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veteran
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veteran
Joined: Jun 2020
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Hey folks, While I'm working on some other topics, I wanted to take the time to do a breakdown on BG3's implementation of the Sorcerer class. Yes, I know, I never did get around to doing the focused feedback threads for the other class, life got away from me, but I am going to do this one, and maybe I'll be able to work back and get to the others eventually. So, Sorcerer! Sorcerers are innate magic-users who has a natural connection to the weave. Unlike Warlocks and Clerics, who receive their powers through a powerful intermediary to the weave, and unlike Wizards who don't truly have a connection to the weave at all, and master its effects through raw intellect of form and process, a Sorcerer is intrinsically connected to the weave, feels its power directly, and in most cases, must use that power, lest it find ways out on its own, uncontrolled. It's a fun class, and a much loved one by many; for everyone for whom the words “You use magic; I am magic.” resonate, there is the sorcerer. In D&D 5e, Sorcerers have a spell list that is mostly identical to Wizards, with a few notable exceptions, especially in the higher levels. They learn fewer spells overall, and cannot pick up new ones as they go, except through their level progression, but they always have immediate access to the spells they do know, without preparation, they don't rely on a spell book, and they develop specialised ways to alter or augment their spells in creative ways, as well as modulating the amount of power they have flexibly, so that they can always have power to spare of the level they need when they need it. Sorcerous OriginSorcerers come in a myriad of flavour, but for BG3 we're restricted to just the original two that appeared in the Phb – Draconic, and Wild. You get to pick your heritage at level 1, since it's innately a part of you. You get one perk from your origin immediately at 1st level, and additional perks at levels 6, 14 and 18. These levels tie in to compliment features and perks you get at other levels from other aspects of the class, such that you generally get something nice or new each level, but never too many things at once. Draconic BloodlineIn 5e, picking Draconic lineage grants you a couple of immediate perks; you gain a natural armour which means that while you aren't wearing any other armour, you can choose to calculate your AC as being 13 plus your Dex mod – this functionally makes it an 'always on' mage armour, that can't ever be removed or dispelled. It's worth noting, for those less familiar with the system, that this is just an alternate way to calculate your AC – so it doesn't 'stack' with other AC calculation methods. If you cast mage armour on yourself, your AC won't change, for example, because Mage armour itself just gives you another way you can calculate your AC – coincidentally the same way that your dragon scales do. Draconic Sorcerer Monks, by contrast, can choose to calculate their AC as 13 +Dex, by their Dragon lineage, or as 10 +Dex +Wis, as a monk – but they only pick whichever of those two is better – Not 13 +Dex +Wis. In BG3, this has been implemented in the same way fairly smoothly and, since the earlier days, Larian have improved the way the game handles calculating AC, such that things now reference a Base AC – the wording and form is a little clumsy, but the result is that it all works correctly now, which is good to see! You also gain more hit points as you level – BG3 grants you 1 extra hit point per sorcerer level, as a draconic sorcerer, just like it does in core 5e. Looking good so far ^.^ At the time that you pick your sorcerous origin, Dragon Sorcerers also get to pick what type of dragon they have a connection to – this plays into some features that they'll get later on, but they don't drown you in new things right off the bat. BG3 gives Draconic Sorcerers one other thing at 1st level which the core rules do not – an extra spell. This is an interesting choice. One of the big difficulties for Sorcerers has always been that they acquire fewer spells than other full casters – even bards learn more spells than they do. Thi is often contrasted by some folks by saying that sorcerers always have all of their spells available, but in reality that defence doesn't amount to much: Level for level, a Wizard or a Cleric, or any other prepared caster, will be able to prepare more spells each day than a sorcerer even knows – so in reality, the Sorcerer will have a single fixed toolkit that contains fewer spells than the Wizard's daily choices, and they won't be able to change them on a whim like clerics and wizards can – it's not much of a defence, in the end. As such, the limitation on Sorcerer spells has often been heavily criticised, and WotC do seem to have accepted that there are grounds for the complaint in recent times – the latest two sorcerers origins they have published have contained expanded spells, much like a cleric gets, such that they know two extra spells per spell level, up to 5th level spells, which don't count against their known spell limit. These spells are usually designed to be ones that fit the origin in a thematic way. Many have since called for the existing sorcerous origins to be given a back-treatment to give them extra spells too – it's not a balance issue, since the new lines get these extra spells on top of their perks, which are more than equivalent to the existing origins'. It seems likely that the future 5.5 publication will do this, when it releases, in fact. So, adding a new spell for Draconic sorcerers? It's perfectly acceptable, and even a nice choice... but I will admit that I would have preferred, if they're doing this, that they do it fully and properly, and give each sorcerous origin they put into the game the full set origin spells - two per spell level up to fifth. In terms of how it actually works, there are still some minor bugs with the Draconic Lineage spell: The main issue is that it cannot be upcast. There is the chance that this was a deliberate implementation choice and not a bug, but if so it needs to be corrected. Consistency is key here, and in 5e style design, you know the spells you know, and can cast them like any other spell you know, unless specifically stipulated otherwise. Most features that grant an extra spell use a specific wording: They say “You know the [spell name] spell,” first, usually followed by, “and can cast it once without expending a spell slot. You cannot cast the spell this way again until you finish a long rest.” This style is specific, and the wording deliberate, because the key point is that You know the spell. You can use the feature to cast it for free, but you know the spell, first and foremost, and you can cast it in the same way you cast other spells you know – using your spell slots. In particular, the way that the spell has been implemented in BG3, you have to use a spell slot to cast it – but you're only allowed to use a 1st level spell slot, not a 2nd. This design is inconsistent with the rest of the spellcasting system, and as well as limiting players also risks leaving them confused or put out at not being able to do something that they expect they should. That aside, what spells are they giving us? By dragon lineage, we get: Red (Fire): Burning HandsBlack (Acid): GreaseBlue (Lightning): Witch BoltWhite (Cold): Armour of AgathysGreen (Poison): Ray of SicknessGold (Fire/Weakening Breath): Disguise SelfSilver (Cold/Paralysing Breath): Feather FallBronze (Lightning/Repulsion Breath): Fog CloudCopper (Acid/Slowing Breath): Hideous LaughterBrass (Fire/Sleep Breath): SleepMost of these look like pretty decent choices, considering the fact that we're limited to 1st level spells only. They've elected to give the metallic lineages non-damaging spells, and where possible made them at least as closely related to their alternate breath abilities as possible with first level spells. Grease, for the Black dragon's acid affinity is a little odd, but better choices were sparse, and I can accept that trouble. I might have suggested swapping Hideous Laughter and Feather fall – Laughter incapacitates, to line up with the Silver's paralysis breath, while Feather Fall, at a stretch slows your falls, to make a tenuous reach to the Copper's slowing breath... I feel that at least works better than the way it is now, but it's not something that's worth raising major complaints over. In Character