What issues could arise with this Advantage/Disadvantage Variant?












13














Background



In the Player's Handbook, it is specified that Advantage and Disadvange sources effectively "cancel out" regardless of how many there are of each:




If circumstances cause a roll to have both advantage and disadvantage, you are considered to have neither of them, and you roll one d20. This is true even if multiple circumstances impose disadvantage and only one grants advantage or vice versa. In such a situation, you have neither advantage nor disadvantage.




Intuitively, this rule makes sense, but it results in some very bizarre consequences mechanically, especially where multiple Disadvantage sources (which is far more common than having multiple Advantage sources) are concerned.



Take, for example, creature A firing a Longbow from 550' away at their (aware and engaged in combat) target, creature B:




  • From being 550' away, creature A has a source of Disadvantage


  • THEREFORE, creature A has disadvantage on their Attack Roll


Now consider the scenario where this same creature A first steps into an area of thick Fog before attempting their shot, and is therefore no longer able to see their target (and vice-versa; creature B can no longer see creature A). They're still aware of creature B's location (because creature B has not yet moved), but nonetheless they cannot see them.




  • From being 550' away, creature A has a source of Disadvantage

  • From (creature A) being unable to see their target, creature A has a source of Disadvantage

  • From (creature B) being unable to see their attacker, creature A has a source of Advantage


  • THEREFORE, creature A has neither Advantage nor Disadvantage on their Attack Roll (???)


Do you see the problem? By doing something that, by all objective logic, should have made that shot more difficult by obscuring vision to their target, they have instead made their shot easier; blinding themselves caused a significant boost to their shot accuracy.



My Proposal



To fix this issue, I'm proposing allowing Multiple Disadvantage sources to still take precedence over a lesser number of Advantage sources. This rule would not be symmetrical; it would not be possible to gain Advantage while having any number of Disadvantage sources. This is my proposed [re-]wording of that paragraph:




Variant-Multiple sources of Advantage or Disadvantage. If circumstances cause a roll to have both advantage and disadvantage, tally up the sources of Advantage and Disadvantage conferred upon that roll. If the number of Disadvantage sources exceeds the number of Advantage sources, the roll has Disadvantage. Otherwise, the roll is made without Advantage or Disadvantage; having an excess of Advantage sources will not result in a roll that has Advantage.




The intent of this rule is to make it less feasible for characters to make weird "trick shots" like what I've outlined above, where a course of action that should logically make an action more difficult instead makes it easier.



Are there common/notable situations where this ruling could backfire instead? If so, what are those circumstances?



Why not Symmetrical?



The short version is that Advantage, to me, represents circumstances where a character is especially able to perform whatever task they are trying to perform, be it dodging the blast of a Fireball, or successfully making a shot with an Arrow. If there are circumstances that are interfering with their ability to do so, even if they are receiving a lot of bonuses to their capabilities, those interferences should generally negate whatever ease they were otherwise experiencing.










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  • 7




    Related (a very similar house-rule): What are the balance effects of counting instances granting Advantage and Disadvantage to determine Advantage?
    – Rubiksmoose
    Nov 30 '18 at 18:50








  • 1




    Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
    – SevenSidedDie
    Nov 30 '18 at 20:44
















13














Background



In the Player's Handbook, it is specified that Advantage and Disadvange sources effectively "cancel out" regardless of how many there are of each:




If circumstances cause a roll to have both advantage and disadvantage, you are considered to have neither of them, and you roll one d20. This is true even if multiple circumstances impose disadvantage and only one grants advantage or vice versa. In such a situation, you have neither advantage nor disadvantage.




Intuitively, this rule makes sense, but it results in some very bizarre consequences mechanically, especially where multiple Disadvantage sources (which is far more common than having multiple Advantage sources) are concerned.



Take, for example, creature A firing a Longbow from 550' away at their (aware and engaged in combat) target, creature B:




  • From being 550' away, creature A has a source of Disadvantage


  • THEREFORE, creature A has disadvantage on their Attack Roll


Now consider the scenario where this same creature A first steps into an area of thick Fog before attempting their shot, and is therefore no longer able to see their target (and vice-versa; creature B can no longer see creature A). They're still aware of creature B's location (because creature B has not yet moved), but nonetheless they cannot see them.




  • From being 550' away, creature A has a source of Disadvantage

  • From (creature A) being unable to see their target, creature A has a source of Disadvantage

  • From (creature B) being unable to see their attacker, creature A has a source of Advantage


  • THEREFORE, creature A has neither Advantage nor Disadvantage on their Attack Roll (???)


Do you see the problem? By doing something that, by all objective logic, should have made that shot more difficult by obscuring vision to their target, they have instead made their shot easier; blinding themselves caused a significant boost to their shot accuracy.



My Proposal



To fix this issue, I'm proposing allowing Multiple Disadvantage sources to still take precedence over a lesser number of Advantage sources. This rule would not be symmetrical; it would not be possible to gain Advantage while having any number of Disadvantage sources. This is my proposed [re-]wording of that paragraph:




Variant-Multiple sources of Advantage or Disadvantage. If circumstances cause a roll to have both advantage and disadvantage, tally up the sources of Advantage and Disadvantage conferred upon that roll. If the number of Disadvantage sources exceeds the number of Advantage sources, the roll has Disadvantage. Otherwise, the roll is made without Advantage or Disadvantage; having an excess of Advantage sources will not result in a roll that has Advantage.




The intent of this rule is to make it less feasible for characters to make weird "trick shots" like what I've outlined above, where a course of action that should logically make an action more difficult instead makes it easier.



Are there common/notable situations where this ruling could backfire instead? If so, what are those circumstances?



Why not Symmetrical?



The short version is that Advantage, to me, represents circumstances where a character is especially able to perform whatever task they are trying to perform, be it dodging the blast of a Fireball, or successfully making a shot with an Arrow. If there are circumstances that are interfering with their ability to do so, even if they are receiving a lot of bonuses to their capabilities, those interferences should generally negate whatever ease they were otherwise experiencing.










share|improve this question




















  • 7




    Related (a very similar house-rule): What are the balance effects of counting instances granting Advantage and Disadvantage to determine Advantage?
    – Rubiksmoose
    Nov 30 '18 at 18:50








  • 1




    Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
    – SevenSidedDie
    Nov 30 '18 at 20:44














13












13








13







Background



In the Player's Handbook, it is specified that Advantage and Disadvange sources effectively "cancel out" regardless of how many there are of each:




If circumstances cause a roll to have both advantage and disadvantage, you are considered to have neither of them, and you roll one d20. This is true even if multiple circumstances impose disadvantage and only one grants advantage or vice versa. In such a situation, you have neither advantage nor disadvantage.




Intuitively, this rule makes sense, but it results in some very bizarre consequences mechanically, especially where multiple Disadvantage sources (which is far more common than having multiple Advantage sources) are concerned.



Take, for example, creature A firing a Longbow from 550' away at their (aware and engaged in combat) target, creature B:




  • From being 550' away, creature A has a source of Disadvantage


  • THEREFORE, creature A has disadvantage on their Attack Roll


Now consider the scenario where this same creature A first steps into an area of thick Fog before attempting their shot, and is therefore no longer able to see their target (and vice-versa; creature B can no longer see creature A). They're still aware of creature B's location (because creature B has not yet moved), but nonetheless they cannot see them.




  • From being 550' away, creature A has a source of Disadvantage

  • From (creature A) being unable to see their target, creature A has a source of Disadvantage

  • From (creature B) being unable to see their attacker, creature A has a source of Advantage


  • THEREFORE, creature A has neither Advantage nor Disadvantage on their Attack Roll (???)


Do you see the problem? By doing something that, by all objective logic, should have made that shot more difficult by obscuring vision to their target, they have instead made their shot easier; blinding themselves caused a significant boost to their shot accuracy.



My Proposal



To fix this issue, I'm proposing allowing Multiple Disadvantage sources to still take precedence over a lesser number of Advantage sources. This rule would not be symmetrical; it would not be possible to gain Advantage while having any number of Disadvantage sources. This is my proposed [re-]wording of that paragraph:




Variant-Multiple sources of Advantage or Disadvantage. If circumstances cause a roll to have both advantage and disadvantage, tally up the sources of Advantage and Disadvantage conferred upon that roll. If the number of Disadvantage sources exceeds the number of Advantage sources, the roll has Disadvantage. Otherwise, the roll is made without Advantage or Disadvantage; having an excess of Advantage sources will not result in a roll that has Advantage.




The intent of this rule is to make it less feasible for characters to make weird "trick shots" like what I've outlined above, where a course of action that should logically make an action more difficult instead makes it easier.



Are there common/notable situations where this ruling could backfire instead? If so, what are those circumstances?



Why not Symmetrical?



