87: Super powerful rice shan
Y. Shan remembers reading a long, long time ago, a joke that I don't know who made up the joke mainly to describe the conflict between two groups of board game players because of the official canonical set.
Since the conflict arose in the bar where the players gathered, it naturally became a full martial arts.
Normally, this kind of all-out military exercise will end in one to two minutes, no matter what the reason, and the remaining half hour is for the police to appear and pay compensation.
As a result, the gang didn't throw their first punch until twenty-four hours after they decided to fight.
Because the gang first spent half an hour transforming the bar into a suitable place for fighting, and then scored each companion according to the combat effectiveness of each companion who wanted to fight.
This is because the number of points must be the same for both combatants to be present at the same time.
After scoring, you have to set the background and paint your companions, and after the mess is done, it's finally time to start playing the next day.
As a result, when the first punch was not hit, the referee jointly elected by both sides called off the action, took out the dice to determine whether the attack was successful, how much damage was caused, and then judged the morale.
Every battle and every action went through such a round that didn't seem complicated, but it was very time-consuming to calculate, and by the time I took down the mid-game, it was already the afternoon of the third day.
When he first heard about this, Mi Shan judged that this joke must have been made up and hot, and it must have been deliberately acted out if it was not made up.
As a result, in just a few days, Mi Shan saw at least a hundred retweets of this paragraph on his various chat channels.
At this time, Mi Shan reacted in hindsight, although this paragraph is fake, and many people who forward it also know that it is fake, but this does not prevent everyone from complaining about this kind of gameplay.
In the eyes of many players, the kind of board game with the rule book and the dice and chess pieces seems to be very high-minded...... In terms of price alone, it is indeed very high.
But seriously, this kind of seemingly lofty gameplay is very rudimentary.
Later video game versions of RPGs far surpassed board games with dice in terms of determining conditions and computational complexity.
For this kind of game, adding one more decision would greatly increase the amount of computation, without the assistance of a computer, if it were calculated according to the judgment of every action in those later video games.
It wasn't the first punch after twenty-four hours, and it was estimated that the average round would be a week or even a month.
In this way, instead of playing a game, it is a waste of life.
Therefore, in the early board games, the action judgment was as simplified as possible, and players would not be allowed to take a pen and paper for a week.
The result is that many of the actions are too straightforward and very bizarre in their judgments.
For example, in the current Rice Shan, you can roll the dice to determine the outcome of each game character's actions, including the Chaos Evil Gollum.
It's a pity that the current Gollum has borrowed part of the setting of Mishan, and Mishan can't directly change the number of the other party's behavior after throwing the dice...... It's like Y. Shan can't change the weight of Gollum's actions.
But why do you have to use such a simple and crude way as changing the numbers?
As long as you are not afraid of being killed, it is not too simple for DM to want to play dead PC.
Just now, Grunt slipped a stick and smashed Mian to death, because she had already hit the hit after the dice roll, because Mishan changed the "hit zone" slightly to attack skew.
failed to directly turn into an attack miss, and it can only be said that the hit rate of Gollum is too high.
The benchmark hit of 1d20 is okay.
The mace's attack bonus isn't much.
The problem is that Gollum herself steals some of the attack bonus of Rice Shan's power, and the attack value of herself as a funny four-panel comic character.
Relying on the latter two, the final settlement value goes directly towards 100.
And Mirin's side was restrained because of herself...... Restrained by the power of Mishan, and the excessive reduction of body size, even if Gollum rolls a 1, it is bound to hit.
Looking at the 95 points that Gollum finally settled, and then looking at Mirin's AC value, Mi Shan decisively changed the logo on the disc.
The emblem of the western dragon shape, which was still a fire-breathing state, turned into a very cute big eye after a whirlwind.
Under the gaze of this big eye, the attack that Gollum was bound to hit failed, and not only did he deflect and hit the ground, but his arm was also strained.
As for Mian, who became immortal, it can only be said that she is too unlucky...... Or in order to block the road, the game characters who have already filled all the squares around Gollum will definitely suffer like this.
It's either Mian or someone else.
Given that it's just 95 points, not 97, 98 or 100 points, it's a situation where you hit your head out of thin air, or if your weapon falls on your head.
Deflecting down will only hit a spot next to Mirin.
Relying on his ability to resurrect on the spot, Mian is not too innocent.
This is how the rice cedar is boiled in warm water.
I can't change the number you voted, I can't distort the value of your settlement, but I can change the rule book!
The dealer-like Mishan snapped his fingers again, and her big cute eyes turned into a cog-like shelter door...... TRPG rule book or something, there are still a lot of them here.
If it weren't too cumbersome to rewrite, Rice Shan could even write a new rule book to give his side an advantage on the field.
If it is a normal TRPG game, a GM like Mishan, who changes the rule book every round or even every hand, will definitely be killed directly by the PCs.
But now, under the changes in the rule book that Mishan is not even comfortable with on his side, the chaotic evil goo who was still in a state of incomparable will soon be beaten.
"When did the boss become so powerful, he didn't need to use any props to repeatedly modify the rules at the bottom of the world." Jiajia, who was the first to see through the meaning of these means, was surprised.
"Is it amazing" Vayne, who is considered an outer god in the Cthulhu system in terms of identity, asked, as an outer god, she also has the ability to modify the rules at the bottom of the world, but it is very complicated to do, not as easy and comfortable as Mishan.
"It's very powerful, you have to know that the transformation of the past and future that we all accept, as well as the power bonus of the boss, this kind of rule change basically won't affect us." Jiajia said.
"Maybe it's because all of us come from adults." Greenhill said.
"No, no, no, it's completely different, the boss didn't rely on our assistance at all for this modification."
"And this kind of random modification will not cause the world line to shock, and the behavior of causing too many timelines to form in an instant and then causing the environment to collapse is still super powerful." Jiajia said.
Then there is a series of mysterious side words that only Jiajia herself understands.
Jiajia's unabashed hype gave some of the early game characters who followed Mishan a subtle feeling.
They were accustomed to protecting Yeatsun, and they all thought of going together with Baiji before:
Mishan is so powerful, what else do you want them to do?