Just be the asshole in the party that doesnt have it and starts ruining surprise attacks and stealth.
I mean who doesn’t have dark vision these days?
5e was absolutely devastating to the torch-seller economy
Underground races make sense, but I’ve never understood why elves and forest gnomes get it (dark elves excluded, they make sense).
Yeah when I was DMing 5e we just house ruled that only underground races had darkvision, most races currently with darkvision had low light vision (from 3e) instead, and I think I stripped a race or two of even that. All of my players agreed with the changes. Darkvision in 5e is stupid.
weeps gently in dragonborn
My dragonborn warlock doesn’t understand your joke.
Anyone know the original?
I think this is it. I like the D&D edit better.
Oh yeah, definitely. Thanks Picard.
Honestly, that’s one of my biggest gripes: so many character abilities are just “turn this part of the game off.” Something like Goodberry completely obviates the need to worry about food, and darkvision leads to annoying assymetry, and incentivizes the GM to just gloss over it, or hand the one player who doesn’t get it from their race or class some magic goggles and be done with it.
If you don’t want to play worrying about light sources or food, you can just do that. If you want to track those things, you can make it fun. But 5e’s approach is kind of neither. It’s there, but it sucks, so it doesn’t matter. Bleh.
100% agree. I like DMs having more hazards and obstacles at their disposal.
It’s almost not worth picking up at character creation if the DM is probably going to ignore it.