The short version is that Advantage, to me, represents circumstances where a character is especially able to perform whatever task they are trying to perform, be it dodging the blast of a Fireball, or successfully making a shot with an Arrow. If there are circumstances that are interfering with their ability to do so, even if they are receiving a lot of bonuses to their capabilities, those interferences should generally negate whatever ease they were otherwise experiencing.










share|improve this question















Background



In the Player's Handbook, it is specified that Advantage and Disadvange sources effectively "cancel out" regardless of how many there are of each:




If circumstances cause a roll to have both advantage and disadvantage, you are considered to have neither of them, and you roll one d20. This is true even if multiple circumstances impose disadvantage and only one grants advantage or vice versa. In such a situation, you have neither advantage nor disadvantage.




Intuitively, this rule makes sense, but it results in some very bizarre consequences mechanically, especially where multiple Disadvantage sources (which is far more common than having multiple Advantage sources) are concerned.



Take, for example, creature A firing a Longbow from 550' away at their (aware and engaged in combat) target, creature B:




  • From being 550' away, creature A has a source of Disadvantage


  • THEREFORE, creature A has disadvantage on their Attack Roll


Now consider the scenario where this same creature A first steps into an area of thick Fog before attempting their shot, and is therefore no longer able to see their target (and vice-versa; creature B can no longer see creature A). They're still aware of creature B's location (because creature B has not yet moved), but nonetheless they cannot see them.




  • From being 550' away, creature A has a source of Disadvantage

  • From (creature A) being unable to see their target, creature A has a source of Disadvantage

  • From (creature B) being unable to see their attacker, creature A has a source of Advantage


  • THEREFORE, creature A has neither Advantage nor Disadvantage on their Attack Roll (???)


Do you see the problem? By doing something that, by all objective logic, should have made that shot more difficult by obscuring vision to their target, they have instead made their shot easier; blinding themselves caused a significant boost to their shot accuracy.



My Proposal



To fix this issue, I'm proposing allowing Multiple Disadvantage sources to still take precedence over a lesser number of Advantage sources. This rule would not be symmetrical; it would not be possible to gain Advantage while having any number of Disadvantage sources. This is my proposed [re-]wording of that paragraph:




Variant-Multiple sources of Advantage or Disadvantage. If circumstances cause a roll to have both advantage and disadvantage, tally up the sources of Advantage and Disadvantage conferred upon that roll. If the number of Disadvantage sources exceeds the number of Advantage sources, the roll has Disadvantage. Otherwise, the roll is made without Advantage or Disadvantage; having an excess of Advantage sources will not result in a roll that has Advantage.




The intent of this rule is to make it less feasible for characters to make weird "trick shots" like what I've outlined above, where a course of action that should logically make an action more difficult instead makes it easier.



Are there common/notable situations where this ruling could backfire instead? If so, what are those circumstances?



Why not Symmetrical?



The short version is that Advantage, to me, represents circumstances where a character is especially able to perform whatever task they are trying to perform, be it dodging the blast of a Fireball, or successfully making a shot with an Arrow. If there are circumstances that are interfering with their ability to do so, even if they are receiving a lot of bonuses to their capabilities, those interferences should generally negate whatever ease they were otherwise experiencing.







dnd-5e house-rules advantage






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edited Nov 30 '18 at 19:05









GreySage

13.9k44992




13.9k44992










asked Nov 30 '18 at 18:38









XiremaXirema

16.4k247103




16.4k247103








  • 7




    Related (a very similar house-rule): What are the balance effects of counting instances granting Advantage and Disadvantage to determine Advantage?
    – Rubiksmoose
    Nov 30 '18 at 18:50








  • 1




    Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
    – SevenSidedDie
    Nov 30 '18 at 20:44














  • 7




    Related (a very similar house-rule): What are the balance effects of counting instances granting Advantage and Disadvantage to determine Advantage?
    – Rubiksmoose
    Nov 30 '18 at 18:50








  • 1




    Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
    – SevenSidedDie
    Nov 30 '18 at 20:44








7




7




Related (a very similar house-rule): What are the balance effects of counting instances granting Advantage and Disadvantage to determine Advantage?
– Rubiksmoose
Nov 30 '18 at 18:50






Related (a very similar house-rule): What are the balance effects of counting instances granting Advantage and Disadvantage to determine Advantage?
– Rubiksmoose
Nov 30 '18 at 18:50






1




1




Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
– SevenSidedDie
Nov 30 '18 at 20:44




Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
– SevenSidedDie
Nov 30 '18 at 20:44










6 Answers
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16














It complicates what is intentionally simple.



One of the aims of the advantage/disadvantage system is to remove the payoff for "bonus-scrounging". It isn't desirable to have your players constantly trying to find one more reason to get a little plus in their column; that has historically led to a lot of friction, book-diving, and absurd arguments to realism ("I'm standing on the table so I have a high ground bonus against him!"). By making only one advantage 'count', your players are more likely to focus their attention on finding one strong narrative (or mechanical) reason they should have advantage, and then stop looking and roll the dice already.



Your proposed rule partially brings us back to that place -- when there are X disadvantages in play, the players are suddenly strongly incentivized to try to find at least X advantages to balance it back out. Instead of looking for one decent source of advantage, they're hunting for enough to balance things out, and you're back to jumping on tables.



But you may be trying to fix the wrong problem.



From your question, I'm not sure whether you actually have a problem with the advantage system as a whole, or if you're really just seeing a problem with a very specific sort of scenario, and aiming a little too broadly with your fix.



Your example scenario with the fog cloud does highlight an issue I've noticed myself -- I personally think the "unseen attacker" rules are a little hinky. But the problem is in the "unseen attacker" rules, not in the advantage system itself.



It would be easier and less intrusive to make a houserule that modifies the "unseen attacker" rule to say something along the lines of "When you can see a creature but it can't see you, you have advantage on attack rolls against it." Then going from a disadvantageous shot to a double-blind scenario doesn't improve your odds; if you're both blinded to each other, such as by a fog cloud, you both attack at disadvantage, which makes sense both narratively and logically.



That fix would solve the issue you've identified but wouldn't require making the overall system more complicated -- if that's the only thing bothering you.






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    30














    It's overkill



    I'm going to challenge your premise and recommend that instead of attempting a system overhaul to handle edge case exploits, you simply rule at your table when something is attempting an exploit that it won't work.



    This avoids having to rebuild a system that generally works and allows you to handle the edge cases simply. I don't think players will raise much fuss when it's explained as long as you keep it fair and reasonable - but you do still need to watch out for when it is reasonable and within the rules.



    Otherwise, looking at counting the instances and tracking them may work better for you and your table and avoids the need to completely redesign the system in an asymmetrical way (although stacking carries it's own concerns.)



    It may lead to more unfun events



    By making this asymettrical, you may be inherently raising the number of disadvantage instances. If that's the case, then you are making it more likely a PC is going to be rolling at disadvantage when they RAW wouldn't - and that may lead to unhappy players.






    share|improve this answer



















    • 2




      No one likes to miss, it feels like a wasted turn.
      – GreySage
      Nov 30 '18 at 19:59






    • 2




      I say no one likes to hit every time either. What is the point of the dice?!
      – Behacad
      Dec 1 '18 at 3:36






    • 1




      @Behacad To see if you crit, and to see if you auto miss (roll a 1)
      – KorvinStarmast
      Dec 1 '18 at 16:33










    • @Behacad - Although I've not tried them myself, I've seen a few D&D variant combat rules where you do hit every time. Don't even bother rolling to hit, just roll damage each round. The people who have tried them generally seem to like them quite a bit.
      – Dave Sherohman
      Dec 3 '18 at 9:39



















    12














    You've misinterpreted the sample situation



    The following part of your question is the key to your complaint, but only because you've interpreted it with a phrasing that lacks verisimilitude (the bold emphasis was yours, but it's also what I'm emphasizing):




    By doing something that, by all objective logic, should have made that shot more difficult by obscuring vision to their target, they have instead made their shot easier; blinding themselves caused a significant boost to their shot accuracy.




    Nope. Since multiple disadvantages don't stack, the attacker blinding themselves by stepping into the fog cloud didn't cause a boost to their shot accuracy; it had literally no effect because the target was already unreasonably far away. Rather, causing their target to be unable to see them did grant an advantage that caused a significant boost to their shot accuracy by tipping the scale back in the attacker's favor.



    The only difference in the calculus is the advantage gained by making the target unable to see the attacker, and that's exactly what the attacker should have had in mind anyway by leveraging the fog cloud: the attack was already a literal long shot, but it was made a little more tenable by rendering the target unable to see it coming.



    Your scenario as you presented it is only an issue of phrasing. When phrased with verisimilitude, no such issue occurs and the system works as intended.



    If it isn't broke, don't fix it



    It doesn't appear to me that there's an actual problem to fix, so it seems problematic to consider overhauling what is designed to be a simple system to handle an edge case that only exists as a matter of phrasing.



