Mauman
Scholar
- Joined
- Jun 30, 2021
- Messages
- 1,261
I specifically mentioned you could fire the sling one handed. Perhaps you should learn to read.Funnily enough, in most versions of dnd (including 2nd I believe) you're not supposed to be able to use a sling one handed either. Yes, you can shoot the sling one handed, but require two hands to load AND shoot.Enemies being able to close on you faster nerfs this slightly.
Enemy speeds remain the same. Thats part of the problem. see: vanilla vs tutu
https://pihwiki.bgforge.net/BG1TuTu_vs_Vanilla_BG
So the problems of PCs moving faster is purely advantageous to the player. I doubt BD changed this.
No, BD trannies definitely changed sizes - probably in an attempt to fix the notorious pathfinding problems they introduced/exacerbated. I remember this because BD fanboys were talking on the forums about how battles in BG2 were changed due large enemies now being able to enter chokepoints that they couldn't in vanilla BG2.It's probably a consequence of faster movement speed, generally games perform collision by detecting if you are inside something else after each step of movement, so faster steps = more ability to walk through each other.
This is incorrect. You can equip a sling and a one handed weapon+shield, or a bow and a two handed weapon. The idea that this is some kind of intentional balance decision is stupid. It's a UI limitation, the engine had tons of rough edges like this along with cut corners and unimplemented features.
Intended behavior.
So anyone using a bow - the best ranged weapon class in the game - cannot also be equipping a shield at the same time.
edit - just looked in the player's handbook. Surprisingly, it's not mentioned there. I guess technically in 2nd edition you can use a sling one-handed due to the writers forgetting basic logic. Any GM with half a brain (such as mine back in the day) are likely to houserule it in though. That being said, this was changed after 2nd ed.
Nigga, its a sling. Its always "fired" one handed. Even loading it would not be particularly cumbersome with a shield on one arm and in fact I'm pretty sure thats how the romans did it. On the other hand, firing a bow - especially a longbow - with anything larger than a buckler mounted on the arm would be very challenging.
Turns out gygax and the other wargaming nerds before dnd was taken over by trannies and anime geeks, knew what they were doing more or less.
As for loading it....well....I disagree with your assessment.