RPGBOT.Podcast

RPGBOT.net

The RPGBOT.Podcast is a thoughtful and sometimes humorous discussion about Tabletop Role Playing Games, including Dungeons and Dragons and Pathfinder as well as other TTRPGs. The discussion seeks to help players get the most out of TTRPGs by examining game mechanics and related subjects with a deep, analytic focus. The RPGBOT.Podcast includes a weekly episode; and The RPGBOT.News and The RPGBOT.Oneshot. You can find more information at https://rpgbot.net/ - Analysis, tools, and instructional articles for tabletop RPGs. Support us at the following links: Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/rpgbot BlueSky: https://bsky.app/profile/rpgbot.net TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@rpgbotdotnet The RPGBOT.Podcast was developed by RPGBOT.net and produced in association with The Leisure Illuminati.

  1. HOW TO PLAY STAR WARS: EDGE OF THE EMPIRE 2: The Galaxy Needs Heroes… We Built These Instead

    -2 H

    HOW TO PLAY STAR WARS: EDGE OF THE EMPIRE 2: The Galaxy Needs Heroes… We Built These Instead

    Every RPG player knows the real game doesn't start when the dice hit the table. No, the real adventure begins when some nerds open a rulebook, stare at a character sheet, and argue about whether a Wookiee hacker with a moral crusade for droid rights is mechanically viable. In this episode of the RPGBOT.Quickstart series, the crew tackles FFG Star Wars RPG character creation in Fantasy Flight's Edge of the Empire. Randall decides the galaxy clearly needs a Force-sensitive Wookie slicer, Ash plans to become the smooth-talking Twi'lek pilot with questionable ethics, and Tyler guides them through the rules like Han Solo navigating an astroid field. Fewer explosions, though. The crew debates Wookie vocal acting, and give a lot of attention to character backgrounds, motivations, and that fancy "obligation" mechanic that Tyler has been gushing about for the past 5 seasons. Show Notes In Part 2 of the RPGBOT Quickstart guide to the Fantasy Flight Star Wars RPG, the hosts dive deep into character creation for Edge of the Empire, walking listeners step-by-step through how to build a playable character from concept to crunch. The episode begins with a quick refresher on the core elements that define a character in the FFG Star Wars: Unlike traditional D&D-style builds focused on race and class alone, Star Wars characters are shaped by several narrative and mechanical layers: species, career, specialization trees, obligation, motivations, skills, and equipment. Understanding the Core Pieces of a Star Wars Character Characters start from their background and motiviation, which are mostly narrative, but your motivation can provide a recurring source of bonus experience points used to advance your character. Ash selects "Freedom," while Randall chooses "Droid Rights." Next is choosing a species, which determines starting attributes, wound thresholds, strain thresholds, and sometimes special abilities. The group reviews options like humans, droids, wookiees, and other iconic Star Wars species, each bringing unique mechanical strengths. From there, players select a career, the Star Wars equivalent of a class. Careers such as Smuggler, Technician, Bounty Hunter, Colonist, Explorer, and Hired Gun are available in Edge of the Empire, with other careers available in other core books. Each career also includes specialization trees: talent grids that players spend XP on to get exciting new talents. The Obligation Mechanic One of the defining mechanics of Edge of the Empire is the Obligation system. Each character begins with one or more "obligations": debts, blackmail, criminal records, or personal responsibilities that can become recurring problems during play. Players can choose from a table of suggestions or work with the GM to create their own. We like a d100 table, so we rolled. Ash rolls Blackmail, suggesting their former Imperial ties might come back to haunt them, while Randall rolls Criminal, representing legal trouble tied to a mysterious identity issue in which he's wanted for his own murder. The hosts discuss how obligation works at the table, and also how you can get some extra goodies at character creation for taking on extra Obligation. Spending Experience Points The group also covers starting XP allocation during character creation. Players spend XP to increase attributes, train skills, and unlock talents from specialization trees. Tyler explains the economic balance behind XP spending: Improving characteristics is expensive but powerful, while skills can offer cheaper and more focused improvements. Talents are similarly powerful, but often more complex than straight numerical improvements. Players can also spend XP to unclock new specializations, including from different careers. Tyler, who is in fact a generous GM, gives Ash and Randall a big pile of extra starting XP so that Randall can get force powers without cutting into his slicing skills. Equipment and Starting Gear Finally, character spend starting credits on equipment. Ash and Randall spend some time eyeballing armor, weapons, and other goodies. Even simple purchases like blaster pistols can dramatically shape a character's early playstyle, and the meager starting credits (500 by default) don't go very far. By the end of the episode, the party has assembled a crew: A Twi'lek smuggler pilot with secrets and imperial entanglements A Wookie slicer fighting for droid rights and running from the law A ship, an NPC astromech droid, and a galaxy full of problems The perfect setup for Star Wars. Welcome to the RPGBOT Podcast. If you love Dungeons & Dragons, Pathfinder, and tabletop RPGs, this is the podcast for you. Support the show for free: Rate and review us on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or any podcast app. It helps new listeners find the best RPG podcast for D&D and Pathfinder players. Level up your experience: Join us on Patreon to unlock ad-free access to RPGBOT.net and the RPGBOT Podcast, chat with us and the community on the RPGBOT Discord, and jump into live-streamed RPG podcast recordings. Support while you shop: Use our Amazon affiliate link at https://amzn.to/3NwElxQ and help us keep building tools and guides for the RPG community. Meet the Hosts Tyler Kamstra – Master of mechanics, seeing the Pathfinder action economy like Neo in the Matrix. Randall James – Lore buff and technologist, always ready to debate which Lord of the Rings edition reigns supreme. Ash Ely – Resident cynic, chaos agent, and AI's worst nightmare, bringing pure table-flipping RPG podcast energy. Join the RPGBOT team where fantasy roleplaying meets real strategy, sarcasm, and community chaos. How to Find Us: In-depth articles, guides, handbooks, reviews, news on Tabletop Role Playing at RPGBOT.net Tyler Kamstra BlueSky: @rpgbot.net TikTok: @RPGBOTDOTNET Ash Ely Professional Game Master on StartPlaying.Games BlueSky: @GravenAshes YouTube: @ashravenmedia Randall James BlueSky: @GrimoireRPG Amateurjack.com Read Melancon: A Grimoire Tale (affiliate link) Producer Dan @Lzr_illuminati