Creation for our Draconic Sorcerers, they also tell us that our lineage pick will give us more perks at level 6 – this felt a bit odd, since they don't yet have any other places where they tell us what we can get. I'd strongly prefer, as I feel many would, that we be able to see what lies ahead of us on a class' level progression both when we level up, and at character creation. Don't take away telling us what we'll get at 6th level, but rather, tell us more accurately, and tell us what levels we can expect other features too, and tell us this for EVERY class and archetype, please. What they do tell us is a bit vague, sadly: they say that our element-aligned spells will “become stronger”, and that we “can gain” resistance to our element... this isn't very helpful, however. In 5e, at 6th level, you can add your ability modifier to one damage roll of any spell you cast that deals your element damage. Not just any Sorcerer spell, but any spell – this is an important distinction for multiclassing. Whenever you do that, you can also spend one sorcery point to gain resistance to your element for the next hour. We don't know how this will be implemented in BG3 yet, of course... though given the way other hour duration effects and spells have worked so far, it seems likely that you'll be able to take that resistance until you next rest, or else that you'll simply get it innately – either would actually be acceptable perks, and buffs to the feature, in my opinion. One other thing that I noticed in character creation: If you are a draconic sorcerer, and you have a pretty scale pattern... you cannot dream of a daisy with scales, alas. In conscientious objection to being asked to design a physical representation of who attracts me, I tend to always make my dream character an exact duplicate of my own character, unless I'm intending to use my tadpole... but I couldn't do that with the dragon sorceress, because I couldn't give the daisy scales. At 14th Level, in 5e, Dragon Sorcerers gain a set of fully functional wings, granting them a pretty sweet appearance upgrade, a handful of potential fashion problems, and a flying speed equal to their base speed. Unless BG3 implements a functional flying system and proper 3d movement and positioning, this is going to be a fair let down of a 14th level perk; we'll have to wait and see. At 18th level, Dragon sorcerers get a special ability that lets them charm or frighten, their choice, creatures within a massive radius, at the heavy cost of 5 sorcery points. Anyone that passes the save is then immune to it. It's actually a very potent ability, however, as fitting an 18th level capstone, because the fear/charm effect that it inflicts only offers an initial save: it offers no save-outs at any point, and does not break on damage.... so if you fail, you're locked into the effect for the duration, and it can be maintained for up to a minute... which is more than long enough for a dragon sorcerer to murder you with impunity while you're charmed and literally not allowed to fight back. Sadly, we're likely not going to get to a high enough level to see this ability in the flesh. Wild MagicThe other sorcererous origin we can pick from is Wild Magic. Wild magic sorcerers tap the most chaotic elements of the weave, and act as conduits for its raw wild chaos into the material. We don't make any additional extra choices at 1st level, as a Wild Magic sorcerer, but instead get two intertwined features: you get your core features: 'Wild Magic', and 'Tides of Chaos' In 5e, 'Wild Magic' causes you to roll a d20 whenever you cast a sorcerer spell (spells you get from other sources that aren't sorcerer spells for you do not count) of 1st level or higher, with a one in twenty chance of causing a wild magic surge (though it can only occur once per turn, sorry action-surge enthusiasts). You roll on a table containing 50 possibilities, for a wild, unpredictable result. Some of these results cause you to immediately cast another spell as a result of the wild magic, but it's out of your hands to the point that you can't influence a surge-caused spell with your metamagic. Surge-caused spells also last for their full duration, and do not require concentration. The wild Magic feature in BG3 doesn't give us as clear information on how it works, currently – it doesn't tell us anything at all, in fact, other than some flavour text that more or less repeats the introductory text we've already seen. We also don't see any wild magic rolls in the combat log, so I cannot actually report on how the wild magic mechanic, in its basic form, works. What I can say for certain is that, like the core rules, it has a chance of creating a surge when you cast a levelled spell; I don't know whether the one per turn limit applies here. The Wild Magic Surge table has been worked out for BG3's current implementation, however. Larian confirmed for us that it has 10 entries on it, instead of 50, and Larian seem to have focused exclusively on tangible, mechanical effects, without any of the silly or humorous flavour ones. To be honest, I found this disappointing – This would be a perfect place for Larian's signature ridiculous goofy flair to show up in full force, and they didn't. Maybe there will be more surge options at full release, and they only put in the ones that would actually need testing? The effects we can get are: 1) “Create a dense cloud of fog, centred on yourself. The fog heavily obscures and blinds creatures within.” This one is a replica of an entry that appears on the original table, and it's fairly stock standard. It casts Fog Cloud on you, as per the spell, though of course, in BG3 it is as per BG3's version of the spell. The fog cloud only seems to last for a couple of turns at most, however, not the spell's normal full duration. 2) “Until the end of your next turn, you can use a bonus action to teleport up to 30ft.” This one is functionally a free Misty Step each turn. The original only let you teleport 20 feet, in part to balance the fact that it's not a spell, so it can't be blocked or prevented in the same way that spells can be, but ti also lasted for 1 minute. BG3 has upgraded this one to the full 30 feet, but reduced its duration to a mere two turns. 3) “Each Creature within 30ft becomes blurred.” Words as per the Blur spell, but without being the spell itself; as with other spell-mimicing surges, this one doesn't need concentration, but appears to have had its duration severely reduced. This blur affects everyone, friend and foe alike, but only lasts for 3 turns. In retrospect, shortening the duration of effects like this to a few rounds is probably a good call for a video game – especially when it's an effect, like blur, that will just make a conflict draw out more when applied universally. 4) “Each creature within 20ft has their main weapon enchanted. These weapons deal and additional 1d4 Force damage, and always make critical hits.” So, this one is an interesting one. The buff you get tells you that the effect lasts until you next take along rest, which would make it an incredibly potent buffing effect. There are two important elements to this surge that the game does NOT tell you about, however... The first, is that your weapons don't just crit when they hit – they Become Auto-Hits; this is brutally strong as an effect, and would be far too much if the buff actually lasted as long as it says. The second factor is that the buff only actually lasts until you hit something with it once, at which point it is dispelled. Effectively, this surge gives everyone an unerring smite on their weapons. I would strongly recommend that Larian reword this surge effect to be more clear about the limits of the effect: “Each creature within 20 feet has their main hand weapon enchanted. The next time a creature attacks with an enchanted weapon the attack automatically hits and is a critical hit. The weapon also deals an additional 1d4 force damage and the effect then ends on that weapon.” I would also strongly prefer it if it actually worked like smite spells – doing its thing the next time you do hit, but not being an actual auto-hit itself. 