    However, if you're going to fix what you perceive to be a problem, don't throw the baby out with the bathwater. The system as it is works fine most of the time. If it ever doesn't, then you as the DM have the power and the mandate to say that it doesn't. If you think the fog cloud should not benefit the attacker in this scenario, then just make that ruling. That's a lot simpler for you and for the players than requiring everybody to remember a new rule.






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    • I upvoted because it's a great answer rules wise, but the fact remains that now there's a harder shot that has become easier due to multiple circumstances. So the archer now can't see the tiny target at all, and it's easier to hit it anyway. If the target were a stuffed dummy, it couldn't see anyway, and I don't think anyone would rule that all shots on an immovable straw target are taken with advantage due to the straw dummy being unable to see the shooter.
      – MarkTO
      Nov 30 '18 at 21:51






    • 1




      Which is ironically a straw man argument because the straw target is an object with an AC around 11 (see DMG Chapter 8), which means the target creature in the scenario is already almost guaranteed to be harder to hit. Once the target creature is unable to see the attacker due to the fog cloud, then hitting the target creature ends up mathematically more like hitting the straw target. Again, system working as intended.
      – Bloodcinder
      Nov 30 '18 at 22:17








    • 3




      @MarkTO I personally do think the "unseen attacker" rules are a little hinky, but the problem is in the "unseen attacker" rules, not in the advantage system itself. If this scenario bothers you, it would be easier to modify the "unseen attacker" rule to say "When you can see a creature but it can't see you, you have advantage on attack rolls against it." So if you're both blinded, such as by a fog cloud, you both attack at disadvantage, which makes sense both narratively and logically.
      – Darth Pseudonym
      Nov 30 '18 at 22:27








    • 1




      @DarthPseudonym That sounds like something you should flesh out into an answer of your own, because it actually addresses the original scenario's problem (as perceived by the original poster) better than the solution the original poster suggested.
      – Bloodcinder
      Dec 1 '18 at 2:14










    • 's a good point. I'll work on some edits.
      – Darth Pseudonym
      Dec 2 '18 at 2:22



















    11














    It overpowers disadvantage stacking, and underpowers other spells/abilities



    While your proposed system addresses the realism factor to a degree, mechanically it changes the game in a way that can be frustrating, as it completely negates the balancing effect certain spells and abilities have on advantage/disadvantage.



    For example, suppose your Enemy has Blur and Foresight up and is able to poison you. Even if your ally manages to restrain them and someone uses the Help action, you're still going to be at disadvantage, rendering mechanics that negate disadvantage like help/flanking useless unless you can stack enough of them to even hit neutral. Stacking multiple effects becomes an arms race between stacking disadvantage to guarantee it, or to gaining enough stacked advantage to simply negate it.



    The choice to keep it limited to cancellation is easier for tracking, prevents overpowered stacking, and keeps things running smoother overall. It's not perfect, but for the majority of cases it does well at approximating in a way that is simple and fun. As with many edge cases, specific DM ruling in a situation can often be better than broad rule changes.






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    • 2




      Bear in mind with the situation you considered: my variant is not symmetrical. It's not possible to gain Advantage through this kind of stacking; it's only possible to gain Disadvantage or a regular roll through my variant.
      – Xirema
      Nov 30 '18 at 19:41










    • @Xirema You are right, I misunderstood that aspect. I've updated to remove the first section, and emphasized the second, as it still applies.
      – Mwr247
      Nov 30 '18 at 20:14



















    4














    My main concern would be that by allowing this, you are bringing back the bean counting problem that 5ed was trying to avoid. 5ed is streamlined so that combat can be fun and (relative to earlier editions) quick. So I would only allow this in the cases in which bean counting is fun for your group, and I would keep it symmetrical so that spells/abilities that grant you advantage aren't under-powered to disadvantaging your opponent. (No one likes their abilities being situationally nerfed against them)





    I would also like to point out that the simulation you proposed hasn't actually broken down as you claim. Creature A is beyond the accuracy range of his weapon. He has disadvantage because No amount of skill/help can guarantee the arrow will hit any particular location. Blinding himself does not really add disadvantage because the shot is already a kind of Hail-Mary shot. However, by obscuring his shot, the person being shot at can no longer see when a projectile is fired, so they need to notice a very small, very fast moving object leave a fairly large area, before it possibly hits them in the face. Both parties have to deal with long shot odds, so it mostly balances out.



    This is why 5ed opts for canceling. Disadvantage on disadvantage doesn't really stack, but reinforce the situation as sub-optimal, same with advantage. 2 types of disadvantage do not automatically create super-disadvantage. So realistically, after advantage AND disadvantage have been established, it's already anyone's game and nothing will really meaningfully change the odds from there.






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      2














      Your proposal creates too much disadvantage



      The reason that the fog gives advantage to the attacker is that the defender can no longer see the attacker's attempt to shoot him and is thereby less able to dodge the shot if it comes close. Your proposal will create disadvantages where there shouldn't be any, your example case included.



      The 5e rules are intentionally simplified for faster, easier play sometimes at the cost of verisimilitude. This is highlighted by one of the other answers here mentioning that in your example if a straw dummy was the defender the shot would be easier which of course it shouldn't be. One might argue that the attacker should always have advantage against the dummy since it can never see the attacker or dodge the shot. That, however, is already accounted for in the dummy's armor class, and that the real effect of the fog is that the defender should lose some or all of his dexterity bonus to AC...but now we're drifting into a more complex rule set...



      Other editions of the game better supported different playing styles and you might find that the simplified rules in 5e don't support the level of verisimilitude you'd like at your table. Your table might be better served by AD&D 1st or 2nd.






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        6 Answers
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        It complicates what is intentionally simple.



        One of the aims of the advantage/disadvantage system is to remove the payoff for "bonus-scrounging". It isn't desirable to have your players constantly trying to find one more reason to get a little plus in their column; that has historically led to a lot of friction, book-diving, and absurd arguments to realism ("I'm standing on the table so I have a high ground bonus against him!"). By making only one advantage 'count', your players are more likely to focus their attention on finding one strong narrative (or mechanical) reason they should have advantage, and then stop looking and roll the dice already.



        Your proposed rule partially brings us back to that place -- when there are X disadvantages in play, the players are suddenly strongly incentivized to try to find at least X advantages to balance it back out. Instead of looking for one decent source of advantage, they're hunting for enough to balance things out, and you're back to jumping on tables.



        But you may be trying to fix the wrong problem.



        From your question, I'm not sure whether you actually have a problem with the advantage system as a whole, or if you're really just seeing a problem with a very specific sort of scenario, and aiming a little too broadly with your fix.



        Your example scenario with the fog cloud does highlight an issue I've noticed myself -- I personally think the "unseen attacker" rules are a little hinky. But the problem is in the "unseen attacker" rules, not in the advantage system itself.



        It would be easier and less intrusive to make a houserule that modifies the "unseen attacker" rule to say something along the lines of "When you can see a creature but it can't see you, you have advantage on attack rolls against it." Then going from a disadvantageous shot to a double-blind scenario doesn't improve your odds; if you're both blinded to each other, such as by a fog cloud, you both attack at disadvantage, which makes sense both narratively and logically.



        That fix would solve the issue you've identified but wouldn't require making the overall system more complicated -- if that's the only thing bothering you.






        share|improve this answer




























          16














          It complicates what is intentionally simple.



          One of the aims of the advantage/disadvantage system is to remove the payoff for "bonus-scrounging". It isn't desirable to have your players constantly trying to find one more reason to get a little plus in their column; that has historically led to a lot of friction, book-diving, and absurd arguments to realism ("I'm standing on the table so I have a high ground bonus against him!"). By making only one advantage 'count', your players are more likely to focus their attention on finding one strong narrative (or mechanical) reason they should have advantage, and then stop looking and roll the dice already.



          Your proposed rule partially brings us back to that place -- when there are X disadvantages in play, the players are suddenly strongly incentivized to try to find at least X advantages to balance it back out. Instead of looking for one decent source of advantage, they're hunting for enough to balance things out, and you're back to jumping on tables.



          But you may be trying to fix the wrong problem.



          From your question, I'm not sure whether you actually have a problem with the advantage system as a whole, or if you're really just seeing a problem with a very specific sort of scenario, and aiming a little too broadly with your fix.



          Your example scenario with the fog cloud does highlight an issue I've noticed myself -- I personally think the "unseen attacker" rules are a little hinky. But the problem is in the "unseen attacker" rules, not in the advantage system itself.



          It would be easier and less intrusive to make a houserule that modifies the "unseen attacker" rule to say something along the lines of "When you can see a creature but it can't see you, you have advantage on attack rolls against it." Then going from a disadvantageous shot to a double-blind scenario doesn't improve your odds; if you're both blinded to each other, such as by a fog cloud, you both attack at disadvantage, which makes sense both narratively and logically.