    1 h
  2. 2024 DnD 5e SORCERER Levels 5 - 20 (Remastered): Mastering Magic, Essential Spells for Characters

    -2 J

    2024 DnD 5e SORCERER Levels 5 - 20 (Remastered): Mastering Magic, Essential Spells for Characters

    The party had a plan. The Fighter would kick in the door. The Rogue would sneak behind the enemy. The Cleric would prepare a healing spell. And the Sorcerer? The Sorcerer would spend six minutes explaining why Fireball is technically the safest solution to every problem, including diplomacy, stealth, and emotional growth. Because Wizards study magic… Warlocks borrow magic… But a D&D 5e Sorcerer is what happens when magic studies you and decides you're the group's primary tactical error. Today on RPGBOT: Sorcerer Levels 5 - 20 optimization, where your spell list gets bigger, your decisions get more destructive, and your Metamagic makes the DM visibly tired. Show Notes In this episode, the hosts dive deep into D&D 5e Sorcerer levels 5 - 20, focusing on high-level spellcasting strategy and how to survive having fewer spells known than literally every other full caster in the game. The discussion begins with the defining problem of high-level Sorcerers: choice scarcity. Unlike Wizards who prepare spells or Clerics who access entire spell lists, the Sorcerer spell selection becomes a long-term commitment system. Every spell must justify permanent residence in your character sheet. A bad pick at level 7 can haunt you until level 17. The conversation then pivots to Metamagic combinations, the true engine of the Sorcerer's power. Twinned Spell, Quickened Spell, and Subtle Spell are analyzed not as flavor tools but as tools to get more power out of their limited spell selection. From there the hosts analyze essential Sorcerer spells from levels 5 - 20, covering staples like battlefield control, defensive reactions, and encounter-ending options. The episode stresses a core Sorcerer philosophy: your spell list should not just be diverse, it should be ruthlessly efficient. The episode closes by discussing late-game scaling, Sorcery Point economy, and why the optimized Sorcerer becomes less of a caster and more of a reality-editing problem for the DM. At tier 4 play, the class stops solving encounters and starts rewriting them. Key Takeaways D&D 5e Sorcerer levels 5–20 reward planning more than improvisation due to limited spells known Your spell list should focus on encounter-winning effects, not utility redundancy Metamagic optimization 5e is the class's real power — action economy beats raw spell damage Twinned Spell dramatically increases value of single-target spells Quickened Spell converts turns into burst rounds and enables combo casting Subtle Spell bypasses counterspell and social encounter restrictions The best Sorcerer spell choices high level 5e scale across multiple tiers of play Defensive reactions matter more than armor — positioning keeps Sorcerers alive Sorcery Points are a strategic resource, not a panic button A well-built Sorcerer removes threats before durability becomes relevant High-tier Sorcerers specialize in encounter control rather than damage output The optimized Sorcerer plays fewer spells — but each one reshapes the battlefield Welcome to the RPGBOT Podcast. If you love Dungeons & Dragons, Pathfinder, and tabletop RPGs, this is the podcast for you. Support the show for free: Rate and review us on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or any podcast app. It helps new listeners find the best RPG podcast for D&D and Pathfinder players. Level up your experience: Join us on Patreon to unlock ad-free access to RPGBOT.net and the RPGBOT Podcast, chat with us and the community on the RPGBOT Discord, and jump into live-streamed RPG podcast recordings. Support while you shop: Use our Amazon affiliate link at https://amzn.to/3NwElxQ and help us keep building tools and guides for the RPG community. Meet the Hosts Tyler Kamstra – Master of mechanics, seeing the Pathfinder action economy like Neo in the Matrix. Randall James – Lore buff and technologist, always ready to debate which Lord of the Rings edition reigns supreme. Ash Ely – Resident cynic, chaos agent, and AI's worst nightmare, bringing pure table-flipping RPG podcast energy. Join the RPGBOT team where fantasy roleplaying meets real strategy, sarcasm, and community chaos. How to Find Us: In-depth articles, guides, handbooks, reviews, news on Tabletop Role Playing at RPGBOT.net Tyler Kamstra BlueSky: @rpgbot.net TikTok: @RPGBOTDOTNET Ash Ely Professional Game Master on StartPlaying.Games BlueSky: @GravenAshes YouTube: @ashravenmedia Randall James BlueSky: @GrimoireRPG Amateurjack.com Read Melancon: A Grimoire Tale (affiliate link) Producer Dan @Lzr_illuminati

