@Gingerblast That happens. That's why rolling up new characters is exciting and fun. There was a low probability that he would make it, he tried it anyway and failed. That's pretty realistic actually.
@nicolange_ Da sprechen Sie ein wahres Wort. Man vergleiche die Veranstaltung im Weißen Haus mal mit der Kunstausstellung im Schloss Bellevue und man kommt mal drauf was Volksnähe tatsächlich bedeuten kann.
@LINKEPELLI 'La Cabaña Executions' Für Linke wieder ein Grund zum feiern. Haben die Kubaner und el Señor Guevara es doch geschafft mit ihrem eigenen Weg eigene Bürger zu erschießen ohne vorher eine blöde Mauer zu bauen. Die brauchten nur ein altes Fort. Für Linke ein Vorbild!
@yoniChanowitz I don't understand what's going on there? Is this a case of 'If I can't read, calculate, and write, the school kids shouldn't be allowed to have any edumocation as well!'?
@AlysssaHazel You should be glad and thankful that this sermon seems to be made for you, which means that this church is like made for you. There are other people who lack this.
This is an interesting thread. And one has to admit there is a point and if you base D&D on a game centered around medieval warfare, Molotov cocktails are most certainly an anachronism. Fire in medieval warfare however wasn't. People still used 'nafta' in naval warfare. 1/
Dumb uses of fire in D&D
Number One: using oil flasks as molotov cocktails is idiotic. Glass bottles were super-expensive. Oil would be kept in leather pouches or possibly clay pots, and no one's carrying clay pots into battle.
Also the oil you had would be tallow, lard, or olive oil. Not gasoline. Whale oil in Scandinavia. Possibly hemp in Asia. An olive oil fire isn't a rating conflagration.
If you need to fry a bad guy, cast your damn fireball
1/4
https://t.co/nm3279wSzL
Or another good example would be Olga of Kiev's Avian Vengeance. According to our sources birds who built their nests under wooden straw roofs were used to set these very roofs on fire after attaching burning clothes to their feet. 3/