          That fix would solve the issue you've identified but wouldn't require making the overall system more complicated -- if that's the only thing bothering you.






          share|improve this answer


























            16












            16








            16






            It complicates what is intentionally simple.



            One of the aims of the advantage/disadvantage system is to remove the payoff for "bonus-scrounging". It isn't desirable to have your players constantly trying to find one more reason to get a little plus in their column; that has historically led to a lot of friction, book-diving, and absurd arguments to realism ("I'm standing on the table so I have a high ground bonus against him!"). By making only one advantage 'count', your players are more likely to focus their attention on finding one strong narrative (or mechanical) reason they should have advantage, and then stop looking and roll the dice already.



            Your proposed rule partially brings us back to that place -- when there are X disadvantages in play, the players are suddenly strongly incentivized to try to find at least X advantages to balance it back out. Instead of looking for one decent source of advantage, they're hunting for enough to balance things out, and you're back to jumping on tables.



            But you may be trying to fix the wrong problem.



            From your question, I'm not sure whether you actually have a problem with the advantage system as a whole, or if you're really just seeing a problem with a very specific sort of scenario, and aiming a little too broadly with your fix.



            Your example scenario with the fog cloud does highlight an issue I've noticed myself -- I personally think the "unseen attacker" rules are a little hinky. But the problem is in the "unseen attacker" rules, not in the advantage system itself.



            It would be easier and less intrusive to make a houserule that modifies the "unseen attacker" rule to say something along the lines of "When you can see a creature but it can't see you, you have advantage on attack rolls against it." Then going from a disadvantageous shot to a double-blind scenario doesn't improve your odds; if you're both blinded to each other, such as by a fog cloud, you both attack at disadvantage, which makes sense both narratively and logically.



            That fix would solve the issue you've identified but wouldn't require making the overall system more complicated -- if that's the only thing bothering you.






            share|improve this answer














            It complicates what is intentionally simple.



            One of the aims of the advantage/disadvantage system is to remove the payoff for "bonus-scrounging". It isn't desirable to have your players constantly trying to find one more reason to get a little plus in their column; that has historically led to a lot of friction, book-diving, and absurd arguments to realism ("I'm standing on the table so I have a high ground bonus against him!"). By making only one advantage 'count', your players are more likely to focus their attention on finding one strong narrative (or mechanical) reason they should have advantage, and then stop looking and roll the dice already.



            Your proposed rule partially brings us back to that place -- when there are X disadvantages in play, the players are suddenly strongly incentivized to try to find at least X advantages to balance it back out. Instead of looking for one decent source of advantage, they're hunting for enough to balance things out, and you're back to jumping on tables.



            But you may be trying to fix the wrong problem.



            From your question, I'm not sure whether you actually have a problem with the advantage system as a whole, or if you're really just seeing a problem with a very specific sort of scenario, and aiming a little too broadly with your fix.



            Your example scenario with the fog cloud does highlight an issue I've noticed myself -- I personally think the "unseen attacker" rules are a little hinky. But the problem is in the "unseen attacker" rules, not in the advantage system itself.



            It would be easier and less intrusive to make a houserule that modifies the "unseen attacker" rule to say something along the lines of "When you can see a creature but it can't see you, you have advantage on attack rolls against it." Then going from a disadvantageous shot to a double-blind scenario doesn't improve your odds; if you're both blinded to each other, such as by a fog cloud, you both attack at disadvantage, which makes sense both narratively and logically.



            That fix would solve the issue you've identified but wouldn't require making the overall system more complicated -- if that's the only thing bothering you.







            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited Dec 5 '18 at 18:53

























            answered Nov 30 '18 at 22:18









            Darth PseudonymDarth Pseudonym

            12.8k33371




            12.8k33371

























                30














                It's overkill



                I'm going to challenge your premise and recommend that instead of attempting a system overhaul to handle edge case exploits, you simply rule at your table when something is attempting an exploit that it won't work.



                This avoids having to rebuild a system that generally works and allows you to handle the edge cases simply. I don't think players will raise much fuss when it's explained as long as you keep it fair and reasonable - but you do still need to watch out for when it is reasonable and within the rules.



                Otherwise, looking at counting the instances and tracking them may work better for you and your table and avoids the need to completely redesign the system in an asymmetrical way (although stacking carries it's own concerns.)



                It may lead to more unfun events



                By making this asymettrical, you may be inherently raising the number of disadvantage instances. If that's the case, then you are making it more likely a PC is going to be rolling at disadvantage when they RAW wouldn't - and that may lead to unhappy players.






                share|improve this answer



















                • 2




                  No one likes to miss, it feels like a wasted turn.
                  – GreySage
                  Nov 30 '18 at 19:59






                • 2




                  I say no one likes to hit every time either. What is the point of the dice?!
                  – Behacad
                  Dec 1 '18 at 3:36






                • 1




                  @Behacad To see if you crit, and to see if you auto miss (roll a 1)
                  – KorvinStarmast
                  Dec 1 '18 at 16:33










                • @Behacad - Although I've not tried them myself, I've seen a few D&D variant combat rules where you do hit every time. Don't even bother rolling to hit, just roll damage each round. The people who have tried them generally seem to like them quite a bit.
                  – Dave Sherohman
                  Dec 3 '18 at 9:39
















                30














                It's overkill



                I'm going to challenge your premise and recommend that instead of attempting a system overhaul to handle edge case exploits, you simply rule at your table when something is attempting an exploit that it won't work.



                This avoids having to rebuild a system that generally works and allows you to handle the edge cases simply. I don't think players will raise much fuss when it's explained as long as you keep it fair and reasonable - but you do still need to watch out for when it is reasonable and within the rules.



                Otherwise, looking at counting the instances and tracking them may work better for you and your table and avoids the need to completely redesign the system in an asymmetrical way (although stacking carries it's own concerns.)



                It may lead to more unfun events



                By making this asymettrical, you may be inherently raising the number of disadvantage instances. If that's the case, then you are making it more likely a PC is going to be rolling at disadvantage when they RAW wouldn't - and that may lead to unhappy players.






                share|improve this answer



















                • 2




                  No one likes to miss, it feels like a wasted turn.
                  – GreySage
                  Nov 30 '18 at 19:59






                • 2




                  I say no one likes to hit every time either. What is the point of the dice?!
                  – Behacad
                  Dec 1 '18 at 3:36






                • 1




                  @Behacad To see if you crit, and to see if you auto miss (roll a 1)
                  – KorvinStarmast
                  Dec 1 '18 at 16:33










                • @Behacad - Although I've not tried them myself, I've seen a few D&D variant combat rules where you do hit every time. Don't even bother rolling to hit, just roll damage each round. The people who have tried them generally seem to like them quite a bit.
                  – Dave Sherohman
                  Dec 3 '18 at 9:39














                30












                30








                30






                It's overkill



                I'm going to challenge your premise and recommend that instead of attempting a system overhaul to handle edge case exploits, you simply rule at your table when something is attempting an exploit that it won't work.



                This avoids having to rebuild a system that generally works and allows you to handle the edge cases simply. I don't think players will raise much fuss when it's explained as long as you keep it fair and reasonable - but you do still need to watch out for when it is reasonable and within the rules.



                Otherwise, looking at counting the instances and tracking them may work better for you and your table and avoids the need to completely redesign the system in an asymmetrical way (although stacking carries it's own concerns.)



                It may lead to more unfun events



                By making this asymettrical, you may be inherently raising the number of disadvantage instances. If that's the case, then you are making it more likely a PC is going to be rolling at disadvantage when they RAW wouldn't - and that may lead to unhappy players.






                share|improve this answer














                It's overkill



                I'm going to challenge your premise and recommend that instead of attempting a system overhaul to handle edge case exploits, you simply rule at your table when something is attempting an exploit that it won't work.



                This avoids having to rebuild a system that generally works and allows you to handle the edge cases simply. I don't think players will raise much fuss when it's explained as long as you keep it fair and reasonable - but you do still need to watch out for when it is reasonable and within the rules.



                Otherwise, looking at counting the instances and tracking them may work better for you and your table and avoids the need to completely redesign the system in an asymmetrical way (although stacking carries it's own concerns.)