    59 min
  3. HOW TO PLAY STAR WARS: EDGE OF THE EMPIRE 1: Every Roll Tells a Story

    -4 J

    HOW TO PLAY STAR WARS: EDGE OF THE EMPIRE 1: Every Roll Tells a Story

    Randall: "So this is a Star Wars RPG where we're not Jedi, not heroes, and not important… we're basically the guy who owes Jabba rent." Tyler: "Correct. You're the reason bounty hunters have a 401k." Ash: "Finally! A system that understands my characters are emotionally complicated, morally questionable, and one hyperdrive failure away from eating space ramen." -The RPGBOT.Podcast cast, probably Show Notes In this Star Wars: Edge of the Empire RPG How to Play, the RPGBOT crew dives into the core concepts and themes of Fantasy Flight's narrative dice system, a tabletop RPG focused less on galactic heroes and more on desperate scoundrels trying to survive under Imperial rule. Unlike traditional D&D-style tabletop RPG mechanics, Edge of the Empire emphasizes storytelling consequences over binary success and failure. Using custom narrative dice pools, players roll not only to determine success, but also complications, advantages, triumphs, and catastrophic disasters. A blaster shot might hit, but now the Empire knows where you are. A failed stealth check might still reveal useful intel. Every roll advances the story. The hosts explain how the three core game lines: Edge of the Empire (scoundrels), Age of Rebellion (soldiers), and Force and Destiny (Jedi). They share identical mechanics but radically different narrative tones. Edge of the Empire specifically captures the Outer Rim survival fantasy: smugglers, bounty hunters, colonists, and criminals living paycheck-to-paycheck in a galaxy ruled by the Empire. A major highlight is the narrative dice system in Star Wars RPG, where opposed dice cancel symbols to create layered outcomes: success with threat, failure with advantage, or rare triumph and despair moments that dramatically alter scenes. This mechanic encourages cinematic storytelling reminiscent of Andor, Firefly, and The Mandalorian. The episode also introduces one of the system's defining features: the party ship. Players don't just own equipment: they share a starship that acts as a character, home base, and constant financial burden. Fuel, repairs, and debts ensure players stay motivated, reinforcing the "scrappy crew survival" tone. Finally, the hosts discuss why Edge of the Empire excels at collaborative storytelling. Instead of heroes destined to save the galaxy, players create flawed people navigating obligations, debts, and consequences, making it one of the most thematic RPG systems available. Key Takeaways Edge of the Empire focuses on scoundrels and survival rather than Jedi heroics The three core books share mechanics but offer different campaign tones (smugglers, soldiers, Jedi) The Fantasy Flight narrative dice system produces multi-layered outcomes (success + complication) Triumph and Despair create cinematic story moments beyond normal RPG success/failure Players share a ship that functions as a party hub and constant source of financial pressure The system encourages collaborative storytelling over tactical optimization Designed to emulate Firefly-style and Mandalorian-style adventures Force users exist but aren't required — the game works best as a crew drama Resource scarcity ("keeping players hungry") drives plot motivation One roll always advances the story — failure never stalls gameplay Welcome to the RPGBOT Podcast. If you love Dungeons & Dragons, Pathfinder, and tabletop RPGs, this is the podcast for you. Support the show for free: Rate and review us on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or any podcast app. It helps new listeners find the best RPG podcast for D&D and Pathfinder players. Level up your experience: Join us on Patreon to unlock ad-free access to RPGBOT.net and the RPGBOT Podcast, chat with us and the community on the RPGBOT Discord, and jump into live-streamed RPG podcast recordings. Support while you shop: Use our Amazon affiliate link at https://amzn.to/3NwElxQ and help us keep building tools and guides for the RPG community. Meet the Hosts Tyler Kamstra – Master of mechanics, seeing the Pathfinder action economy like Neo in the Matrix. Randall James – Lore buff and technologist, always ready to debate which Lord of the Rings edition reigns supreme. Ash Ely – Resident cynic, chaos agent, and AI's worst nightmare, bringing pure table-flipping RPG podcast energy. Join the RPGBOT team where fantasy roleplaying meets real strategy, sarcasm, and community chaos. How to Find Us: In-depth articles, guides, handbooks, reviews, news on Tabletop Role Playing at RPGBOT.net Tyler Kamstra BlueSky: @rpgbot.net TikTok: @RPGBOTDOTNET Ash Ely Professional Game Master on StartPlaying.Games BlueSky: @GravenAshes YouTube: @ashravenmedia Randall James BlueSky: @GrimoireRPG Amateurjack.com Read Melancon: A Grimoire Tale (affiliate link) Producer Dan @Lzr_illuminati