5) “Summon a mephit that is hostile to everyone in the vicinity.” I would much rather it was the frightened flumphs, personally. This one summons a mephit – Mud at levels 1-3, but a slightly stronger one at level 4. The mephit is a summoning variety mephit, and will usually summon another mephit on its first turn. That mephit can also summon a mephit if it chooses to, etc. The possibilities are endless... On the bright side, the Mephit is hostile to everything, including its own summons, who, in turn, aren't too happy with it, or, indeed, with each other. If it gets out of hand, you can usually rely on some of them having it out with each other instead of you. 6) “Switch positions with a target each time you cast a spell or cantrip” Larian... Cantrips are Spells. Everything that reacts to 'cast a spell' includes cantrips unless it specifically denotes a spell of 1st level or higher – those aren't frivolous extra words, they have deliberate meaning, because cantrips are spells. That aside, this is actually a fun and interesting one that allows for some nifty shenanigans. It lasts for 5 turns, so there's plenty of time to get a few amusing switches in. Surfaces seem to play a bit of havoc with this surge effect - especially if the spell you're casting has a surface component to it. Whether you, or your target gets affected seems to vary. While testing it, I also found that sometimes my character would fall prone upon switching, while sometimes my switch target would. Occasionally we'd both fall prone, though usually neither would. It was unclear what was causing this, though in general this surge seems to cause major issues with creatures appearing to be in places where they aren't. It's fun, but it's got some kinks still. 7) “Your spells of 1st level and higher Spells of 1st level or higher heal all creatures in a 10ft radius for 1d4 hit points per spell slot level” Another interesting effect, and seems to work as described without any real anomalies. It DOES heal enemies as well as allies. The effect lasts for 5 turns. The remaining 3 effects are gated by you character level, but this only feels like a sensible limitation for one of them. The other two should be available from the outset. Regardless it seems odd to gate them behind character level... but only the jump from level 1 to level 2 or 3 (unclear) those levels pass quickly enough that you may as well abandon the idea of gating some of the surges at all – it's too much extra effort for not real gain. 8) “Each creature and item within 20 feet starts burning and takes 1d6 fire damage per turn.” This is a slightly reduced version of the fairly infamous 'Fireball yourself' surge, and overall, I think it's a good idea. It might be momentarily amusing, but overall it's no fun to have character deaths or a low level party wipe due to a random surge roll, and even though the fireball was only ever a 1-50 chance of happening, stories are rife involving it for some reason. In this version of the surge, the burning effect lasts for 5 turns, so you effectively get a little more than half a fireball of damage total, but you have more time to respond to it as well – casting create water with your cleric, for example, will immediately put everyone out, and I like and appreciate this kind of interaction. Like this, it doesn't even really need to be level gated, as I'd agree with for a full fireball version. 9) “Until the end of your next turn, each spell you cast restores sorcery points equal to its spell slot level.” This one is level gated because you don't HAVE sorcery points until level 2; okay, fair. The original surge got around this problem by simply making the surge restore spent sorcery points – which for level 1 characters is just zero. That aside, the language here is messy. We can 'assume' that it means you regain sorcery points when you cast, but it doesn't say that – and as written, it wold mean that if you surge and cast a spell on another sorcerer, they'd be the one to gain sorcery points. To match 5e style this should be written: “Until the end of your next turn, each time you cast a spell of 1st level or higher you regain spent sorcery points equal to the level of the spell you cast.” 10) “At the start of each turn, trigger a random magical effect.” This one is also a little messy an unclear. What it Means is that you will surge again at the start of each turn... it should say that more clearly, however. The original version of this lasted for 1 minute, while in BG3, it's been collapsed to 5 turns – half the duration. In the original version, it specifically locked out getting this surge again, during your surge chain, and while I can't confirm it, that seems to be the case here as well (checked over the course of about a dozen surge chains, no additional surge chain repeats showed up). At any rate, these three do not need to be level locked, and I really don't feel they should be... but in the end, no-one is going to notice because levels 1-3 pass so quickly anyway. In other threads, someone reported a magic surge that turned everyone invisible, however in all of my testing this one has not occurred at any point; I suspect the reporter may have mistaken the Blur surge for this, but if anyone else can confirm it and offer a screen capture of the surge, I'd appreciate that. == This last section is more to do with another illustration of the weak RNG that Larian uses and still haven't fixed or replaced. Knowing that there were 10 possible surge options, as confirmed by Swen, I did a test of 100 wild magic surges in order to make sure I got a capture of each one. I used a recharge pad in the nautiloid and firebolt on an invincible object in order to force Tides of Fate and trigger surges with mage armour, tapping the restoration pad in between. What I observed was concerning. There was a clear drop off for Tides triggering surges the longer I tested; for the first ten surges, it almost never failed to produce one. For the next 20-30 surges, it began to miss every other time, and for the back 50 surges I would usually go between three to four resets between managing to trigger a surge. As usual, there were occasional brief swings up and short strings of success, but the curve was pronounced and clear. A second test of another 100 surges repeated the same effect. What I also observed was that three of the surges were particularly common, while three were somewhat rarer, and three of them were substantially rarer, in both tests. The last surge, mephits, was rare in the first twenty or so surges, and then increased in frequency alongside the decrease in the success rate of Tides to produce a surge at all. This pattern, too, occurred in both 100 surge tests. So... If you're playing a wild magic sorcerer, be prepared to see a LOT of Fog Clouds, Misty Steps and Blurs, and relatively few of anything else by comparison. If you don't load often (or possibly any loading screen transition may cause a reseed – I can't say), expect to see a gradually increasing failure rate of Tides, and a gradually increasing rate of mephit summoning alongside that. Putting a deliberate weighting on the surge table to deliver the 'mundane' surges most often and the interesting ones more rarely is, in my personal opinion, the absolute antithesis of what wild magic is supposed to be about – the weighting on the roll table should be and remain equal, and Tides must be clear about its interaction with your surge chance. As usual, I still have the results and if people feels strongly that it's necessary, I can parse them into some neat tables and charts to illustrate this... but I'd like to work on other things, so I'm hoping that at this point folks will take me at my word... == Along with Wild Magic at 1st level, we also get the core ability that is meant to assist with it: Tides of ChaosIn the core rules, Tides of Chaos is the tool you are meant to use to help achieve wild magic surges with the degree of regularity you want, rather than leaving it to the extremely rare 1-in-20 roll. It allows you to take advantage on an attack roll, ability check or saving throw of your choice, with the offset that your DM's can call a surge to happen for you any time you would otherwise roll for the risk of it happening. The important thing here is that when you surge as a result of using your Tides of Chaos, your Tides of Chaos then recharges immediately, allowing you to use it again, and trigger another surge. If you don't work with your DM to use this, what you have, as a wild magic sorcerer, is a core ability that more or less never occurs, and an ability that you can use once per long rest to take advantage on one thing. It's pretty dull. When you work with an understanding DM, however, what you have is a feature that becomes a game of risk and reward, where you see wild magic surges at a reasonable frequency to make the class feel worthwhile, and you balance the game of how often you want to use your ability to take advantage on something, with how often you want to risk a surge. Currently, the