                It may lead to more unfun events



                By making this asymettrical, you may be inherently raising the number of disadvantage instances. If that's the case, then you are making it more likely a PC is going to be rolling at disadvantage when they RAW wouldn't - and that may lead to unhappy players.







                share|improve this answer














                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer








                edited Nov 30 '18 at 19:48

























                answered Nov 30 '18 at 19:26









                NautArchNautArch

                53.1k8188356




                53.1k8188356








                • 2




                  No one likes to miss, it feels like a wasted turn.
                  – GreySage
                  Nov 30 '18 at 19:59






                • 2




                  I say no one likes to hit every time either. What is the point of the dice?!
                  – Behacad
                  Dec 1 '18 at 3:36






                • 1




                  @Behacad To see if you crit, and to see if you auto miss (roll a 1)
                  – KorvinStarmast
                  Dec 1 '18 at 16:33










                • @Behacad - Although I've not tried them myself, I've seen a few D&D variant combat rules where you do hit every time. Don't even bother rolling to hit, just roll damage each round. The people who have tried them generally seem to like them quite a bit.
                  – Dave Sherohman
                  Dec 3 '18 at 9:39














                • 2




                  No one likes to miss, it feels like a wasted turn.
                  – GreySage
                  Nov 30 '18 at 19:59






                • 2




                  I say no one likes to hit every time either. What is the point of the dice?!
                  – Behacad
                  Dec 1 '18 at 3:36






                • 1




                  @Behacad To see if you crit, and to see if you auto miss (roll a 1)
                  – KorvinStarmast
                  Dec 1 '18 at 16:33










                • @Behacad - Although I've not tried them myself, I've seen a few D&D variant combat rules where you do hit every time. Don't even bother rolling to hit, just roll damage each round. The people who have tried them generally seem to like them quite a bit.
                  – Dave Sherohman
                  Dec 3 '18 at 9:39








                2




                2




                No one likes to miss, it feels like a wasted turn.
                – GreySage
                Nov 30 '18 at 19:59




                No one likes to miss, it feels like a wasted turn.
                – GreySage
                Nov 30 '18 at 19:59




                2




                2




                I say no one likes to hit every time either. What is the point of the dice?!
                – Behacad
                Dec 1 '18 at 3:36




                I say no one likes to hit every time either. What is the point of the dice?!
                – Behacad
                Dec 1 '18 at 3:36




                1




                1




                @Behacad To see if you crit, and to see if you auto miss (roll a 1)
                – KorvinStarmast
                Dec 1 '18 at 16:33




                @Behacad To see if you crit, and to see if you auto miss (roll a 1)
                – KorvinStarmast
                Dec 1 '18 at 16:33












                @Behacad - Although I've not tried them myself, I've seen a few D&D variant combat rules where you do hit every time. Don't even bother rolling to hit, just roll damage each round. The people who have tried them generally seem to like them quite a bit.
                – Dave Sherohman
                Dec 3 '18 at 9:39




                @Behacad - Although I've not tried them myself, I've seen a few D&D variant combat rules where you do hit every time. Don't even bother rolling to hit, just roll damage each round. The people who have tried them generally seem to like them quite a bit.
                – Dave Sherohman
                Dec 3 '18 at 9:39











                12














                You've misinterpreted the sample situation



                The following part of your question is the key to your complaint, but only because you've interpreted it with a phrasing that lacks verisimilitude (the bold emphasis was yours, but it's also what I'm emphasizing):




                By doing something that, by all objective logic, should have made that shot more difficult by obscuring vision to their target, they have instead made their shot easier; blinding themselves caused a significant boost to their shot accuracy.




                Nope. Since multiple disadvantages don't stack, the attacker blinding themselves by stepping into the fog cloud didn't cause a boost to their shot accuracy; it had literally no effect because the target was already unreasonably far away. Rather, causing their target to be unable to see them did grant an advantage that caused a significant boost to their shot accuracy by tipping the scale back in the attacker's favor.



                The only difference in the calculus is the advantage gained by making the target unable to see the attacker, and that's exactly what the attacker should have had in mind anyway by leveraging the fog cloud: the attack was already a literal long shot, but it was made a little more tenable by rendering the target unable to see it coming.



                Your scenario as you presented it is only an issue of phrasing. When phrased with verisimilitude, no such issue occurs and the system works as intended.



                If it isn't broke, don't fix it



                It doesn't appear to me that there's an actual problem to fix, so it seems problematic to consider overhauling what is designed to be a simple system to handle an edge case that only exists as a matter of phrasing.



                However, if you're going to fix what you perceive to be a problem, don't throw the baby out with the bathwater. The system as it is works fine most of the time. If it ever doesn't, then you as the DM have the power and the mandate to say that it doesn't. If you think the fog cloud should not benefit the attacker in this scenario, then just make that ruling. That's a lot simpler for you and for the players than requiring everybody to remember a new rule.






                share|improve this answer





















                • I upvoted because it's a great answer rules wise, but the fact remains that now there's a harder shot that has become easier due to multiple circumstances. So the archer now can't see the tiny target at all, and it's easier to hit it anyway. If the target were a stuffed dummy, it couldn't see anyway, and I don't think anyone would rule that all shots on an immovable straw target are taken with advantage due to the straw dummy being unable to see the shooter.
                  – MarkTO
                  Nov 30 '18 at 21:51






                • 1




                  Which is ironically a straw man argument because the straw target is an object with an AC around 11 (see DMG Chapter 8), which means the target creature in the scenario is already almost guaranteed to be harder to hit. Once the target creature is unable to see the attacker due to the fog cloud, then hitting the target creature ends up mathematically more like hitting the straw target. Again, system working as intended.
                  – Bloodcinder
                  Nov 30 '18 at 22:17








                • 3




                  @MarkTO I personally do think the "unseen attacker" rules are a little hinky, but the problem is in the "unseen attacker" rules, not in the advantage system itself. If this scenario bothers you, it would be easier to modify the "unseen attacker" rule to say "When you can see a creature but it can't see you, you have advantage on attack rolls against it." So if you're both blinded, such as by a fog cloud, you both attack at disadvantage, which makes sense both narratively and logically.
                  – Darth Pseudonym
                  Nov 30 '18 at 22:27








                • 1




                  @DarthPseudonym That sounds like something you should flesh out into an answer of your own, because it actually addresses the original scenario's problem (as perceived by the original poster) better than the solution the original poster suggested.
                  – Bloodcinder
                  Dec 1 '18 at 2:14










                • 's a good point. I'll work on some edits.
                  – Darth Pseudonym
                  Dec 2 '18 at 2:22
















                12














                You've misinterpreted the sample situation



                The following part of your question is the key to your complaint, but only because you've interpreted it with a phrasing that lacks verisimilitude (the bold emphasis was yours, but it's also what I'm emphasizing):




                By doing something that, by all objective logic, should have made that shot more difficult by obscuring vision to their target, they have instead made their shot easier; blinding themselves caused a significant boost to their shot accuracy.




                Nope. Since multiple disadvantages don't stack, the attacker blinding themselves by stepping into the fog cloud didn't cause a boost to their shot accuracy; it had literally no effect because the target was already unreasonably far away. Rather, causing their target to be unable to see them did grant an advantage that caused a significant boost to their shot accuracy by tipping the scale back in the attacker's favor.



                The only difference in the calculus is the advantage gained by making the target unable to see the attacker, and that's exactly what the attacker should have had in mind anyway by leveraging the fog cloud: the attack was already a literal long shot, but it was made a little more tenable by rendering the target unable to see it coming.



                Your scenario as you presented it is only an issue of phrasing. When phrased with verisimilitude, no such issue occurs and the system works as intended.



                If it isn't broke, don't fix it



                It doesn't appear to me that there's an actual problem to fix, so it seems problematic to consider overhauling what is designed to be a simple system to handle an edge case that only exists as a matter of phrasing.



                However, if you're going to fix what you perceive to be a problem, don't throw the baby out with the bathwater. The system as it is works fine most of the time. If it ever doesn't, then you as the DM have the power and the mandate to say that it doesn't. If you think the fog cloud should not benefit the attacker in this scenario, then just make that ruling. That's a lot simpler for you and for the players than requiring everybody to remember a new rule.






                share|improve this answer





















                • I upvoted because it's a great answer rules wise, but the fact remains that now there's a harder shot that has become easier due to multiple circumstances. So the archer now can't see the tiny target at all, and it's easier to hit it anyway. If the target were a stuffed dummy, it couldn't see anyway, and I don't think anyone would rule that all shots on an immovable straw target are taken with advantage due to the straw dummy being unable to see the shooter.
                  – MarkTO
                  Nov 30 '18 at 21:51






                • 1




                  Which is ironically a straw man argument because the straw target is an object with an AC around 11 (see DMG Chapter 8), which means the target creature in the scenario is already almost guaranteed to be harder to hit. Once the target creature is unable to see the attacker due to the fog cloud, then hitting the target creature ends up mathematically more like hitting the straw target. Again, system working as intended.
                  – Bloodcinder
                  Nov 30 '18 at 22:17








                • 3




                  @MarkTO I personally do think the "unseen attacker" rules are a little hinky, but the problem is in the "unseen attacker" rules, not in the advantage system itself. If this scenario bothers you, it would be easier to modify the "unseen attacker" rule to say "When you can see a creature but it can't see you, you have advantage on attack rolls against it." So if you're both blinded, such as by a fog cloud, you both attack at disadvantage, which makes sense both narratively and logically.
                  – Darth Pseudonym
                  Nov 30 '18 at 22:27








                • 1




                  @DarthPseudonym That sounds like something you should flesh out into an answer of your own, because it actually addresses the original scenario's problem (as perceived by the original poster) better than the solution the original poster suggested.
                  – Bloodcinder
                  Dec 1 '18 at 2:14










                • 's a good point. I'll work on some edits.
                  – Darth Pseudonym
                  Dec 2 '18 at 2:22














                12












                12








                12






                You've misinterpreted the sample situation



                The following part of your question is the key to your complaint, but only because you've interpreted it with a phrasing that lacks verisimilitude (the bold emphasis was yours, but it's also what I'm emphasizing):




                By doing something that, by all objective logic, should have made that shot more difficult by obscuring vision to their target, they have instead made their shot easier; blinding themselves caused a significant boost to their shot accuracy.




