this post was submitted on 28 Jan 2024
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I've been a DM for about 3 years, and have predominantly run one-shots and short campaigns in DnD5e and PF2e. I have a player who persistently builds primary caster based characters, but then won't do anything in combat but "I stab it with my dagger." They rarely use cantrips, and basically won't cast a leveled spell unless I suggest it immediately before their turn. They seem to enjoy playing despite the fact that they're far too squishy to be a front-line melee character and don't utilize most of their class features. I've talked with them explicitly about how their play style seems to be discordant with the kind of play they want to do, and that maybe next time they should try a paladin/champion or a fighter/rougue subclass with some minor casting. They agreed at the time that sounded like a good idea, but low and behold showed up to the next one-shot with a primary caster, and over 3 hours of play and 3 combats never cast a single spell, including a cantrip.

I enjoy playing with this persons as a whole. They are engaged in the fiction, and are particularly engaged during exploration activities. They tell me they also find combat quite fun, and they are requesting I run a mega dungeon in the near future.

As a general rule, I like to let people play how they have the most fun, but issues have arisen with this play style. Namely, all of my TPKs have been associated with this player charging a squishy character directly up to a significantly stronger villain and continuing to stab it with a dagger until they went down, significantly hindering the party in the action economy and resulting in a TPK. I feel I have to intentionally weaken all of my encounters to keep the party feasible in the face of such mechanically poor combat choices.

What else can I do to help drive this individual towards melee builds, and/or help encourage them to change their play style to better suite the caster classes they choose?

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[–] godzillabacter@lemmy.world 4 points 9 months ago (2 children)

I don't try and TPK my players, quite the opposite. I'm actively downgrading encounters and making mechanically disadvantageous choices to avoid them. The only thing I'm not doing is fudging rolls.

I am reaching out to the community to help me try and better understand how I can resolve this problem at my table, and everyone else in this thread seems to agree that this player's choices are, at a surface level at least, baffling. I recognize it is probably reflective of some underlying assumptions that I have tried multiple times to elucidate so I can better understand the situation. But for some reason, you are the only person I have encountered who has become hostile and accusatory towards me. I don't know if you've been butt-hurt by some DM in your past or if your games live by the rule of cool. Regardless, you're being disrespectful and I don't appreciate that. I won't be engaging with you anymore.

[–] init@lemmy.ml 6 points 9 months ago (1 children)

As an idea, you could very easily begin your next session with all your players in Avernus, with a devil that sees "great potential" in them, and knows they have unfinished business and want nothing more than to continue their quest--and feels like giving them a second chance and a gamble for their souls.

But the cost! Oh! The cost of such a trade is enormous. So enormous in fact... That it will require ripping the magic potential away from one character irrevocably as compensation... They are free to try and scrape together what they can by taking feats, subclasses or multi-classing if you allow it, but they must re-spec their character in a 1-for-1 trade into whatever class you believe best suites their play style (sounds like Paladin, Fighter, or Barbarian).

And the ongoing cost of this contract... Occasionally have this patron reveal himself and task the party to go do questionable things so that eventually, the party gets it in their heads that they are strong enough to take him on and try to end the contract prematurely.

Just an idea, I hate causing players to remake characters to continue a quest and figuring out a plausible excuse for them to pick up where the original characters left off!

[–] godzillabacter@lemmy.world 3 points 9 months ago (1 children)

That's a really cool narrative way to go about fixing this, though it does feel kinda rail-roady. I'll give it some thought.

[–] init@lemmy.ml 3 points 9 months ago (2 children)

Yeah, that's a fair criticism. Maybe you could ask your players which way they would prefer? Give them the option to build new characters, or if they want, keep their current characters for a price.

I also wouldn't do this without talking to the offending player and making sure they are cool with it and that it isn't a "punishment" as much as you trying to help them build something that works well for their play style. It might give the players an interesting "living backstory"

Best wishes! DnD is such an awesome thing and I love hearing other people's experiences both as players and GMs!

[–] godzillabacter@lemmy.world 2 points 9 months ago

Oh, absolutely, there was going to have to be a discussion well before I would be willing to do that. I'd never take unilateral control of a player's character like that

[–] Case@lemmynsfw.com 1 points 9 months ago

I wish I had that option in a previous campaign.

We even had a rule set, if your character dies, you can reroll a new character. Same level. Gearing would be similar (in power, not the same gear).

I hated my character. Mechanically I just did NOT enjoy playing them.

Being a mentally ill character (GOO warlock, Cthulhuesque patron of madness, part of the pact) I turned to depression, fool hardy risks, etc. The DM just would NOT let that character die.

I just wanted to play a character that better fit the party and campaign. Having a "Face" character in a campaign with a stupid barbarian (both player and int score) that solved every problem with a great axe, and if there wasn't a problem created one, was useless.

Got stopped by guards at the gate of a new town? Instead of just talking for 30 seconds, the party wound up jailed and forced into trial by combat. It didn't end well. Then I (the host for every session, but not DM) changed jobs and schedules and no one else would host so it died.