implementation in BG3 is much closer to the first version of things, and it's depressing. They've allowed tides of Chaos to replenish on a short rest instead of a long rest, but not allowed it to replenish on a surge, so the result is, as we saw in Swen's last Swen-plays-BG3, the player being perpetually gun-shy about whether 'now' is the right time to use up their tides of chaos... because they aren't going to get it back without resting... and as a result, we also saw, very, very few surges. It didn't make for a very good exposition of the subclass at all. - Using tides of Chaos should guarantee a surge, or at least give a very high percent chance (as in, 80% or higher) to cause one at the next opportunity. - Having a wild surge should recharge Tides of Chaos. This is how it's 'meant' to work, and how it should work in a video game format. Tides of Chaos is currently set up to work like a reaction, though it doesn't consume a reaction, but with the reaction system that Larian has at the moment, as with all such things, it strips the feature of a lot of its flexibility and usefulness. For example – it's virtually impossible to use Tides of Chaos to take advantage on a saving throw you need to pass, which is one of the things it's meant to do. Beyond 1st level, wild magic sorcerers get Bend Luck at 6th level, which lets you spend sorcery points (2) to give someone an extra d4 to a roll they make, in the moment – it uses a reaction that you can use after you know what they rolled, but before the outcome has been declared, making it a very versatile little feature. You can also use it to subtract from enemy rolls in the same manner. A proper reaction system is going to be essential if Larian want to implement this feature properly, so we'll see what they do. After that, they get Controlled Chaos at 14th, which lets them roll twice on the surge table whenever they surge and pick which result they'd prefer – there isn't really a good way to do this one without a system that can pause to ask the player what they want, either... so again, this is going to be one to watch, if we get to 14. Lastly, at 18th level they would get Spell Bombardment... which is, frankly, a deeply underwhelming subclass capstone... It functionally lets you add one damage die to damage dealing spells you cast once per turn, provided you roll max damage on at least one damage die in your initial roll. It's... not great for a level 18 ability. Regardless, though, we won't be going here in BG3 anyway, so, it's a fairly moot point. That's it for subclass abilities at least. On the whole, these are fairly well handled, but with a few pointed issues, and a bumpy road ahead with later features, if we don't get a proper reaction system. The core sorcerer features don't fare quite as well, unfortunately, with some strange decisions in the translation from 5e rules to BG3. Core Class FeaturesFont of MagicAt level 2, Sorcerers traditionally get their Font of Magic feature. This introduces the player to sorcery points, and teaches them what they can do with those points just 'as is'. It's intended to introduce the primary sorcerer currency and the nature of Sorcerer's flexible casting, without drowning the player in too much at once. Font of Magic is the controlling ability that lets you spend sorcerer points to create new spell slots, and expend available spell slots to create sorcery points: It's VERY flexible, and deliberately so, and it comes with some caveats, to keep it a balanced: - First, you can never have more sorcery points that your current sorcery point maximum (usually dictated by your level, but there now exists a feat to give you a couple more). - Second, any spell slots you create disappear when you finish along rest. Your sorcery points also regenerate on long rests. These caveats allow you to do some fairly unusual things and still be fairly within the bounds of the rules, and not broken. For example: Your party might be 6th level, but if your sorcerer really needs it, they can create a 4th level spell slot for themselves and upcast one of their other spells with it, even though they don't normally have access to 4th level slots. In BG3, they haven't called this feature Font of Magic, and they haven't described it particularly clearly. Instead, you just get two separate abilities, called “Create Sorcery Points” and “Create Spell Slots” They have not implemented the maximum on sorcery points, allowing you to burn spell slots to create as many sorcery points at once as you wish, but they've also not provided the full set of conversion options, and these only unlock as you gain access to higher spell levels. The result is that... and I'm saying this again, sorry everyone... they've elected to take something, do it differently and in their own way for no reason, and ended up doing it only partially as well and leaving it lacking key elements and features as a result. The two separate abilities we get, which each have to occupy their own buttons on our hot bar if we wish to use them, give only a very brief description of how they work and, while it's sufficient, it doesn't let us see what we will be able to do as we progress. Our sorcerers in BG3 can only assume that they will be able to make 3rd level slots and 4th level slots; they don't know this for certain, and they also don't know how much that conversion will cost, because they options are not visible. Despite Having 7 sorcery points at level 7, they will not be allowed to Make a 5th level spell slot, and will only be told that they can two levels later, at level 9. I can foresee, after launch, people spamming Larian with bug reports upon reaching 11th level, to report that the option to create 6th level spell slots hasn't appeared... because they're expecting it to, and don't know that 5th level is as high as you can create. MetamagicLeaving aside the fact that the UI calls your metamagic 'Class Passives'... Another confusing choice in design here. After having a level to digest and learn about your new currency and get a feeling for how you can use it, Level 3 traditionally brings the other major feature that defines sorcerers in 5e – Metamagic. Metamagic as the name suggests, is magic that affects magic... it's another way to spend your sorcery points, and the player has to make some careful choices about this, in terms of how they feel like they want their character to develop. Metamagic abilities cost between 1 and 3 sorcery points, with one or two powerful exceptions that cost a number of points equal to the level of the spell they're being applied to. You normally get this at level 3, so that you can pick from all of the metamagic options, and be able to use them immediately. You get to pick two options, from a short list, and you gain more at higher levels – much higher. You don't pick up your third metamagic option until 10th level, and your fourth at 17th. Larian decided to give you your first Metamagic picks at level 2 instead of level 3 – at the same time that you've just been given your sorcery points, and your intro to flexible casting. This means that instead of being given the flexible casting system first, and then, after a small chance to experience it, being given tow more thing you can do, you're now being presented with four different things you can do with your sorcery points all at once, and being asked to pick two of them at the same time, before you've had any experience using the currency. A more pressing issue than this, is that at level 2 you only have 2 sorcery points, so you cannot use some of the metamagic options. BG3's solution to that problem is to simply not offer them to you, and make you pick two metamagic options from a cut down list that doesn't include several options. The initial level 2 list is also missing at least one metamagic that only costs 1 point, so I'm not really sure of their reasoning here. I say initial list, because they then present you with the metamagic list again at level 3, the very next level. They ask you to pick a third metamagic option from the existing ones, plus several more that didn't appear the first time... this sets a fairly awkward precedent, since it seems to imply that we'll be regularly adding to our pool of metamagic as we level, and have a lot of them before long. We don't get any more at level 4, but we also don't know what Larian's plans are regarding this, going forward. If we don't get any more until level 10 now, then having some at level 2 and then more at level 3 is a very awkward, clunky situation. So, what metamagic do we get, and how do they fare?
