What would the result of this be? Non-D&D player here.
A counter spell prevents other magic users from casting their spell. It can be used by a magic user to block a spell to various degrees of success. This DM didn’t use it with any villains in the campaign, except once, to block a resurrection in the final battle.
He killed a guy’s charector, then basically re-killed him right after.
He didn’t just re-kill him. He plastered over the stone that Jesus was trying to roll away. It’s brutal, and it’s what makes campaigns epic. If the last boss is a cake walk, then what’s the point. I hope the party survived and the barb is welcomed by their god.
Trust issues, lol
The players were trying to bring their fallen comrade back to life (and back into the fight) but the DM opted to use an ability of the dragon to counter the spell, meaning dead dude stays dead.
Can’t they just cast it again?
I don’t know D&D but in Baldurs Gate, it’s a pretty high level spell, so you might only have 1 or 2 uses. And even if you can cast it again, that’s a high level spell slot that could have been used for damage or healing which is now gone.
And by the time your turn comes around again, the enemy will have had their turn and got their reactions back.
So they could just counterspell it againThey’d need the high level spell slots as well, is the only thing.
I’d argue that’s besides the point. The game is supposed to facilitate collaborative fun. An important thing to remember as a GM is to be a fan of the players. Want them to succeed. Make it challenging, yes, but never make it “DM vs players”.
Besides, think of the lost dramatic potential. Perhaps the barbarian is haunted by what they briefly witnessed in the afterlife. Or, maybe, the cleric senses the dragon prepare the spell and as a boon their deity ensures the spell succeeds, but now the deity needs something in return from the barbarian, who didn’t agree to any of this.
Or they could just counterspell it and “beat” their players.
A player rez being countered in the final big bad fight sounds like a dramatic scene to me. I’d hope the DM would ham it up when it happens.
Sounds like fun for the dead PC who gets to sit out the rest of the fight. On the up side, they can finally use the bathroom and get snacks.
Trust issues is right. I wouldn’t want to play with a DM who does that. This is not just fictional cruelty, to take a player out of the final battle just to rub in how evil and clever the villain is just feels unsportsmanlike to me.
But I see there is a whole genre of posts that’s all about suggesting awful things for D&D games because it makes for spicy social media content. Same goes for, say, the False Hydra, a monster that does not fit with the games mechanics and imposes a metagame threat that bypasses the characters abilities and resistances entirely. I hope it’s all just memes at the end of the day.
The only part of it that I think is really out of place and would make me unhappy is that it’s the first counterspell he used.
If that’s been a pattern and it’s a higher lethality game in general, then all’s fair. But springing a counterspell on them at the last moment might make me a bit… bitter.
I dunno. Even in the sense of a high lethality campaign that the BBEG would use that reaction and spell slot for denying recovery rather than defending, counterattacking or causing further harm seems petty, and not in the way that it makes for a fun BBEG.
Because of that, the dead PC’s player can only sit there idly and wait for the next attempt, or they might be fully taken out of the conclusion, over an interaction they had no input in participating. It isn’t really the caster PC who faces the consequences.
As far as I can tell the group was trying to bring the barbarian back to life. But the counterspell prevented it. So barbarian stayed dead
The players could have expected this: they’ve noticed that the dragon has lair and legendary actions. It’s clearly dangerous, and it’s smart. The dragon presumably needed line of sight to the caster, an unused reaction, and had to be within 60 feet.
BUT the DM hadn’t used the spell before. So the players don’t realize Counterspell is a thing baddies do. I dunno.
In my current campaign, my caster is really engaged. He watches for enemy casters to use their reactions. He tracks line of sight and distance. But he’s been Counterspelled often enough to know it’s necessary.
(This is my table, I don’t expect others to enjoy this style of play, but as a DM, my final battles will not use mechanics the players aren’t familiar with)
It also seems kind of spiteful? Revivify seems like an odd thing to counterspell, much better to stop a big damage spell or heal. Revivify only revives with 1 hp, so a strong breeze would put the barbarian back down. The party would have to commit multiple actions to healing him up while he runs for his life.
Instead, one of the players basically has to sit out for the finale of the campaign. Assuming the party succeeds, he can’t conclude the story with everyone else and the player just zones out during the epilogue.
I think a good twist mechanic is one you can react and adapt to. If the dragon countered a random damage spell, the players are introduced to the twist in a less consequential way and can now adjust their strategy to the new information. Here, they are punished for something they didn’t even know could happen (unless they have meta knowledge from other campaigns, which you should never assume) and can’t do anything except shrug and accept that their friend is dead.
my final battles will not use mechanics the players aren’t familiar with
This seems kinda boring.
I pretty much expect a big bad to pull some off the wall crap I’m not expecting, otherwise what makes them big & bad?
The morale shattering of getting a revival countered would make the party come up with something new, instead of trying their same formula over & over. Remember the magic mcguffin they’ve been saving for a ‘situation’? This is exactly the time to break out the one-shot items!
There’s still going to be all the standard lair actions, legendary actions, etc.
I think the best is when you’re exposed to mechanics one at a time, acolytes with one aspect of the BBEG’s power, some creature with another, a foot soldier with a surprisingly formidable weapon, etc. Then, the finale combines them all. That way the experience is novel and challenging, but the players aren’t blindsided when it matters.
Yeah but not everyone playing D&D knows all of the rules and spells and everything else, in fact, it’s often more fun when players have less knowledge and get to experience things first hand and have a degree of mystery to them.
Hard agree. My statement applies to my players at my table. I know them and they know the type of combat I run.
5e isn’t very crunchy. I think I would enjoy a more technical system that has more interaction between mechanics, but this is near the top-end of my table’s level of engagement. And we’re happy here.
As a player I’m constantly trying to derail the game and take the story in an unforseen direction. As someone that’s looking for surprises and not trying to stay on the rails, I totally appreciate and applaud the idea of using mechanics I’m not familiar with. If I were that barbarian, I’d be very excited to have died like that.
I totally appreciate and applaud the idea of using mechanics I’m not familiar with. If I were that barbarian, I’d be very excited to have died like that.
As a DM, I would enjoy that. But since I put PCs in scenarios where there’s a high likelihood of failure, I don’t want them to feel like the physics of the campaign has suddenly changed during the last battle.
I’ve tossed out new mechanics (doom trackers, Blades in the Dark style heists) mid campaign, but I’d prefer not to do that when we’re coming to a conclusion.
Yea, throwing a new mechanic at players during something conclusive seems like an I Wanna Be The Guy kinda masocore move.
I mean it can go be super successful (or successfully unsuccessful) but the potential for bitterness about getting completely blindsided seems too high to me.
Thank you for teaching me the word “masocore”.
And everything you say is why I don’t do it.
I love I Wanna Be The Guy and I love a DM that plays dirty and blindsides the players. If I die I die and I’ll just make a new character. I’m a good loser.
If there’s any time to stop pulling your punches it’s then. Put the pai(g)n in campaign finale!
Who was the DM? Szass Tam?
Szass Tam was a fine upstanding citizen.
Szass Tam did nothing wrong
OUCH!
That hurt more than my Medical Corpsman getting his head bashed to a pulp in the Alien game I’m playing in.
Just give him CPR. He’ll be fine.