Kilsek
Encounter Killer



Age : 36
Joined : 17 Feb 2007
Posts : 2240
Completed Trades : 31
Play DnD and DDM : Both but I am a RPG Geek
Location :  View of DDM 2.0 :  View of 4.0 :  Trade Topic : Here Good Posts :
  (0/150)
|
Subject: Preview 4 Thu May 29, 2008 6:08 pm |
|
|
This week we present two winged enemies: one from the Astral Sea, the other from the Abyss. Both of these creatures have effects that revolve around the bloodied state. One is easier to finish off when it is bloodied, while the other gets a huge damage boost against bloodied creatures.
From a game design perspective, the bloodied state is a progress tracker. By having the game state change as creatures become bloodied, the game designer adds a powerful tactic a player can exploit. In the old rules, this was done with morale, but failing a morale save could cost a player the game. Abilities that grant advantages against bloodied creatures help retain some of the tactics that people utilized to take advantage of morale in the old rules but not to the extent that morale did.
Angel of Retribution
In Desert of Desolation, you found the fiery Angel of Vengeance. From the other end of the temperature spectrum comes the Angel of Retribution. At first glance, miniature battle players may dismiss this creature as being less accurate and easier to hit than other creatures of similar cost. The actual attack and defense numbers deserve a closer look.
This Angel's basic attack is actually a bit more accurate than most. The ability to reroll a missed attack can be a huge advantage. Against a creature of approximately the same level, the angel should hit about 75% of the time, whereas without the reroll, the attack would connect only about half the time.
Players using this creature should be careful to maintain it in an unbloodied state, because its defenses change with the bloodied condition. While this creature is not bloodied, enemies not immune to fear effects have a -2 penalty when attacking it.
Gnaw Demon
Demons are driven to destroy. Some, like the Bar-lgura, choose to tear apart foes with their bare hands. Others use slightly more sophisticated methods such as the Balor's fiery whip or the slashing scimitars of a Marilith. The only desire for the Gnaw Demon is to consume.
This low-level demon is a decent fighter at the beginning of a battle, but if you can protect him for a short time, his offensive potential skyrockets. A 17-point creature teleporting adjacent to a bloodied target and striking for 25 damage should turn anyone's head.
Speaking of demons, my parting tidbit for this week: three creatures in this set have the Orcus keyword.
See us next week when I drag Shoe away from his work to give his thoughts on two miniatures in the set.
http://www.wizards.com/default.asp?x=dnd/mi/20080529a
Features Angel of Retribution and the Gnaw Demon

 _________________ Hey Guest, you have been a member here since and have 0 total posts, why not take advantage of Good Posts Award System.
 |
|
Chosen of Mystra
Sage of Shadowdale



Age : 15
Joined : 02 Mar 2007
Posts : 248
Completed Trades : none
Play DnD and DDM : Yes
Location :  View of DDM 2.0 :  View of 4.0 :  Good Posts :
  (0/150)
|
Subject: Re: Preview 4 Thu May 29, 2008 8:04 pm |
|
|
The angel looks like a evil frost demon Tired of the angels!
The Budda wanna be is pretty cool. _________________ Gygax:The new D&D is too rule intensive. It's relegated the Dungeon Master to being an entertainer rather than master of the game. It's done away with the archetypes, focused on nothing but combat and character power, lost the group cooperative aspect, bastardized the class-based system, and resembles a comic-book superheroes game more than a fantasy RPG where a player can play any alignment desired, not just lawful good. Now, should I tell you what I really think [of it]?" |
|