                Nope. Since multiple disadvantages don't stack, the attacker blinding themselves by stepping into the fog cloud didn't cause a boost to their shot accuracy; it had literally no effect because the target was already unreasonably far away. Rather, causing their target to be unable to see them did grant an advantage that caused a significant boost to their shot accuracy by tipping the scale back in the attacker's favor.



                The only difference in the calculus is the advantage gained by making the target unable to see the attacker, and that's exactly what the attacker should have had in mind anyway by leveraging the fog cloud: the attack was already a literal long shot, but it was made a little more tenable by rendering the target unable to see it coming.



                Your scenario as you presented it is only an issue of phrasing. When phrased with verisimilitude, no such issue occurs and the system works as intended.



                If it isn't broke, don't fix it



                It doesn't appear to me that there's an actual problem to fix, so it seems problematic to consider overhauling what is designed to be a simple system to handle an edge case that only exists as a matter of phrasing.



                However, if you're going to fix what you perceive to be a problem, don't throw the baby out with the bathwater. The system as it is works fine most of the time. If it ever doesn't, then you as the DM have the power and the mandate to say that it doesn't. If you think the fog cloud should not benefit the attacker in this scenario, then just make that ruling. That's a lot simpler for you and for the players than requiring everybody to remember a new rule.






                share|improve this answer












                You've misinterpreted the sample situation



                The following part of your question is the key to your complaint, but only because you've interpreted it with a phrasing that lacks verisimilitude (the bold emphasis was yours, but it's also what I'm emphasizing):




                By doing something that, by all objective logic, should have made that shot more difficult by obscuring vision to their target, they have instead made their shot easier; blinding themselves caused a significant boost to their shot accuracy.




                Nope. Since multiple disadvantages don't stack, the attacker blinding themselves by stepping into the fog cloud didn't cause a boost to their shot accuracy; it had literally no effect because the target was already unreasonably far away. Rather, causing their target to be unable to see them did grant an advantage that caused a significant boost to their shot accuracy by tipping the scale back in the attacker's favor.



                The only difference in the calculus is the advantage gained by making the target unable to see the attacker, and that's exactly what the attacker should have had in mind anyway by leveraging the fog cloud: the attack was already a literal long shot, but it was made a little more tenable by rendering the target unable to see it coming.



                Your scenario as you presented it is only an issue of phrasing. When phrased with verisimilitude, no such issue occurs and the system works as intended.



                If it isn't broke, don't fix it



                It doesn't appear to me that there's an actual problem to fix, so it seems problematic to consider overhauling what is designed to be a simple system to handle an edge case that only exists as a matter of phrasing.



                However, if you're going to fix what you perceive to be a problem, don't throw the baby out with the bathwater. The system as it is works fine most of the time. If it ever doesn't, then you as the DM have the power and the mandate to say that it doesn't. If you think the fog cloud should not benefit the attacker in this scenario, then just make that ruling. That's a lot simpler for you and for the players than requiring everybody to remember a new rule.







                share|improve this answer












                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer










                answered Nov 30 '18 at 21:38









                BloodcinderBloodcinder

                18.6k263122




                18.6k263122












                • I upvoted because it's a great answer rules wise, but the fact remains that now there's a harder shot that has become easier due to multiple circumstances. So the archer now can't see the tiny target at all, and it's easier to hit it anyway. If the target were a stuffed dummy, it couldn't see anyway, and I don't think anyone would rule that all shots on an immovable straw target are taken with advantage due to the straw dummy being unable to see the shooter.
                  – MarkTO
                  Nov 30 '18 at 21:51






                • 1




                  Which is ironically a straw man argument because the straw target is an object with an AC around 11 (see DMG Chapter 8), which means the target creature in the scenario is already almost guaranteed to be harder to hit. Once the target creature is unable to see the attacker due to the fog cloud, then hitting the target creature ends up mathematically more like hitting the straw target. Again, system working as intended.
                  – Bloodcinder
                  Nov 30 '18 at 22:17








                • 3




                  @MarkTO I personally do think the "unseen attacker" rules are a little hinky, but the problem is in the "unseen attacker" rules, not in the advantage system itself. If this scenario bothers you, it would be easier to modify the "unseen attacker" rule to say "When you can see a creature but it can't see you, you have advantage on attack rolls against it." So if you're both blinded, such as by a fog cloud, you both attack at disadvantage, which makes sense both narratively and logically.
                  – Darth Pseudonym
                  Nov 30 '18 at 22:27








                • 1




                  @DarthPseudonym That sounds like something you should flesh out into an answer of your own, because it actually addresses the original scenario's problem (as perceived by the original poster) better than the solution the original poster suggested.
                  – Bloodcinder
                  Dec 1 '18 at 2:14










                • 's a good point. I'll work on some edits.
                  – Darth Pseudonym
                  Dec 2 '18 at 2:22


















                • I upvoted because it's a great answer rules wise, but the fact remains that now there's a harder shot that has become easier due to multiple circumstances. So the archer now can't see the tiny target at all, and it's easier to hit it anyway. If the target were a stuffed dummy, it couldn't see anyway, and I don't think anyone would rule that all shots on an immovable straw target are taken with advantage due to the straw dummy being unable to see the shooter.
                  – MarkTO
                  Nov 30 '18 at 21:51






                • 1




                  Which is ironically a straw man argument because the straw target is an object with an AC around 11 (see DMG Chapter 8), which means the target creature in the scenario is already almost guaranteed to be harder to hit. Once the target creature is unable to see the attacker due to the fog cloud, then hitting the target creature ends up mathematically more like hitting the straw target. Again, system working as intended.
                  – Bloodcinder
                  Nov 30 '18 at 22:17








                • 3




                  @MarkTO I personally do think the "unseen attacker" rules are a little hinky, but the problem is in the "unseen attacker" rules, not in the advantage system itself. If this scenario bothers you, it would be easier to modify the "unseen attacker" rule to say "When you can see a creature but it can't see you, you have advantage on attack rolls against it." So if you're both blinded, such as by a fog cloud, you both attack at disadvantage, which makes sense both narratively and logically.
                  – Darth Pseudonym
                  Nov 30 '18 at 22:27








                • 1




                  @DarthPseudonym That sounds like something you should flesh out into an answer of your own, because it actually addresses the original scenario's problem (as perceived by the original poster) better than the solution the original poster suggested.
                  – Bloodcinder
                  Dec 1 '18 at 2:14










                • 's a good point. I'll work on some edits.
                  – Darth Pseudonym
                  Dec 2 '18 at 2:22
















                I upvoted because it's a great answer rules wise, but the fact remains that now there's a harder shot that has become easier due to multiple circumstances. So the archer now can't see the tiny target at all, and it's easier to hit it anyway. If the target were a stuffed dummy, it couldn't see anyway, and I don't think anyone would rule that all shots on an immovable straw target are taken with advantage due to the straw dummy being unable to see the shooter.
                – MarkTO
                Nov 30 '18 at 21:51




                I upvoted because it's a great answer rules wise, but the fact remains that now there's a harder shot that has become easier due to multiple circumstances. So the archer now can't see the tiny target at all, and it's easier to hit it anyway. If the target were a stuffed dummy, it couldn't see anyway, and I don't think anyone would rule that all shots on an immovable straw target are taken with advantage due to the straw dummy being unable to see the shooter.
                – MarkTO
                Nov 30 '18 at 21:51




                1




                1




                Which is ironically a straw man argument because the straw target is an object with an AC around 11 (see DMG Chapter 8), which means the target creature in the scenario is already almost guaranteed to be harder to hit. Once the target creature is unable to see the attacker due to the fog cloud, then hitting the target creature ends up mathematically more like hitting the straw target. Again, system working as intended.
                – Bloodcinder
                Nov 30 '18 at 22:17






                Which is ironically a straw man argument because the straw target is an object with an AC around 11 (see DMG Chapter 8), which means the target creature in the scenario is already almost guaranteed to be harder to hit. Once the target creature is unable to see the attacker due to the fog cloud, then hitting the target creature ends up mathematically more like hitting the straw target. Again, system working as intended.
                – Bloodcinder
                Nov 30 '18 at 22:17






