Ah, the long-awaited second installment of our Magus licking monsters series! Those racial grooming habits have come back to bite our favorite catfolk once again! One can only surmise that someone triple-dog dared her to do it (which, for a catfolk, is in extremely poor taste). Be that as it may, it’s not the dangers of giant licking I want to talk about today. It’s the danger of LOGIC.

At issue is the application of phrases like, “It only makes sense if…” and “If that’s true, then…” and “Assuming Earth physics are true…” to a game world. In the present example, it does make a certain amount of sense to suggest that cold-themed monsters do cold-themed things. A frost giant may be pushing it a bit, but take this yeti for example. Check out its signature supernatural ability:

Cold (Su) A yeti’s body generates intense cold, dealing 1d6 points of cold damage to any creature that contacts it with a natural attack or unarmed strike, or whenever it hits a foe with its claws or rend attack.

Dude is so cold that it hurts you to punch him. And if you’re so imprudent as to go for some tongue-on-yeti action, then I think a GM would be justified in ruling as per today’s comic. But then we begin to extrapolate.

Suppose you were suffering bleed damage from an icicle trap. Would your fists get glued to the yeti when you landed a gore-soaked hit? And what if you had to cross some open water? Could you push a yeti corpse into yonder river to create an instant ice bridge? I don’t know about you guys, but I say “no” to the former and “yes” to the latter. And that has to do with the element of player agency.

When you get creative with monsters, environmental abilities, and similar effects, I think it pays to get creative in the players’ favor. This may play merry hell with verisimilitude, but it’s worth the tradeoff in fun. That’s because the power dynamic makes it so incredibly easy for players to feel like they’re being targeted unfairly, even if you’re just trying to run a consistent world. Therefore, when it’s my turn behind the screen, I err on the side of cartoon physics for players and only-what-the-rule-says-it-does for me.

What do the rest of you Handbook-World inhabitants think? Would you stick that riding gecko to the yeti if it managed to land a bite? The image is funny, but is it worth the risk of pissing off the player with an antagonistic ruling? Sound off with all your own creative calls, logical rulings, and geckos hanging by the tongue from yetis down in the comments!

 

 

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