Cool, they’re catching up with Paizo and other companies. They’re only a couple of years late.
Now they need to learn about ethics .
Cool, they’re catching up with Paizo and other companies. They’re only a couple of years late.
Now they need to learn about ethics .
I am still baffled by the success of a mediocre product in a sea of high quality TTRPGs like Pathfinder 2e.
The question is not which tool should I use?
The question is what is it that you want to achieve? That will drive your choice of tools.
I want to mirror my drive can be achieved by a lot of tools. But I want to be able to restore a file I accidentally deleted up to 24 hours with a 1 hour interval is a totally different game.
For backups I am very fond of restic as it does a lot of things in a simple way: encryption, (incremental) snapshots, mounting of said snapshots, support various storage backends, policy based purging, tagging, …
Your tool may not be able to do all you need, like automated scheduled backups, so you will need to also learn cron (or whatever scheduler you may have)
And finally, what about maintenance? What should happen to all those files you’ve synced? How long do you want to keep them?
I attended a Mötörhead concert…
We are not the same.
I came here to say this!
I tip my hat to you!
It’s how dns should have been.
And it is perfect. Now at least I can fork Firefox and not cause issues with the one maintained by mozilla, but have both on my system!
It is clear the author of the article hasn’t taken the effort to learn the rules and apply them.
I originally chose (3 years ago) DnD5e over PF2e for my newest campaign because of simplicity: I played DnD ever since I could walk, and PF2e seemed to have too much and too complex rules.
Big Mistake
I needed to come up with my own solutions to shortcomings of the DnD5e system, as it promotes to be rule light.
My session prep turned into nightmares, as it took more time tinkering with the rules than it did building the campaign.
Enter OGL relicense fiasco
Our group decided to leave DnD5e behind and venture into PF2e mid-campaign. I was flabbergasted at the maturity of the rules. There is indeed a lot of rules, but they all fit together. The rulebook has a notoriously bad index, and it is being addressed in the remaster, but the archives of Nethys website is awesome and a good complement. It tried learning the rules in record time, and my players are patient when I need to look something up mid-session, but the games are more awesome.
I spend my preptime doing what I like best: designing the campaign, not the rules.
I am still picking up details each session, but up until now, it is my non-professional opinion PF2e rocks and DnD5e sucks mothballs.
Will you marry me?
BandsInTown is a good app to help you check tourdates and what’s happening nearby
Maybe he has yours?