The initial list, at level 2 presents us with:
Careful Spell: “Allies automatically succeed saving throws against spells that require them.” (Costs 1 Sorcery Point)
This one is fairly straight forward. In the core rules, there's a limit on this – you can only protect a number of people equal to your Charisma modifier. Here, that limit has been removed, and that seems fair enough, all things considered – Especially since Evocation wizards gt the superior version of this feature, and they get it for free, all the time, and without cost... *grumble*
Ahem. Otherwise, this one seems to work reliably as intended.
Distant Spell: “Increase the range of spells by 50%. Spells with a range of 5ft are increased to 30ft.” (Costs 1 Sorcery Point)
In the core rules this metamagic doubles the range of spells, and increases touch spells to 30ft. In BG3, this metamagic has been reduced to only increase spell ranges by 50%, along with all of the other crunched ranges that cause problems for the game.
What's important to note here is something that BG3 leaves nebulous and does not explain to the player: The range of a spell is a very specific thing, as strange as that may seem to write... but in BG3, they use the 'range' field in their spells to list a variety of different things, many of which are not actually the spell's formal range. Here's an example: In BG3, Burning Hands is listed has having a 'Range' of 17ft. It doesn't. Its Range is Self. It creates a 15 (17 in bg3) foot cone from you.
This is a nuance that BG3 doesn't clarify... so it looks like the spell has a range of 17 feet, and without any other caveat or qualifier, you average player would be forgiven for thinking that the spell's 'range' would be extended by Distant Spell, to 25 feet; that it should be an applicable spell for this metamagic. It is not (and for good reason) .
This is an issue one part about UI and one part about information clarity. Both are problems all over the game, and this is just one more place where it occurs. Fortunately, while the information provided to the player is unclear and misleading, the actual implementation appears to be accurate – only spells with an actual range, or a Touch range seem to be affected.
Extended Spell: “Doubles the duration of conditions, summons and surfaces created by spells.” (Costs 1 Sorcery Point)
BG3 has completely changed this metamagic, though not without a certain amount of justifiable reason. The core rules for Extended Spell double the duration of a spell with a duration of 1 minute or greater, up to a maximum of 24 hours. Most spells in BG3 that have a duration of more than 1 minute have already had their duration pushed out to a flat “until you rest”, however, so in this sense it's understandable that they wanted to give it some more coverage.
In making these changes, however, they've dropped the 24 hour limit, so if we get some of the higher level summon spells later on, that may cause problems. The increasing of effects is an interesting choice, but it does feel like unnecessary homebrewing for the sake of it: many of our 1 minute duration spells have had their duration cut down to just a few rounds, so using this metamagic to boost them up again doesn't even put them back to their 5e versions duration in the first place. In other ways, it's a serious balance concern going back the other direction – since it now increases fixed effect debuffs, some of which need to only last a short time. A cantrip denying reactions for multiple rounds, is, for example, an incredibly strong effect for a single sorcery point.
It's an interesting choice, but I'm concerned that it will have many balance issues in the long run that the designers haven't fully thought through.
Outside of this, we lose one of the most valuable uses of Extended Spell: Night-before preparation. With Extended spell, you can use spell slots that you have left at the end of a day to set up for difficult challenges in the next day. For example, the night before you go to fight the biggest, baddest bad your world has ever seen... your Extendable Sorcerer can cast an extended high level Aid on the party, to give them all a large increase to their max Hp that will last for most of the following day, even after they sleep. They can then spend a few 4th levels on Death Wards for key people, and if they happen to have their ninth level slot available, put an extended foresight on someone as well... and then sleep, recharge and be ready for the fight the next day. We lose this function in BG3's rendition of the metamagic; we shouldn't be losing features like that.
This is at least partially because their game engine hasn't been designed to allow anything to carry over a rest break at all – even things that shouldn't reset do, when you long rest in BG3... but this reason doesn't really feel like an adequate consolation, if I'm honest.
(A side note to Extend: The visual cue for which spells work with which metamagics does not light up Reduce/Enlarge for extend spell, however it is a valid target, and it does get extended correctly if you use the metamagic with it)
Twinned Spell: “Spells that only target one creature can target an additional creature.” (Costs Sorcery Points equal to the level of the spell)
Twin spell is a mess, unfortunately. As well as this very simplistic description, there's a line in the bottom of the description box that goes on to read: “For spells that don't shoot a projectile, the targets need to be close enough together.”
So... In the core rules, Twin spell says: “When you cast a spell that targets only one creature and doesn’t have a range of self, you can spend a number of sorcery points equal to the spell’s level to target a second creature in range with the same spell (1 sorcery point if the spell is a cantrip).
To be eligible, a spell must be incapable of targeting more than one creature at the spell’s current level.”
Your targets do not, ever, need to be close to each other, as long as they are both within the range of the spell. If I want to enlarge the Barbarian who is 30 feet ahead of me, and twin that to enlarge the Paladin who is twenty feet behind me guarding our back flank, I should be able to: Why is BG3 disallowing this? This is a core application of Twin Spell, and we can't do it.
