![]() ![]() If the character saves by 3 or more then the next lie will have the same base save, but if the character saves by only 2 the next lie will have +1 to the DC, and a save of only 1 will add +2 to the DC, making the direct DC save adds a +3 to the next lie's DC.Ī character that is great at Bluffing gives a +2 synergy bonus to will vs Zone of Truth.Ĭharacters who fail the Save DC will find a +5 to DC for each point they failed by. The 'house rules' are to make the build up of lies harder for the character, unless they are extremely good at lying. Otherwise a minimum of 5% of attempted liars would be able to tell at least one lie in the temple.Īs a DM I have this effect in an interogation room. ![]() I’d allow things like mind blank, and perhaps misdirection or nondetection, foil it, but otherwise I wouldn’t allow a save if the temple really is supposed to be famed for this effect. ![]() Though, with something like this, I’d also just consider waiving the saving throw altogether. It would depend on how powerful I want the effect to be, and how much I found constant rolling/keeping track of what is a separate lie to be annoying and slowing down the game. Or perhaps it’s a save per attempted Bluff check, but a single Bluff check may involve several lies. I’m not sure exactly what I’d call “one lie” – perhaps a lie, once established on a successful save and Bluff check, can be freely spoken, but introducing another false “fact” requires a save. If you succeed, you may tell the lie, but must save again the next time you want to tell a lie. If you fail, you cannot tell that lie, nor any other lie for the next 24 hours. Personally, I would probably rule it like this:Įach time you attempt to lie within the temple, you must make a Will save. I would recommend not having it be a single save ever, since that would mean someone who makes the save never has to worry about that effect ever again, while someone who does not can never break it. Since you’re doing something the rules don’t cover, there is no rule that tells you one way or the other how it’s “supposed” to go – it’s up to you. ![]()
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