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D&d 3.5 to 5e conversion
D&d 3.5 to 5e conversion




d&d 3.5 to 5e conversion

In that case, you need to do a careful conversion, and the Wizards of the Coast conversion document explains this in detail. Maybe you run a strict game based heavily on stats, where even just 1 extra hit point could mean the difference between player character death and victory. Sometimes, approximation just doesn't feel right. I've run several Pathfinder and 3e modules for 5e, and all I've had to do is adjust the obvious stuff: instead of a Disable Device skill check, you ask for a Dexterity check, and so on.Īny DM is used to having to invent a DC target in the moment, so adjusting for that comes naturally.Įnemies tend not to last too long anyway, so hasty conversions of an unusual Pathfinder-only NPC class to whatever's "close enough" in 5e tends to work pretty well. I got a lot of great feedback about my previous article, How to Convert D&D monsters to 5e, so it's obviously time for the same article for Third Edition (or 3.5, realistically).įor the longest time, I never really bothered converting from 3.5 to 5e, because I found them to be relatively easy to convert in real time.






D&d 3.5 to 5e conversion