It's worse than this as well – they've written in this projectile nonsense too, which means that we CAN cast Chromatic Orb at both the Minotaur that's 60 feet in front of us, and also Twin it up to the Minotaur 40 feet above and behind us on the ledge where it's just flattened everyone else.... but we CNA'T do the exact same thing with Hold Monster – because Hold Monster doesn't “shoot a projectile”. Why? I can't even Crown of Madness, or Hold Person, the two goblins on opposite rooftops trying to ambush me, even though I have clear line of sight to both... but I can Witch Bolt them, or Ray of Sickness them... Why? It's completely inane and ridiculous.
The issues continue – you can't even choose the targets of your Twin Spell if they don't shoot projectiles... you just have to point it at the first one you want, or close to it, and try your best to slide your mouse around and find the sweet-spot pixel where maybe you might get lucky and have it highlight the specific two creatures you want... if they do happen to be close enough together for it to consider it in the first place. If there's more than two or three targets in the area, though, your chances of managing this are slim to none most of the time.
The exact range as to what is “close enough” for those twinable spells that don't shoot projectiles is not defined anywhere or at any point, and the player has no way of knowing what the magical range might be until they bring out the spell to try waving their mouse around in the targeting mini game. The actual range varies from spell to spell, in fact, with nothing to indicate what it will be or why.
As if that wasn't frustrating enough, we can find issues with Twin back in the other direction as well. The way it's written in BG3, Twin Spell does not lock out spells with a target of Self – in fact it seems to actively confirm them as valid for Twin Spell. Any player reading the description would be forgiven for seeing “targets only one creature”, and thinking, “neat, this metamagic will let me use this spell that I can only cast on myself, on my buddy as well!” The way it's written implies this, and it's false. Spells with a target of Self are disallowed for Twin in BG3 (as they should be), but it fails to describe this – you just have to find out the hard way if you don't already know the system.
That's all we get for Metamagic, at least at first – we see these four, but the rest are missing. The very next level, however, we get asked to pick one more and it presents us with the list again, but now adds three more metamagic to it:
Heightened Spell: “Targets of spells that require saving throws have disadvantage on their first saving throw.” (Costs 3 Sorcery Points)
Heightened spell has received an extremely large buff; I suspect Larian aren't actually aware of what a massive buff they have given this metamagic, but at the same time, they don't really seem to understand the value point of disadvantage on saving throws either, so perhaps this isn't a surprise.
The core rules for Heightened Spell read:
“When you cast a spell that forces a creature to make a saving throw to resist its effects, you can spend 3 sorcery points to give one target of the spell disadvantage on its first saving throw made against the spell. “
So, in BG3, Heightened Spell now imposes disadvantage on ALL targets affected by the spell, not just one of your choice. This isn't a huge, huge deal for damage-dealing spells – it's still a substantial buff, but one that could very nearly be acceptable. The problem comes with spells that do things other than deal damage; giving all targets disadvantage on an upcast charm person, hypnotic pattern, or if we get to 11, mass suggestion, all for a very cheap 3 sorcery point, just for example.
Larian's current engine can't handle a multi-target spell where you also get to choose one target in particular for any reason, and that aside, the way they've chosen to implement metamagic makes this difficult as well; more on this later.
A final issue for heighten: As many spells are designed in BG3 right now, they force the saving throw to happen immediately upon casting (even when they shouldn't be), however, despite this, these spells are all NOT treated as applicable candidates for Heightened Spell. The game seems to know which spells are not meant to be forcing their saves immediately and which ones are... but it does not communicate this to the player, which will leave players very confused about why they can't Heighten their casting of Web, to ensure that the enemies get stuck – they can't, but by all accounts, as things are presented in BG3, they should be able to. (Indeed, this ruling is under contention by many, who feel that in PnP, spells like Web very much should be acceptable targets for Heightened/Careful Spell)
Quickened Spell: “Spells that take an Action take a Bonus Action instead.” (Costs 3 Sorcery Points)
Messy language again, but the general intent is intact and not dissimilar from the core rules. Quicken has had its cost increased from 2 sorcery points to 3, in BG3, which reads as a tacit statement from Larian that they don't intend to impose the bonus action casting restriction rule going forward.
Quicken is, itself, the main reason why that rule exists, and I've made my own feelings on this matter clear in other threads, but in brief – Quicken needs that bonus action limitation, for balance reasons. Other spellcasting doesn't – there aren't that many bonus action spells, and doubling them up isn't that big of a deal, really – the extra slot expenditure is balance enough (with one high level BA spell exception). Quicken, however, is where it becomes overbearing, and we need that limit.
Costing one extra sorcery point is not enough to balance and legitimise the things quicken allows without that stricture... I'd strongly like for the stricture to be put in place specifically for quicken spell, and nothing else, and to have quicken returned to its 2 sorcery point cost.
(“When you cast a spell that has a casting time of 1 action, you can spend 2 sorcery points to change the casting time to 1 bonus action for this casting. If you cast a spell as a bonus action using this Metamagic, you can't use an action to cast another spell during the same turn, unless it is a cantrip.” This would fix the balance break without limiting or penalising anyone else needlessly.)
In terms of use in BG3 it seems to be working correctly without any implementation problems found.
Subtle Spell: “You can cast spells while Silenced” (Costs 1 Sorcery Point)
This is another one that is a bit of a mess, but its mess is more under the hood than out in the open. Subtle spell is supposed to allow you to cast spells without using any verbal or somatic components. The intention being that this is a subtle way of casting, as the name implies, and generally, if the spell does not require material components, is undetectable.
The issue that we have is that, in BG3, spells DO record whether they need verbal, somatic, and material components, even if they don't make it clear to the player. Several spells, currently in game, which do not have Verbal components, can already be cast in a silence bubble – this isn't a bug; the spells that don't have verbals are allowed, while any spell that has a verbal is blocked. The silence effect, however, just says 'can't cast spells', which is flatly untrue.
The game is giving the player directly false information and conflicting itself, so how are we to rectify Subtle Spell? How do we check what it's actually doing? Yes, right now Subtle unlocks spells locked by a silence bubble... but we've still LOST major functionality from the spell – for example, we cannot cast V/S spells while restrained in BG3, which is one of the strong abilities that the metamagic gives you (Many DMs still allow somatic component spells to casters while they are restrained, but the individual restraint in question is the guidepost for whether a character has their hands sufficiently free, and its discretionary).