    1 h 12 min
  4. THE PUGILIST - Part 3: Punching the Rules Until They Apologize

    9 MARS

    THE PUGILIST - Part 3: Punching the Rules Until They Apologize

    We began this series asking a simple question: Is the Pugilist balanced? We continued by asking: How much damage is too much damage? Today we ask the only question left: At what point does the DM legally become a victim? Welcome to the finale of the guide to Optimizing the D&D 5e Pugilist, where the class doesn't just punch monsters, it punches D&D's encounter design. Across three episodes we've had grapples that ignore physics, exhaustion that improves performance, and damage numbers that topple dragon gods. We have reached the final stage of optimization: not just winning fights, but ending them un assisted in a single turn. Show Notes In the final installment of the RPGBOT.Podcast's series on optimizing the Pugilist in Dungeons & Dragons 5e, the hosts move from early-level performance into full class evaluation and overall design conclusions. After previously demonstrating extremely high damage output from low levels, the conversation now focuses on scaling, balance implications, and what the class actually does to a campaign over time. The episode revisits the central mechanical problem: Haymaker. The hosts repeatedly identify it as the feature that converts the Pugilist from a strong martial into a potentially disruptive one, since turning attacks into maximum damage fundamentally breaks the assumptions behind D&D 5e encounter math. As the episode continues, the class's core identity becomes clear. The Pugilist is not merely a striker; it is a layered combat engine combining advantage generation, forced positioning, resource recovery, and survivability. Features like Moxie, temporary hit points, and exhaustion mitigation allow the character to operate at peak output in nearly every encounter instead of pacing resources across the adventuring day. The conclusion of the series is less about banning the Pugilist and more about understanding its problems and how to make the class work at the table without causing problems. The class is effective, flavorful, and fun, but its mechanics change how D&D works around it. There's a real question about how much damage output is too much, and the Pugilist is clearly well past that line. Welcome to the RPGBOT Podcast. If you love Dungeons & Dragons, Pathfinder, and tabletop RPGs, this is the podcast for you. Support the show for free: Rate and review us on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or any podcast app. It helps new listeners find the best RPG podcast for D&D and Pathfinder players. Level up your experience: Join us on Patreon to unlock ad-free access to RPGBOT.net and the RPGBOT Podcast, chat with us and the community on the RPGBOT Discord, and jump into live-streamed RPG podcast recordings. Support while you shop: Use our Amazon affiliate link at https://amzn.to/3NwElxQ and help us keep building tools and guides for the RPG community. Meet the Hosts Tyler Kamstra – Master of mechanics, seeing the Pathfinder action economy like Neo in the Matrix. Randall James – Lore buff and technologist, always ready to debate which Lord of the Rings edition reigns supreme. Ash Ely – Resident cynic, chaos agent, and AI's worst nightmare, bringing pure table-flipping RPG podcast energy. Join the RPGBOT team where fantasy roleplaying meets real strategy, sarcasm, and community chaos. How to Find Us: In-depth articles, guides, handbooks, reviews, news on Tabletop Role Playing at RPGBOT.net Tyler Kamstra BlueSky: @rpgbot.net TikTok: @RPGBOTDOTNET Ash Ely Professional Game Master on StartPlaying.Games BlueSky: @GravenAshes YouTube: @ashravenmedia Randall James BlueSky: @GrimoireRPG Amateurjack.com Read Melancon: A Grimoire Tale (affiliate link) Producer Dan @Lzr_illuminati

