julian

joined 2 years ago
[–] julian@pathfinder.social 1 points 1 year ago

Agreed. In fact it's had such problems that its content doesn't even seem to be federating to my main instance anymore, likely because it's been deemed "dormant."

We're also several versions behind and there have been major security fixes since then...

 

I've never really run 2e before this except for the Beginner's Box, and because I worked that into Foundry myself I mystified all the items. But I see that the AV Foundry module doesn't mystify anything, which leads me to wonder if I should be making players identify items or not?

Obviously healing potions I don't, since they have encountered them enough to know what they are.

[–] julian@pathfinder.social 1 points 2 years ago (1 children)

Maybe it does now, but it didn't when I used it last time (it had just come out.)

[–] julian@pathfinder.social 3 points 2 years ago (3 children)

From what I recall, it doesn't import spells. Which is a bit annoying, but totally workable.

[–] julian@pathfinder.social 2 points 2 years ago

Hey @SenseiRat, could we get a memes channel? I'm sure there will be more soon!

[–] julian@pathfinder.social 3 points 2 years ago

For me it was whips. They seemed like the ultimate Rogue weapon, but the Martial classification made it way too feat-intensive. I can't wait to play with one!

[–] julian@pathfinder.social 4 points 2 years ago

At my table we added the Divine Lance change (ie, it can actually do damage to things,) as well as ignoring the Open trait, giving Rogues access to martial weapons and Wizards access to simple weapons. Other stuff we'll probably wait for the books to come out.

[–] julian@pathfinder.social 2 points 2 years ago

The one that comes with it is fine. Please note that there are multiple computers under the name "Yoga," some are very cheap. I have a first generation Thinkpad X1 Yoga. The X380 Yoga and others in that series are apparently also very good. The cheap ones are not.

[–] julian@pathfinder.social 4 points 2 years ago (1 children)

Absolutely agree. For absolute newbies I tend to nudge them toward playing as Merisiel or something similar for the first oneshot, just so they can get a feel for the basic rules before needing to master their character quirks. We of course had someone who had never played PF insist on playing an Inventor for their first character, and after we finished the oneshot they realized that they'd missed their main class feature the whole time and that's why they felt so ineffective. Whoops!

[–] julian@pathfinder.social 5 points 2 years ago (3 children)

I am mildly afraid of this myself, as I'll be running the Beginner's Box soon for a group of 4 with custom-built characters. All of us have played PF2e a little bit, but not enough to necessarily know what's a good choice mechanically or tactically.

[–] julian@pathfinder.social 2 points 2 years ago (3 children)

Absolutely. I have been using tablet PCs since 2011, all of which have run desktop operating systems. My first was an ASUS that ran Windows 7, which I used for school and later for TTRPG. OneNote was excellent software which got me through that phase of my life.

I later upgraded to a laptop-type tablet instead of a slate with a Bluetooth keyboard. I find the format more convenient. The Yoga has been excellent for me — though I don't like the keyboard a lot as I'm used to the chunkier type. The pen has a battery so I do have to pause to charge it after a few hours of writing/drawing, but that has been nice because it forces me to take breaks (which can be hard when you have ADHD!) The pen is a bit narrow and now super ergonomic, but there are many compatible styluses out there that are larger.

As for software, I've switched to Linux as of many years ago and up until recently there were not many good apps out there for handwritten notes. Xournal++ is ugly but good for marking up PDFs. Rnote is a very new app, written in Rust and designed around GNOME design principles, so it looks very nice and is quite fast. It's not a 1:1 replacement for OneNote — it has basic file management but not as advanced as OneNote's notebooks and tabs and pages, and there is no OCR for searching within your handwriting. I would not use it to do worldbuilding, but it has been more than good enough for me to take rough notes as I play.

The downside of the Yoga is that it has soldered RAM, so you need to get one with good enough specs right off the bat. I purchased a 16GB model and it has been sufficient, though the processor is a downgrade from my last laptop. I still use my desktop for beefier jobs. One example of where it struggles is that when I played 5e with a group, if I rolled digital dice on DND Beyond the performance was quite slow. This seemed to be an issue for everyone on a laptop, though.

[–] julian@pathfinder.social 2 points 2 years ago (5 children)

Rnote is a dedicated handwriting app. I have a Lenovo Thinkpad Yoga (first gen.)

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