I'd like to see, for example, A Sorcerer with Subtle Spell able to get a spellcasting option using it, in the 'Prisoner of Gut' sequence; that's the exact kind of situation where the metamagic comes into play.
As it is, this metamagic is not going to see much use in this game, because it's current only function is as a direct counter to another very specific spell... which, in this game, given crunched ranges and unrestricted movement, is usually easier to counter just by walking out of the zone. It needs more attention. Finally, I don't know why this one as gated back a level compared to the others - it seems like they kept back the 3 sorcery point costs ones until level 3, but that doesn't explain this one.
That's all for the second set. The big problem I have here is that as well as setting up an awkward progression by giving us meta magic two levels in a row, it's also limiting out ability to make choices in the process.
As much as they might be giving us an extra metamagaic by doing this... someone who wants to choose, for example, Heighten and Subtle, or Quicken and Heighten, cannot. We simply cannot make that metamagic choice, at all. Why not?
Please, Larian... the distance between level 2 and 3 is not big. Wait. Let us pick from the full list of metamagic at level 3, and don't dump some of them on us early... by doing so you're actually Restricting our possible choices, not increasing them.
Larian aren't looking forward with this deign implementation – they're just bundling what they can into the existing mould. As they've implemented Metamagic right now, you have to select the metamagic first, and then the spell. This works acceptably well for the metamagics they've provided us, but there are metamagic options for which that simply cannot work – and those ones are conspicuously missing from the game for the time being. Rather than create an implementation that allows them to do everything they're supposed to, they've gone with the one that's easy to fit into the existing system, and then just avoided the metamagics that don't work for it. This is bad design practice...
At some point they're going to have to put in, for example, Empower, which is missing... the timing for Empower, however, comes after your damage roll and right now the game engine can't do that. Eventually they'll have to rework the system to allow for these things... and then they'll have to re-do a whole lot of work that they already put into this initial system.
We're also missing Seeking and Transmuted Spell, though these are from other books... but IF we get to a point where these other metamagic options are given to us, they will also require a system more robust than the one we have right now.
So, that's it for Sorcerer for now; what's the verdict?Draconic Bloodling is looking good, more or less, but I would strongly prefer that they give each Sorcerous origin a full expanded spell list, as Clockwork and Aberrant have been given. The one bonus spell we have needs to be treated as a proper sorcerer spell, and upcast correctly. If we can put scale patterns on our body, we need to be able to do it for our Daisy as well.... and on the rest of our bodies too. More customisation all around please Larian. Wild magic is feeling... lacklustre. It's not nearly as wild as it should be, especially considering Larian's normal style. Tides of Chaos needs to be rechargeable through player action, not just resting, and it needs to be clear about how it affects your surge chance. The surging should be equal chance for all surges. Font of Magic should be called as such, and it should let us know the conversion values in full, up front. The hard cap on maximum sorcery points need sot be instated, so that we can potentially make spell slots of a higher level than we can normally cast, but can't go overboard with it. We should not be getting our metamagic until 3rd level, and it needs to present all of our metamagic options at once, so that we can pick the ones we want, without being restricted. Metamagic targeting is in an asinine mess of a state right now, but this is the result of Larian's current engine and how it handles spells and spellcasting. They should NOT be writing these limitations into their spell and metamagic design, however – they need to fix it. There should be no pointless cripple of functionality between attack roll and saving throw spells, for example. That's just stupid. For the most part, the implementation looks solid, and I found few major bugs with it in actual practice, outside of these design and implementation issues. This might be the last focused feedback thread I do for a little while - I'm working on another one, but there's a lot to do for it, and I'd like to get it done as soon as possible, at this stage. Have fun until next time folks ^.^
Last edited by Niara; 27/10/21 05:56 AM.
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veteran
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I totally agree with you on the draconic bloodline and the fact, that metamagic should be pickable at level 3. I haven't played wild magic yet, since draconic just sounds so much more interesting to me. Thank you for the indepth look at that class.
"We are all stories in the end. Just make it a good one."
Doctor Who
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I like the draconic origin spells a lot. They are very flavorful and also make sure your Sorcerer always has powers that match their heritage even if you're tempted to pick other spells that don't.
But they should be more like Clerics domain spells and you should get them from each spell level.
I also wish the 5e spells were better balanced and that Larian can do some tweaking. E.g. Witch Bolt just sucks and feels like a useless freebie when it's out damaged so hard by all other level 1 spells. If it had higher damage or some debuff effect from being constantly electrocuted Blue Dragon Sorcerers would be more on par with the rest that get better options. Lightning Vulnerability is easy to give enemies and can make it strong though but I think that's a separate issue. Chromatic Lightning Orb will still outdamage it by a wide margin and when we get Lightning Bolt in the game everyone will probably see that Lightning Vulnerability from water sources is grossly OP and needs to be better balanced. 16d6 AoE from a level 5 is a bit much. Or 32d6 if Sorcerers can cast two spells per turn. That's 112 AoE surprise damage before initiative is rolled using Create Water or a water bottle.
The "only one leveled spell per turn" rule should be enforced in BG3 for obvious reasons.
Last edited by 1varangian; 27/10/21 10:20 AM.
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apprentice
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Joined: Jul 2014
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game's proposed level cap is 10, well before any of the reasons you pick draconic become available. The more I play the game the more this becomes disheartening, and the more i read the forums, the more i hate humanity.
Take Care, Have Fun and Bee Well!
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What I also observed was that three of the surges were particularly common, while three were somewhat rarer, and three of them were substantially rarer, in both tests. The last surge, mephits, was rare in the first twenty or so surges, and then increased in frequency alongside the decrease in the success rate of Tides to produce a surge at all. This pattern, too, occurred in both 100 surge tests. I haven't finished reading yet, but I wanted to get this down before I forget. Did you have weighted dice turned on? My first thought when I read this was that it's possible weighted dice apply to the roles for surge effect, which would explain why some effects would appear more common than others.
Last edited by colinl8; 27/10/21 03:07 PM. Reason: spoiler block
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One of the major themes here (with which I completely agree) is that one of the biggest whiffs (with sorcerer features and elsewhere in the game) is information availability & clarity. Unless we do the kind of structured testing you're doing, there's a lot of information we just have to figure out for ourselves, and hope we're understanding it right. It's an issue throughout what we've seen so far, and I hope someone at Larian has already gotten that message and is working on it. And this applies both to main UI and what's in the combat log. One of the areas you didn't address was the non-combat aspects of the class, dialog options, interactions, etc., and I think they've done an excellent job in that department. My sorcerer playthroughs have been really satisfying in that regard. "My magic could kill me at any moment, you think I'm scared of /you/?
