Registrarse
Invitado
Ver perfil
Predicador
Fostern +53
  • Usuario fuera de línea
Enviado el 17-ago-2007, 15:54 h. (+1) Citar
En youtube ya han mostrado las portadas de los libros.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gJ3J8t2-RVs



Y explican como es su proyecto de D&D online.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hWZ2WdeTo1M



Estoy siguiendo varios foros y por lo visto se ha dicho algo asi como..

Set the wayback machine to May of 2004!

Even at that point, we knew 4th Edition was coming, though official work on it wouldn’t start for another year. At the time, the design team used to meet regularly in what we jokingly called the “Design Cabal.” And one day, in May ’04, we started kicking around the question of how many slices of pie a D&D character should consist of, and how big each piece should be.

In 3rd Edition, class and magic items were two big pieces of the PC pie. Race was important at 1st level, but by the time you hit 20th, there was rarely much to distinguish a dwarf fighter from a half-orc fighter. The difference between a +2 here and a +2 over there was drowned out by the huge bonuses from magic items and character level—it didn’t matter any more.

We wanted race to matter all the way up through a character’s career. We wanted there to be some difference between two characters of different races, all other things being equal. We had tried out mechanics like the racial paragons in Unearthed Arcana and the racial substitution levels in the Races of . . . series of books, and we liked the results.

In May of 2004, we started kicking around ideas like “the 20-level race.” In a 20-level race, at each level you gained, you’d get not only new class features, but also new racial qualities. Your race might predetermine which ability scores you increased at some levels, so a dwarf’s Constitution would always have an edge over characters of other races. It would grant you new special abilities as you advanced in level, always appropriate to your level, of course.

One key advantage we saw to this system was that it made it much easier to find room for new races without resorting to the kludgy and awkward mechanic of level adjustments. If we spread the tasty magical abilities of drow out through their levels, they could start at 1st level on a par with other character races. Races like the githyanki already anticipated some of that idea by granting new spell-like abilities at higher levels.

Well, over the next few years, things changed, as things are wont to do. We blew the game out to thirty levels, but put your most significant racial choices in the first ten. Above that, other choices started to crowd out room for special abilities coming from your race.

In the final version of 4th Edition, most of your racial traits come into play right out of the gate at 1st level—dwarven resilience, elven evasion, a half-elf’s inspiring presence, and so on. As you go up levels, you can take racial feats to make those abilities even more exciting and gain new capabilities tied to your race. You can also take race-specific powers built into your class, which accomplish a lot of what racial substitution levels used to do: a dwarf fighter with the friend of earth power can do something that other 10th-level fighters just can’t do.

The rules have changed a lot since that first idea of the 20-level race, but they still serve the same purpose: to make sure that your race stays not just relevant but actually important all the way up through thirty levels of adventure.



¿Cómo explicarlo? Creo que cada razas reciben distintas ventajas al subir de nivel, algo así como la clase parangon de Arcanos Desenterrados, pero con muchos más niveles. Tambien se puede decir que son tambien como las clases monstruos de Especies Salvajes, pero que te permiten multiclasear en cualquier momento.

Asi que dos PJ con la misma clase, dotes y todo eso, pero de distintas razas, con el tiempo tendran distintas cualidades. No será lo mismo un picaro hafling que gnomo susurante (el de razas de piedra) tiefling, un trasgo.
Firmado por Predicador desde Villacarrillo (Jaén). "Ama y haz lo que quieras. Si callas, calla con amor; si gritas, grita con amor; si corriges, corrige con amor; si perdonas, perdona con amor. Si tienes el amor arraigado en ti, ninguna otra cosa sino amor serán tus frutos." (San Agustin de Hipona).
Experiencia: Fostern (+53 puntos de mensajes enviados)
Propulsado por Estudio Hécate s.l. 1998, 2008 © Templo de Hécate. Juegos y videojuegos de rol y estrategia
Condiciones de uso | Asociados | Contacto | Estadísticas