I’d like to give my party the ability to control an unstable godling in combat. Do you have any suggestions on how to make this fun?

I have four party members. I’m thinking that on the godlings turn, each party member will be able to declare a target enemy and an ability to activate. If more than half of the party members declare the same target, then the target is selected, ditto for the attack. If they fail to meet that bar, something random will happen to a random target (including the party).

They’ll probably be fighting 7ish clerics and cultists, and the godling will probably have two-ish attacks.

Edit: Any suggestions on how to make the control more fun for the players? I want a strong element of chaos, but more than half of the attacks should be controlled by the party.

Here’s the context: My party has gotten involved with an almost-extinct god that has been revived. It’s an unstable bundle of power that throws off random miracles. It has manifested a set of curse/boons for each party member. The godling had a portfolio of growth, but it’ll probably get rebirth/reincarnation.

  • sbvOP
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    1 year ago

    it is hard to implement so I see your trouble

    Yeah. I have that problem a lot. Combat in D&D turns into a grind, so I’ve been trying stuff to spice it up. The whole godling subplot came from wanting to give each PC a boon/curse pairing that would give them more options in combat. It’s mostly different ways to grant advantage or disadvantage, so it worked within the existing rules.

    I’d have one attack per player since it is a god, let him wreck house. Maybe increase the number of enemies to accommodate the attacks.

    That makes a lot of sense.

    The chaos burst is a good idea. It’s a well understood way to add some randomness.