                3




                3




                @MarkTO I personally do think the "unseen attacker" rules are a little hinky, but the problem is in the "unseen attacker" rules, not in the advantage system itself. If this scenario bothers you, it would be easier to modify the "unseen attacker" rule to say "When you can see a creature but it can't see you, you have advantage on attack rolls against it." So if you're both blinded, such as by a fog cloud, you both attack at disadvantage, which makes sense both narratively and logically.
                – Darth Pseudonym
                Nov 30 '18 at 22:27






                @MarkTO I personally do think the "unseen attacker" rules are a little hinky, but the problem is in the "unseen attacker" rules, not in the advantage system itself. If this scenario bothers you, it would be easier to modify the "unseen attacker" rule to say "When you can see a creature but it can't see you, you have advantage on attack rolls against it." So if you're both blinded, such as by a fog cloud, you both attack at disadvantage, which makes sense both narratively and logically.
                – Darth Pseudonym
                Nov 30 '18 at 22:27






                1




                1




                @DarthPseudonym That sounds like something you should flesh out into an answer of your own, because it actually addresses the original scenario's problem (as perceived by the original poster) better than the solution the original poster suggested.
                – Bloodcinder
                Dec 1 '18 at 2:14




                @DarthPseudonym That sounds like something you should flesh out into an answer of your own, because it actually addresses the original scenario's problem (as perceived by the original poster) better than the solution the original poster suggested.
                – Bloodcinder
                Dec 1 '18 at 2:14












                's a good point. I'll work on some edits.
                – Darth Pseudonym
                Dec 2 '18 at 2:22




                's a good point. I'll work on some edits.
                – Darth Pseudonym
                Dec 2 '18 at 2:22











                11














                It overpowers disadvantage stacking, and underpowers other spells/abilities



                While your proposed system addresses the realism factor to a degree, mechanically it changes the game in a way that can be frustrating, as it completely negates the balancing effect certain spells and abilities have on advantage/disadvantage.



                For example, suppose your Enemy has Blur and Foresight up and is able to poison you. Even if your ally manages to restrain them and someone uses the Help action, you're still going to be at disadvantage, rendering mechanics that negate disadvantage like help/flanking useless unless you can stack enough of them to even hit neutral. Stacking multiple effects becomes an arms race between stacking disadvantage to guarantee it, or to gaining enough stacked advantage to simply negate it.



                The choice to keep it limited to cancellation is easier for tracking, prevents overpowered stacking, and keeps things running smoother overall. It's not perfect, but for the majority of cases it does well at approximating in a way that is simple and fun. As with many edge cases, specific DM ruling in a situation can often be better than broad rule changes.






                share|improve this answer



















                • 2




                  Bear in mind with the situation you considered: my variant is not symmetrical. It's not possible to gain Advantage through this kind of stacking; it's only possible to gain Disadvantage or a regular roll through my variant.
                  – Xirema
                  Nov 30 '18 at 19:41










                • @Xirema You are right, I misunderstood that aspect. I've updated to remove the first section, and emphasized the second, as it still applies.
                  – Mwr247
                  Nov 30 '18 at 20:14
















                11














                It overpowers disadvantage stacking, and underpowers other spells/abilities



                While your proposed system addresses the realism factor to a degree, mechanically it changes the game in a way that can be frustrating, as it completely negates the balancing effect certain spells and abilities have on advantage/disadvantage.



                For example, suppose your Enemy has Blur and Foresight up and is able to poison you. Even if your ally manages to restrain them and someone uses the Help action, you're still going to be at disadvantage, rendering mechanics that negate disadvantage like help/flanking useless unless you can stack enough of them to even hit neutral. Stacking multiple effects becomes an arms race between stacking disadvantage to guarantee it, or to gaining enough stacked advantage to simply negate it.



                The choice to keep it limited to cancellation is easier for tracking, prevents overpowered stacking, and keeps things running smoother overall. It's not perfect, but for the majority of cases it does well at approximating in a way that is simple and fun. As with many edge cases, specific DM ruling in a situation can often be better than broad rule changes.






                share|improve this answer



















                • 2




                  Bear in mind with the situation you considered: my variant is not symmetrical. It's not possible to gain Advantage through this kind of stacking; it's only possible to gain Disadvantage or a regular roll through my variant.
                  – Xirema
                  Nov 30 '18 at 19:41










                • @Xirema You are right, I misunderstood that aspect. I've updated to remove the first section, and emphasized the second, as it still applies.
                  – Mwr247
                  Nov 30 '18 at 20:14














                11












                11








                11






                It overpowers disadvantage stacking, and underpowers other spells/abilities



                While your proposed system addresses the realism factor to a degree, mechanically it changes the game in a way that can be frustrating, as it completely negates the balancing effect certain spells and abilities have on advantage/disadvantage.



                For example, suppose your Enemy has Blur and Foresight up and is able to poison you. Even if your ally manages to restrain them and someone uses the Help action, you're still going to be at disadvantage, rendering mechanics that negate disadvantage like help/flanking useless unless you can stack enough of them to even hit neutral. Stacking multiple effects becomes an arms race between stacking disadvantage to guarantee it, or to gaining enough stacked advantage to simply negate it.



                The choice to keep it limited to cancellation is easier for tracking, prevents overpowered stacking, and keeps things running smoother overall. It's not perfect, but for the majority of cases it does well at approximating in a way that is simple and fun. As with many edge cases, specific DM ruling in a situation can often be better than broad rule changes.






                share|improve this answer














                It overpowers disadvantage stacking, and underpowers other spells/abilities



                While your proposed system addresses the realism factor to a degree, mechanically it changes the game in a way that can be frustrating, as it completely negates the balancing effect certain spells and abilities have on advantage/disadvantage.



                For example, suppose your Enemy has Blur and Foresight up and is able to poison you. Even if your ally manages to restrain them and someone uses the Help action, you're still going to be at disadvantage, rendering mechanics that negate disadvantage like help/flanking useless unless you can stack enough of them to even hit neutral. Stacking multiple effects becomes an arms race between stacking disadvantage to guarantee it, or to gaining enough stacked advantage to simply negate it.



                The choice to keep it limited to cancellation is easier for tracking, prevents overpowered stacking, and keeps things running smoother overall. It's not perfect, but for the majority of cases it does well at approximating in a way that is simple and fun. As with many edge cases, specific DM ruling in a situation can often be better than broad rule changes.







                share|improve this answer














                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer








                edited Nov 30 '18 at 20:13

























                answered Nov 30 '18 at 19:32









                Mwr247Mwr247

                1,692818




                1,692818








                • 2




                  Bear in mind with the situation you considered: my variant is not symmetrical. It's not possible to gain Advantage through this kind of stacking; it's only possible to gain Disadvantage or a regular roll through my variant.
                  – Xirema
                  Nov 30 '18 at 19:41










                • @Xirema You are right, I misunderstood that aspect. I've updated to remove the first section, and emphasized the second, as it still applies.
                  – Mwr247
                  Nov 30 '18 at 20:14














                • 2




                  Bear in mind with the situation you considered: my variant is not symmetrical. It's not possible to gain Advantage through this kind of stacking; it's only possible to gain Disadvantage or a regular roll through my variant.
                  – Xirema
                  Nov 30 '18 at 19:41










                • @Xirema You are right, I misunderstood that aspect. I've updated to remove the first section, and emphasized the second, as it still applies.
                  – Mwr247
                  Nov 30 '18 at 20:14








                2




                2




                Bear in mind with the situation you considered: my variant is not symmetrical. It's not possible to gain Advantage through this kind of stacking; it's only possible to gain Disadvantage or a regular roll through my variant.
                – Xirema
                Nov 30 '18 at 19:41




                Bear in mind with the situation you considered: my variant is not symmetrical. It's not possible to gain Advantage through this kind of stacking; it's only possible to gain Disadvantage or a regular roll through my variant.
                – Xirema
                Nov 30 '18 at 19:41












                @Xirema You are right, I misunderstood that aspect. I've updated to remove the first section, and emphasized the second, as it still applies.
                – Mwr247
                Nov 30 '18 at 20:14




                @Xirema You are right, I misunderstood that aspect. I've updated to remove the first section, and emphasized the second, as it still applies.
                – Mwr247
                Nov 30 '18 at 20:14











                4














                My main concern would be that by allowing this, you are bringing back the bean counting problem that 5ed was trying to avoid. 5ed is streamlined so that combat can be fun and (relative to earlier editions) quick. So I would only allow this in the cases in which bean counting is fun for your group, and I would keep it symmetrical so that spells/abilities that grant you advantage aren't under-powered to disadvantaging your opponent. (No one likes their abilities being situationally nerfed against them)





                I would also like to point out that the simulation you proposed hasn't actually broken down as you claim. Creature A is beyond the accuracy range of his weapon. He has disadvantage because No amount of skill/help can guarantee the arrow will hit any particular location. Blinding himself does not really add disadvantage because the shot is already a kind of Hail-Mary shot. However, by obscuring his shot, the person being shot at can no longer see when a projectile is fired, so they need to notice a very small, very fast moving object leave a fairly large area, before it possibly hits them in the face. Both parties have to deal with long shot odds, so it mostly balances out.