    46 min
  5. 2014 DnD 5e SORCERERS Levels 1 - 4 (Remastered): A Guide to Building a Magical Being

    7 MARS

    2014 DnD 5e SORCERERS Levels 1 - 4 (Remastered): A Guide to Building a Magical Being

    Today the RPGBOT crew explains how to survive levels 1-4 without becoming a cautionary tale titled "Local Wizard College Denies Knowing This Child." We discuss the best low level sorcerer spells, metamagic optimization, and other essentials for a low level Sorcerer build. Show Notes In this episode, the RPGBOT hosts dive into the chaotic beauty of the Dungeons & Dragons 5e sorcerer from levels 1-4, exploring how to construct a functional magical character before the class truly "comes online." Early sorcerer gameplay is defined by scarcity: limited spell slots, fragile hit points, and the emotional stability of a shaken soda can. The discussion begins with the identity crisis at the heart of the class. Unlike the wizards in D&D 5e, the sorcerer does not study magic: they are magic. This shapes both mechanics and roleplay. We also discuss picking the best Sorcerer subclass. Your subclass determines not only your features, but also your big thematic parts of your character: divine heir, chaotic anomaly, draconic nepo-baby, or walking cosmic accident. The hosts emphasize survival strategy first. At levels 1-2, your goal is not dominance — it's remaining alive long enough to become interesting. Spell selection becomes critical: choosing the best level 1 5e sorcerer spells like Shield, Mage Armor, and Chromatic Orb dramatically increases longevity. Bad spell selection, meanwhile, results in a character sheet that doubles as a memorial plaque. Metamagic arrives at level 3, transforming the class from fragile caster into tactical specialist. The conversation highlights best metamagic options for a low level sorcerer such as Twinned Spell and Quickened Spell, explaining how action economy manipulation creates disproportionate power spikes in early encounters. Suddenly the Sorcerer stops being a liability and becomes the party's artillery platform. The episode closes with practical advice: early sorcerers are specialists, not generalists. You cannot solve every problem, but you can solve a few problems spectacularly. Pick a lane (damage, control, or support) and commit. A focused build produces a memorable character; a scattered one produces a smear on dungeon flooring. Key Takeaways Early D&D 5e sorcerer levels 1-4 are about survival, not dominance Always take staple defensive spells like Shield and Mage Armor Subclass choice defines both mechanics and roleplay identity Metamagic at level 3 is the class's first real power spike Metamagic like Twinned Spell and Quickened Spell dramatically improve your spells Pick a specialization: blaster, controller, or support; don't split your focus until you can learn more spells Sorcerers excel when casting fewer spells more effectively Strong backstory enhances the experience of roleplaying a sorcerer in D&D 5e A bad spell list hurts more than low hit points Welcome to the RPGBOT Podcast. If you love Dungeons & Dragons, Pathfinder, and tabletop RPGs, this is the podcast for you. Support the show for free: Rate and review us on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or any podcast app. It helps new listeners find the best RPG podcast for D&D and Pathfinder players. Level up your experience: Join us on Patreon to unlock ad-free access to RPGBOT.net and the RPGBOT Podcast, chat with us and the community on the RPGBOT Discord, and jump into live-streamed RPG podcast recordings. Support while you shop: Use our Amazon affiliate link at https://amzn.to/3NwElxQ and help us keep building tools and guides for the RPG community. Meet the Hosts Tyler Kamstra – Master of mechanics, seeing the Pathfinder action economy like Neo in the Matrix. Randall James – Lore buff and technologist, always ready to debate which Lord of the Rings edition reigns supreme. Ash Ely – Resident cynic, chaos agent, and AI's worst nightmare, bringing pure table-flipping RPG podcast energy. Join the RPGBOT team where fantasy roleplaying meets real strategy, sarcasm, and community chaos. How to Find Us: In-depth articles, guides, handbooks, reviews, news on Tabletop Role Playing at RPGBOT.net Tyler Kamstra BlueSky: @rpgbot.net TikTok: @RPGBOTDOTNET Ash Ely Professional Game Master on StartPlaying.Games BlueSky: @GravenAshes YouTube: @ashravenmedia Randall James BlueSky: @GrimoireRPG Amateurjack.com Read Melancon: A Grimoire Tale (affiliate link) Producer Dan @Lzr_illuminati

