You never bothered to address my prior points because you already dismissed them even tho they are all perfectly valid. Honestly, would you rather have to remove the retraining rules from your game, or have the feat stack as intended?
Can't wait to see what wrong conclusion you also jump to.
Great point!
Haha, just kidding.
Poisoning the well – a type of ad hominem where adverse information about a target is presented with the intention of discrediting everything that the target person says.Behold: Psionic Talent [Psionic]
You gain additional power points to supplement those you already had.
You haven't proved Hidden Talent stacks with it's self in order to use as proof for this discussion.
Circular reasoning (circulus in demonstrando) – when the reasoner begins with what he or she is trying to end up with; sometimes called assuming the conclusion.The true failing of the feat is that it doesn't increase your refresh-able pool at all. It just says "have some points" and by the rules once you use them they vanish and all you have to show is an empty feat. If the OP had said that, I'd have nothing to say. As it is, and as you further elaborated on, the grammar supports the current handling of the feat the same as it does psionic talent.
The Feat doesn't say "have some points", please refrain from using your own words based on grossly incorrect interpretation and stick to the actual rules used.
Hasty generalization (fallacy of insufficient statistics, fallacy of insufficient sample, fallacy of the lonely fact, leaping to a conclusion, hasty induction, secundum quid, converse accident) – basing a broad conclusion on a small sampleAlso
Appeal to flattery – a specific type of appeal to emotion where an argument is made due to the use of flattery to gather support.No one really cares if you'd think he would be right in another matter, please stay on topic.
That's part of why I'm having trouble following his logic. I've been playing so long that when I look at something that obviously stacks, it never occurs to me that someone would say "it doesn't stack".
The funniest part is, if they don't stack...you can retrain the under font to a top font. The game never goes back to look because they don't stack, now does it? That is to say:
Font 1 gives you 1 point
Font 2 gives you 2 points, never cares about Font 1 again
retrain Font 1 to Font 3
Font 3 gives you 3 points, never cares about Font 2 again
retrain Font 2 to Font 4
....
profit.
That's the most obvious reason to me why stacking is important. It's so devastating that the whole int max font thing has no bearing on it at all.
*Ding* *ding* Your "obvious reasoning" or your appeal that it isn't how you imagined things isn't a supporting point.
Argument from (personal) incredulity (divine fallacy, appeal to common sense) – I cannot imagine how this could be true, therefore it must be false.Appeal to ridicule – an argument is made by presenting the opponent's argument in a way that makes it appear ridiculous.There is more, quite a few more but you get the point.
~Through every example of who you are in this thread suggests you won't.Anyway, on to something that does matter.
"Indicated Otherwise" is not the same as "it says so". If they want it to be "it says so" they would have wrote that, going along with your whole what the author says and means argument. See how that turns around on you when pointing to any rule and not just the one you're misinterpreting?
So the debate is centered not around this
Special: You can take this multiple times. Each time you take this feat after the first time, the number of inspiration points you gain increases by 1 (for example, you gain 2 inspiration points if you take the feat a second time). The maximum number of times you can take this feat is equal to your Intelligence modifier.
Because both sides are in full agreeance that the 1st time you take the Feat it gives +1 and the second time it gives the Feat you gain +2.
The discrepancy is in weather or not that initial +1 stacks with the second granted +2 and there is
nothing in the passage that goes either way. Truly, there isn't. Everything else spoke about that Feat is either a lie or made up through faulty generalization being repeated as fact rather than using the original printing. Like at some point Soft said "
It's so devastating that the whole int max font thing has no bearing on it at all." but this is highly incorrect.
Taken as none-stacking x1 Feat grants +1 point, x2 Feats grant a total of +2 point, and x3 Feats grant a total of +3 points and so on. It provides a continued progression that will, most likely, hit it's intended cap. Like the starting example Factotum cannot take it more than twice and it's 6th level version cannot exceed three. The idea the IntMod cap is irrelevant stems from optimizing your character's Intelligence to super high values, which is just yet another fallacy. Maybe it's the Stormwind one, through I don't fully understand that one beyond it's based on using optimization vs standard to make a point. Well the exact name side, the cap has relevance and Soft claiming it don't as a reason to disbelieve it is just another fallacy on his part.
So if things could go either way - Ignoring the fact the burden of proof always lies with the person saying something can and not the one saying you cannot - with no indication one which, how does Robby know he's not misinterpreting?
Benefit: What the feat enables the character (“you” in the feat description) to do. If a character has the same feat more than once, its benefits do not stack unless indicated otherwise in the description. In general, having a feat twice is the same as having it once.
Well he has a rules quote saying the Feat doesn't stack unless it says otherwise.
So people like Soft moved to the
language debate of what constitutions saying otherwise. Now language debates are about as tasteless as you can go, but this one is fairly special. All known and provable Feats that stack with them selves use the phase "it's effects stack" or something very close to that. So Soft's little debate is also based on all examples confirming the expectation of the default phasing D&D uses cannot be used to prove him wrong. And I believe that is a form of cherry picking.
Cherry picking (suppressed evidence, incomplete evidence) – act of pointing at individual cases or data that seem to confirm a particular position, while ignoring a significant portion of related cases or data that may contradict that position