as I feel it's effects might be too random.
Combat seemed way more streamlined and faster than 3.5/4e with a return to the simpler bash/bash mechanics of earlier editions. It may not be terribly realistic, but it gets the job done with the minimum of delay.