Dialog/interaction-wise, sorcerer feels like there's been much more effort than the other classes. But to one of your main points, 100% on the "as a player, this is confusing and ambiguous" situation.
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Draconic Bloodling is looking good, more or less, but I would strongly prefer that they give each Sorcerous origin a full expanded spell list, as Clockwork and Aberrant have been given. The one bonus spell we have needs to be treated as a proper sorcerer spell, and upcast correctly. Great ideas! I hope they add these. One of the areas you didn't address was the non-combat aspects of the class, dialog options, interactions, etc., and I think they've done an excellent job in that department. My sorcerer playthroughs have been really satisfying in that regard. Agree! Love all the class dialogue for sorcerers. I hope they get wings! 😊 Overall, sorcerer is my favorite class so far.
Last edited by Icelyn; 27/10/21 04:38 PM.
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Did you have weighted dice turned on? My first thought when I read this was that it's possible weighted dice apply to the roles for surge effect, which would explain why some effects would appear more common than others. No, no weighted dice. I don't use the weighted dice at all, because I'd much rather they fix or improve their base RNG, so that it doesn't produce these visible waves... and I don't accept having to turn on an extra feature that back-handedly calls you a cheater just to get fair play. I know there are folks who will say that two sets on 100 surges is not a large enough sample size, and to a certain extent they're not wrong, but it was as much as I had the stamina for, and I felt it was telling that the noted patterns emerged in both sets, independent of one another. == Folk are right, I didn't talk about the dialogue attention. A lot of it is neat, and it's hard not to want to pick some of the options when they show up... but I did feel a lot like suddenly there was a sorcerer line for just about every situation, at least in the first part of the chapter, to the point that it made the occasional and infrequent race/class options for races and for other classes - This is the new thing, and nothing else has even remotely as much as this has, and that feels kind of slap-dash, in a sense. I may not be communicating what I mean well, but it feels like an unprofessional development cycle... it's immediate flash at the cost of final quality, in a sense, because it's obvious that this was made later, and has so much more presence in the world than everything that came before it... maybe someone else can put it to words better, what I'm getting at.
Last edited by Niara; 28/10/21 12:59 AM.
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I know there are folks who will say that two sets on 100 surges is not a large enough sample size, and to a certain extent they're not wrong, but it was as much as I had the stamina for, and I felt it was telling that the noted patterns emerged in both sets, independent of one another. I intentionally bit my tongue on that point, for exactly the reasons you gave I did feel a lot like suddenly there was a sorcerer line for just about every situation, at leas tin the first part of the chapter, to the point that it made the occasional and infrequent race/calls options for races and for other classes - This is the new thing, and nothing else has even remotely as much as this has, and that feels kind of slap-dash, in a sense. I may not be communicating what I mean well, but it feels like an unprofessional development cycle... it's immediate flash at the cost of final quality, in a sense, because it's obvious that this was made later, and has so much more presence in the world than everything that came before it... maybe someone else can put it to words better, what I'm getting at. That's an angle on it that hadn't occurred to me. Do you know/reckon if their telemetry includes dialog choices? Because that would be interesting information to your point. Are there a whole bunch of sorcerer dialog choices initially because it's flash and new, but then their selection drops off as the novelty wears off?
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stranger
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I don't have much to say that hasn't been said, but please know Tides of Chaos is *the* subclass feature, not the Wild Magic Surge
I tolerate the Wild Magic Surge *for* Tides of Chaos...not allowing the Tides of Chaos to reset with a Wild Magic Surge breaks the class...you literally get nothing from it
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I don't have much to say that hasn't been said, but please know Tides of Chaos is *the* subclass feature, not the Wild Magic Surge
I tolerate the Wild Magic Surge *for* Tides of Chaos...not allowing the Tides of Chaos to reset with a Wild Magic Surge breaks the class...you literally get nothing from it +1 – Tides should definitely reset on a surge, and also our chance of triggering a surge should be significantly increased when Tides is expended
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I feel that, in lieu of having a DM to work with, the simplest video-game mechanical answer is that Tides should simply *cause* your next spell of 1st level or higher to trigger a surge, guaranteed, and that a surge procced by Tides in that manner (not 'natural' surges) always automatically resets Tides; simple, efficient, clean and easy for new-comers to understand the mechanics of.
Edit: to be clear, I'm leaning in this direction because the use of tides is, and getting resets, is ideally supposed to be something that the player and the Dm have a discussion about out of game, so they're on the same page about what they want out of the class and its abilities. In video game terms, this means that it needs to be a way that the player, out of universe, can control their game-play experience for how often they'd *like* to be surging... and on this score, cleaner, clearer mechanics are better.
Last edited by Niara; 18/02/22 03:42 AM.
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I'm all for that... I'm playing a wild magic sorc right now and my DM can't wait until I've used Tides so he can force me to surge on my next spell. Let's just assume BG3 is as enthusiastic as a DM like him
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stranger
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I'm all for that... I'm playing a wild magic sorc right now and my DM can't wait until I've used Tides so he can force me to surge on my next spell. Let's just assume BG3 is as enthusiastic as a DM like him At the very least I'm glad Tides of Chaos resets on a short rest...previously thought it was a long rest, but more often would be better
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Thank you Niara, another great write up (sorry, I read this just now. I did not visit this forum for a long time).
I would never play a wild magic char. For me it would only increase the number of reloads and I already play slow as hell. I remember that somebody wrote about his experiance as wild mage in BG1. You come fresh out of candlekeep, see your first wolf, cast your first spell and then a demon gates in and kills you.
So If I use a sorcerer, the only question would be the element of my sorcerer. So which element has most (mechanically) different spells, which is most resisted by enemies and which is most used by enemies. Espicially considering Larians obsession with AoE, ground and environment effects.
Prof. Dr. Dr. Mad S. Tist World leading expert of artificial stupidity. Because there are too many people who work on artificial intelligence already
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journeyman
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Joined: Oct 2020
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game's proposed level cap is 10, well before any of the reasons you pick draconic become available. The more I play the game the more this becomes disheartening, and the more i read the forums, the more i hate humanity. No that is old info, Larian has since revised it to say it will probably be higher as they have added more content than originally planned.
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