                This is why 5ed opts for canceling. Disadvantage on disadvantage doesn't really stack, but reinforce the situation as sub-optimal, same with advantage. 2 types of disadvantage do not automatically create super-disadvantage. So realistically, after advantage AND disadvantage have been established, it's already anyone's game and nothing will really meaningfully change the odds from there.






                share|improve this answer




























                  4














                  My main concern would be that by allowing this, you are bringing back the bean counting problem that 5ed was trying to avoid. 5ed is streamlined so that combat can be fun and (relative to earlier editions) quick. So I would only allow this in the cases in which bean counting is fun for your group, and I would keep it symmetrical so that spells/abilities that grant you advantage aren't under-powered to disadvantaging your opponent. (No one likes their abilities being situationally nerfed against them)





                  I would also like to point out that the simulation you proposed hasn't actually broken down as you claim. Creature A is beyond the accuracy range of his weapon. He has disadvantage because No amount of skill/help can guarantee the arrow will hit any particular location. Blinding himself does not really add disadvantage because the shot is already a kind of Hail-Mary shot. However, by obscuring his shot, the person being shot at can no longer see when a projectile is fired, so they need to notice a very small, very fast moving object leave a fairly large area, before it possibly hits them in the face. Both parties have to deal with long shot odds, so it mostly balances out.



                  This is why 5ed opts for canceling. Disadvantage on disadvantage doesn't really stack, but reinforce the situation as sub-optimal, same with advantage. 2 types of disadvantage do not automatically create super-disadvantage. So realistically, after advantage AND disadvantage have been established, it's already anyone's game and nothing will really meaningfully change the odds from there.






                  share|improve this answer


























                    4












                    4








                    4






                    My main concern would be that by allowing this, you are bringing back the bean counting problem that 5ed was trying to avoid. 5ed is streamlined so that combat can be fun and (relative to earlier editions) quick. So I would only allow this in the cases in which bean counting is fun for your group, and I would keep it symmetrical so that spells/abilities that grant you advantage aren't under-powered to disadvantaging your opponent. (No one likes their abilities being situationally nerfed against them)





                    I would also like to point out that the simulation you proposed hasn't actually broken down as you claim. Creature A is beyond the accuracy range of his weapon. He has disadvantage because No amount of skill/help can guarantee the arrow will hit any particular location. Blinding himself does not really add disadvantage because the shot is already a kind of Hail-Mary shot. However, by obscuring his shot, the person being shot at can no longer see when a projectile is fired, so they need to notice a very small, very fast moving object leave a fairly large area, before it possibly hits them in the face. Both parties have to deal with long shot odds, so it mostly balances out.



                    This is why 5ed opts for canceling. Disadvantage on disadvantage doesn't really stack, but reinforce the situation as sub-optimal, same with advantage. 2 types of disadvantage do not automatically create super-disadvantage. So realistically, after advantage AND disadvantage have been established, it's already anyone's game and nothing will really meaningfully change the odds from there.






                    share|improve this answer














                    My main concern would be that by allowing this, you are bringing back the bean counting problem that 5ed was trying to avoid. 5ed is streamlined so that combat can be fun and (relative to earlier editions) quick. So I would only allow this in the cases in which bean counting is fun for your group, and I would keep it symmetrical so that spells/abilities that grant you advantage aren't under-powered to disadvantaging your opponent. (No one likes their abilities being situationally nerfed against them)





                    I would also like to point out that the simulation you proposed hasn't actually broken down as you claim. Creature A is beyond the accuracy range of his weapon. He has disadvantage because No amount of skill/help can guarantee the arrow will hit any particular location. Blinding himself does not really add disadvantage because the shot is already a kind of Hail-Mary shot. However, by obscuring his shot, the person being shot at can no longer see when a projectile is fired, so they need to notice a very small, very fast moving object leave a fairly large area, before it possibly hits them in the face. Both parties have to deal with long shot odds, so it mostly balances out.



                    This is why 5ed opts for canceling. Disadvantage on disadvantage doesn't really stack, but reinforce the situation as sub-optimal, same with advantage. 2 types of disadvantage do not automatically create super-disadvantage. So realistically, after advantage AND disadvantage have been established, it's already anyone's game and nothing will really meaningfully change the odds from there.







                    share|improve this answer














                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer








                    edited Nov 30 '18 at 21:21

























                    answered Nov 30 '18 at 20:51









                    TezraTezra

                    990317




                    990317























                        2














                        Your proposal creates too much disadvantage



                        The reason that the fog gives advantage to the attacker is that the defender can no longer see the attacker's attempt to shoot him and is thereby less able to dodge the shot if it comes close. Your proposal will create disadvantages where there shouldn't be any, your example case included.



                        The 5e rules are intentionally simplified for faster, easier play sometimes at the cost of verisimilitude. This is highlighted by one of the other answers here mentioning that in your example if a straw dummy was the defender the shot would be easier which of course it shouldn't be. One might argue that the attacker should always have advantage against the dummy since it can never see the attacker or dodge the shot. That, however, is already accounted for in the dummy's armor class, and that the real effect of the fog is that the defender should lose some or all of his dexterity bonus to AC...but now we're drifting into a more complex rule set...



                        Other editions of the game better supported different playing styles and you might find that the simplified rules in 5e don't support the level of verisimilitude you'd like at your table. Your table might be better served by AD&D 1st or 2nd.






                        share|improve this answer


























                          2














                          Your proposal creates too much disadvantage



                          The reason that the fog gives advantage to the attacker is that the defender can no longer see the attacker's attempt to shoot him and is thereby less able to dodge the shot if it comes close. Your proposal will create disadvantages where there shouldn't be any, your example case included.



                          The 5e rules are intentionally simplified for faster, easier play sometimes at the cost of verisimilitude. This is highlighted by one of the other answers here mentioning that in your example if a straw dummy was the defender the shot would be easier which of course it shouldn't be. One might argue that the attacker should always have advantage against the dummy since it can never see the attacker or dodge the shot. That, however, is already accounted for in the dummy's armor class, and that the real effect of the fog is that the defender should lose some or all of his dexterity bonus to AC...but now we're drifting into a more complex rule set...



                          Other editions of the game better supported different playing styles and you might find that the simplified rules in 5e don't support the level of verisimilitude you'd like at your table. Your table might be better served by AD&D 1st or 2nd.






                          share|improve this answer
























                            2












                            2








                            2






                            Your proposal creates too much disadvantage



                            The reason that the fog gives advantage to the attacker is that the defender can no longer see the attacker's attempt to shoot him and is thereby less able to dodge the shot if it comes close. Your proposal will create disadvantages where there shouldn't be any, your example case included.



                            The 5e rules are intentionally simplified for faster, easier play sometimes at the cost of verisimilitude. This is highlighted by one of the other answers here mentioning that in your example if a straw dummy was the defender the shot would be easier which of course it shouldn't be. One might argue that the attacker should always have advantage against the dummy since it can never see the attacker or dodge the shot. That, however, is already accounted for in the dummy's armor class, and that the real effect of the fog is that the defender should lose some or all of his dexterity bonus to AC...but now we're drifting into a more complex rule set...



                            Other editions of the game better supported different playing styles and you might find that the simplified rules in 5e don't support the level of verisimilitude you'd like at your table. Your table might be better served by AD&D 1st or 2nd.






                            share|improve this answer












                            Your proposal creates too much disadvantage



                            The reason that the fog gives advantage to the attacker is that the defender can no longer see the attacker's attempt to shoot him and is thereby less able to dodge the shot if it comes close. Your proposal will create disadvantages where there shouldn't be any, your example case included.



                            The 5e rules are intentionally simplified for faster, easier play sometimes at the cost of verisimilitude. This is highlighted by one of the other answers here mentioning that in your example if a straw dummy was the defender the shot would be easier which of course it shouldn't be. One might argue that the attacker should always have advantage against the dummy since it can never see the attacker or dodge the shot. That, however, is already accounted for in the dummy's armor class, and that the real effect of the fog is that the defender should lose some or all of his dexterity bonus to AC...but now we're drifting into a more complex rule set...



                            Other editions of the game better supported different playing styles and you might find that the simplified rules in 5e don't support the level of verisimilitude you'd like at your table. Your table might be better served by AD&D 1st or 2nd.







                            share|improve this answer












                            share|improve this answer



                            share|improve this answer










                            answered Dec 1 '18 at 13:55









                            TuorgTuorg

                            1,5301519




                            1,5301519






























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