

Yes he is and no it does not. That is a common house rule Larian implemented into BG3, but it is not part of the original rules of DnD 5e.
Yes he is and no it does not. That is a common house rule Larian implemented into BG3, but it is not part of the original rules of DnD 5e.
I love it. The drawings, but especially the moments of characters looking back at how far they have come and remembering all the happened along the way. There is a certain… bittersweet melancholy to it.
What!? Who is short here? I’ll show you short!!
Thanks. He seems like a really cool guy.
Who ist this guy?
Ah yes. Good ol’ Volo. Nice to see him from time to time. I should use his books more often.
Ironically enough, I’ve had campaigns where just doing what the priestess suggested would have been a better solution than what the party ended up deciding to do.
Thats funny, because I’ve seen some DMs where nobody cares wether or not lvl. 10, they still treat you as if you were lvl. one and don’t know sh*t about you. (Mainly in campaigns where the characters travel a lot. I still find it weird. Rumors spread quickly.)
Sune does not know about people dating? Clearly cyric impostering her.
I think you answered your rethorical question yourself: If it is not in the official books, it is not an official rule.
And I would not say that they leave it vague. To quote the PHB: “To make an ability check, roll a d20 and add the relevant ability modifier. As with other d20 rolls, apply bonuses and penalties, and compare the total to the De. If the total equals or exceeds the DC, the ability check is a success […]. Otherwise, it’s a failure, which means the character or monster makes no progress toward the objective[…].” That does not leave much room for interpretation. It plainly say that if the exceed, then they succeed and if they don’t, than they fail. Yes they don’t make an explicit remark about critical results, but they don’t need to, because such a rule was never meant to exist in 5e aside attack rolls and death saves.
Not to say that you can’t make it a rule at your table (same as with everything else), but there is still not much room for missunderstanding the official print.