    49 min
  6. THE PUGILIST - Part 2: Haymaker Math & Other War Crimes

    5 MARS

    THE PUGILIST - Part 2: Haymaker Math & Other War Crimes

    Last episode we discovered the Pugilist can punch above its weight class. This episode we discovered the Pugilist can punch above the entire encounter budget. Today on RPGBOT: One character becomes a professional wrestler air-dropping enemies from low orbit One character summons eldritch tentacles to commit mathematically irresponsible violence One character crits often enough to make the Rogue question their life choices Welcome back to our D&D 5e Pugilist build guide, where "balanced combat encounter" is more of a philosophical suggestion. Show Notes In Part 2 of the RPGBOT.Podcast deep dive into the Pugilist class in Dungeons & Dragons 5e, the hosts shift from theory into practice by building actual characters and analyzing low-level combat performance (levels 1–10 gameplay). After previously discussing the core mechanics like Moxie points, exhaustion gameplay, and Haymaker damage, the episode explores how subclasses dramatically amplify the class's effectiveness, especially during tier 1 and 2 where balance matters most. Each host builds a different Pugilist archetype: A grappling-focused wrestler leveraging shove-prone and movement manipulation A spell-augmented "Hand of Dread" pugilist combining melee and warlock magic A critical-hit boxer maximizing burst damage and counterattacks The discussion highlights a major mechanical theme: the Pugilist excels at advantage generation in D&D 5e combat. By knocking enemies prone, grappling, or using subclass features, the class reliably attacks with advantage, dramatically increasing DPR (damage per round). Once Haymaker is added to the equation, damage spikes sharply. The hosts compare expected damage output to standard design math ("dude-stop damage"), demonstrating that even basic tactics can nearly reach or exceed a full party's intended damage output — especially when combining Hex, advantage stacking, and bonus attacks. The episode also examines character optimization choices such as species, feats, and ability scores. Strength and Constitution dominate builds, while backgrounds and feats further push survivability and burst damage. The result is a martial class that plays less like a traditional striker and more like a hybrid of barbarian durability, monk mobility, and rogue-style burst damage. Ultimately, Part 2 reinforces the earlier conclusion: the Pugilist's real power isn't just numbers — it's how its mechanics interact. The combination of resource refresh, exhaustion mitigation, grappling control, and burst damage allows players to reshape encounters in ways most classes simply cannot at early levels. Key Takeaways D&D Pugilist subclasses drastically increase power at levels 1–5 Grapple + shove prone creates reliable advantage in D&D combat Haymaker turns consistent hits into extreme burst damage Spellcasting options (like Hex) push DPR beyond normal martial scaling The class frequently approaches or exceeds expected 5e damage per round math Tier 1 encounters struggle against optimized Pugilist builds Strength + Constitution are the optimal Pugilist ability scores Moxie point recovery enables aggressive play every fight Exhaustion mechanics become a benefit instead of a drawback The class blends control, durability, and burst damage into one role Basic tactics alone can approach "dude-stop damage" Subclasses determine whether the Pugilist breaks balance… or demolishes it Welcome to the RPGBOT Podcast. If you love Dungeons & Dragons, Pathfinder, and tabletop RPGs, this is the podcast for you. Support the show for free: Rate and review us on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or any podcast app. It helps new listeners find the best RPG podcast for D&D and Pathfinder players. Level up your experience: Join us on Patreon to unlock ad-free access to RPGBOT.net and the RPGBOT Podcast, chat with us and the community on the RPGBOT Discord, and jump into live-streamed RPG podcast recordings. Support while you shop: Use our Amazon affiliate link at https://amzn.to/3NwElxQ and help us keep building tools and guides for the RPG community. Meet the Hosts Tyler Kamstra – Master of mechanics, seeing the Pathfinder action economy like Neo in the Matrix. Randall James – Lore buff and technologist, always ready to debate which Lord of the Rings edition reigns supreme. Ash Ely – Resident cynic, chaos agent, and AI's worst nightmare, bringing pure table-flipping RPG podcast energy. Join the RPGBOT team where fantasy roleplaying meets real strategy, sarcasm, and community chaos. How to Find Us: In-depth articles, guides, handbooks, reviews, news on Tabletop Role Playing at RPGBOT.net Tyler Kamstra BlueSky: @rpgbot.net TikTok: @RPGBOTDOTNET Ash Ely Professional Game Master on StartPlaying.Games BlueSky: @GravenAshes YouTube: @ashravenmedia Randall James BlueSky: @GrimoireRPG Amateurjack.com Read Melancon: A Grimoire Tale (affiliate link) Producer Dan @Lzr_illuminati

