RedwoodElf wrote:Well that psionic splish attack does seem to have a bleed effect, making it somewhat unique. Strictly by the rules, you don't bleed until you hit 0 HP except for certain special bleed effects.
Yeah, thatÔÇÖs what I was thinking, that (behind the screen) there was a bleed effect of some sort going on.
Product Placement wrote:
Commenting on that entire line of dialog, not friedkitty, specifically.
From what I can remember from 3rd edition D&D, the only time players normally have to worry about bleeding to death is when their hitpoints have reached 0 or less.
There are other attacks that can cause bleed damage as well, from what I remember, they just arenÔÇÖt very common. I know there are in Pathfinder, so maybe IÔÇÖm just getting it confused. IÔÇÖm assuming that dismemberment would have something house ruled in.
So, as unrealistic as it may sound, while that growing puddle of blood certainly adds drama to the situation, she's not bleeding to death unless there's a red negative number floating over head.
IÔÇÖm not as certain about that. The basic rules as written donÔÇÖt have anything about bleeding out except for falling below 0 hp or (maybe) special attacks, but they also donÔÇÖt have anything about dismemberment. I think most DMs would rule that a severed limb bleeds until you do something to fix it.
And yes, I know that the story is based on a modified 3rd edition ruleset. All I'm saying is that unless Thunt is specifically house ruling that players receive continued hp loss, after crippling attacks like that, there are no standard rules in place that support this theory. Since I don't have Thunt's special rulebook in my hands, I can only draw from the original source material.
Whatever is going on, I think it is safe to say that it isnÔÇÖt covered by the PlayerÔÇÖs Handbook alone. There are no standard rules in place to deal with this type of bleeding, but there are also no standard rules in place to deal with this kind of dismemberment. Saying she isnÔÇÖt bleeding to death seems about as realistic at this point as saying that she hasnÔÇÖt lost the lower half of her body.