    1 h 16 min
  7. THE PUGILIST - Part 1: "I Cast Fist"

    2 MARS

    THE PUGILIST - Part 1: "I Cast Fist"

    Every D&D party has that one character who brings a sword, one who brings a spellbook… and one who brings unresolved childhood issues and a willingness to fist-fight a dragon. Welcome to the Pugilist. Today we explore a popular D&D homebrew martial class fueled by bad decisions, Moxie points, and the medically concerning belief that exhaustion is just another resource pool. If the Barbarian is rage and the Monk is discipline, the Pugilist is: "I didn't hear no bell." Show Notes  In this episode of the RPGBOT.Podcast, the hosts dive into a detailed overview of the Pugilist class in Dungeons & Dragons 5e, a popular homebrew martial character class created by Benjamin Huffman known for gritty street-fighter flavor and unconventional resource management. The discussion begins with the class fantasy: a bare-knuckle brawler inspired equally by boxing legends and tavern disasters. Unlike traditional D&D martial classes, the Pugilist 5e mechanics revolve around Moxie points, a flexible combat resource used for survivability, control, and burst damage rather than spells or rage. The hosts analyze how the class converts risk into power through its signature exhaustion-based gameplay design. Instead of avoiding exhaustion like most characters in a tabletop RPG, the Pugilist weaponizes it — gaining resistances, bonuses, and survivability through abilities such as Dig Deep and Bloodied but Unbowed. This creates a unique resource management strategy in D&D combat where players intentionally flirt with collapse for tactical advantage. A major portion of the conversation compares the Pugilist to other martial classes, examining damage scaling in D&D 5e, balance concerns, and how improvised weapons and grappling expand combat options. The class excels at battlefield control: shoving, grappling, and repositioning enemies while converting failed rolls into successes through Swagger-style mechanics. The hosts also discuss community reception of the class and how its design still maintains strong mechanical identity. Ultimately, the Pugilist demonstrates that a well-designed homebrew D&D class can be both flavorful and mechanically interesting — even when its primary strategy is punching reality until it cooperates. Key Takeaways The Pugilist class (D&D 5e homebrew) offers a high-flavor alternative to Monk or Barbarian martial gameplay. Moxie points function as a flexible combat resource for defense, mobility, and burst damage. The class uniquely uses exhaustion as a tactical resource instead of a punishment. Abilities like Dig Deep encourage risk-reward decision making during combat. Improvised weapons and grappling make the Pugilist a strong battlefield control martial build. Damage scaling competes with official classes but depends heavily on player tactics. The design emphasizes creative play over strict optimization balance. Failure mitigation mechanics allow recovery from bad rolls. The class rewards aggressive positioning and close-quarters strategies. Community discussion focuses on balance vs fun — and the Pugilist clearly chooses fun.

    1 h 9 min
  8. RUNES (Remastered): Introducing Axe and Anarchy Into Your Game

    28 FÉVR.

    RUNES (Remastered): Introducing Axe and Anarchy Into Your Game

    You know how every +1 sword in 5e feels like it came off the same enchanted assembly line? "Congratulations adventurer — your reward is… statistically adequate." This week, the crew grabs a metaphorical chisel, carves glowing symbols into that boredom, and asks: What if your weapon didn't just hit harder — what if it screamed cosmic philosophy while doing it? From axiomatic swords enforcing universal order to anarchic axes overthrowing alignment conventions, we dive into Pathfinder 2e rune system mechanics, shamelessly loot them for D&D 5e magic item customization, and then escalate into tone-bending chaos where you might play villain henchmen or survive horror scenarios for fun. Because nothing says "balanced campaign design" like rewriting metaphysics with Nordic graffiti and then handing the party an axe that hates bureaucracy. Show Notes In this episode, the RPGBOT crew examines one of tabletop fantasy's most persistent mechanical gripes: magic items in Dungeons & Dragons 5th Edition often feel numerically incremental rather than creatively transformative. The discussion pivots toward Pathfinder 2e's rune system, positioning it as a compelling model for deeper customization through layered item enhancement rather than static bonuses. The hosts unpack the distinctions between fundamental and property runes, emphasizing how property runes add unique mechanical effects to weapons and armor, producing gameplay that's both expressive and modular. They explore how these mechanics could be translated into homebrew D&D campaigns, addressing balance through level-based restrictions, rarity adjustments, and vulnerability considerations. Attention shifts toward practical experimentation — allowing multiple runes per item, adjusting enhancement bonuses, and porting armor runes to broaden defensive options. The conversation also touches on systemic design trends like emerging magic item pricing guidance in OneD&D, which could make cross-system adaptation easier for DMs. In true RPGBOT fashion, the episode expands beyond mechanics into narrative structure: The crew suggests using rune-inspired item shifts as gateways for tonal experimentation, recommending session-zero communication, short tonal arcs, villain-perspective one-shots, or survival-horror side stories to re-energize campaigns. The result is an episode that blends TTRPG system design analysis, cross-system mechanical hacking, and campaign tone strategy, demonstrating how rules innovation can reshape storytelling possibilities at the table. Key Takeaways Standard D&D 5e magic item mechanics often rely on numeric scaling rather than narrative identity. Pathfinder 2e rune mechanics provide modular item customization through layered enhancements. Property runes introduce unique combat and thematic effects beyond simple bonuses. Use level restrictions and rarity mapping to maintain balance. Experiment with multiple runes per item for player agency. Extend rune logic to armor for broader gear diversity. Price transparency (e.g., OneD&D item costs) supports homebrew adaptation. Rune mechanics illustrate modular system design principles applicable across TTRPGs. Discuss tonal changes openly with players before implementation. Run experimental arcs or villain POV sessions for variety. Horror survival scenarios can reframe player motivation and stakes. Welcome to the RPGBOT Podcast. If you love Dungeons & Dragons, Pathfinder, and tabletop RPGs, this is the podcast for you. Support the show for free: Rate and review us on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or any podcast app. It helps new listeners find the best RPG podcast for D&D and Pathfinder players. Level up your experience: Join us on Patreon to unlock ad-free access to RPGBOT.net and the RPGBOT Podcast, chat with us and the community on the RPGBOT Discord, and jump into live-streamed RPG podcast recordings. Support while you shop: Use our Amazon affiliate link at https://amzn.to/3NwElxQ and help us keep building tools and guides for the RPG community. Meet the Hosts Tyler Kamstra – Master of mechanics, seeing the Pathfinder action economy like Neo in the Matrix. Randall James – Lore buff and technologist, always ready to debate which Lord of the Rings edition reigns supreme. Ash Ely – Resident cynic, chaos agent, and AI's worst nightmare, bringing pure table-flipping RPG podcast energy. Join the RPGBOT team where fantasy roleplaying meets real strategy, sarcasm, and community chaos. How to Find Us: In-depth articles, guides, handbooks, reviews, news on Tabletop Role Playing at RPGBOT.net Tyler Kamstra BlueSky: @rpgbot.net TikTok: @RPGBOTDOTNET Ash Ely Professional Game Master on StartPlaying.Games BlueSky: @GravenAshes YouTube: @ashravenmedia Randall James BlueSky: @GrimoireRPG Amateurjack.com Read Melancon: A Grimoire Tale (affiliate link) Producer Dan @Lzr_illuminati

    1 h 3 min

À propos

The RPGBOT.Podcast is a thoughtful and sometimes humorous discussion about Tabletop Role Playing Games, including Dungeons and Dragons and Pathfinder as well as other TTRPGs. The discussion seeks to help players get the most out of TTRPGs by examining game mechanics and related subjects with a deep, analytic focus. The RPGBOT.Podcast includes a weekly episode; and The RPGBOT.News and The RPGBOT.Oneshot. You can find more information at https://rpgbot.net/ - Analysis, tools, and instructional articles for tabletop RPGs. Support us at the following links: Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/rpgbot BlueSky: https://bsky.app/profile/rpgbot.net TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@rpgbotdotnet The RPGBOT.Podcast was developed by RPGBOT.net and produced in association with The Leisure Illuminati.

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