HeckoX
March 14th, 2022, 21:10
Version: 4.1.14 Ultimate
Ruleset: Starfinder
Operating System: Windows 10
In my games, certain rolls (e.g. stealth, sense motive, bluff, etc.) are always hidden roles. This is in part because I don't want the players to subconsciously meta the result, but also because we stream our sessions and I don't want the viewers to figure things out either and maybe give something away in chat.
Anyway, one of my players has skills that allow her to add a 1d6 to certain rolls. This is handled by her clicking a button on the character sheet and an effect being applied to her character in the combat tracker. When she rolls the skill -openly- (drag into chat or double-clicking), the effect resolves correctly. However, if she rolls it hidden (drag onto dice tower), the effect doesn't resolve at all. I'm assuming this is a bug, because no matter how you roll (hidden or openly) the effect should resolve, as long as you don't miss the dice tray entirely.
P.S. Some may say "As the GM, you could just roll for them - then no one can see the result but you", but I don't want to take this away from the players.
Ruleset: Starfinder
Operating System: Windows 10
In my games, certain rolls (e.g. stealth, sense motive, bluff, etc.) are always hidden roles. This is in part because I don't want the players to subconsciously meta the result, but also because we stream our sessions and I don't want the viewers to figure things out either and maybe give something away in chat.
Anyway, one of my players has skills that allow her to add a 1d6 to certain rolls. This is handled by her clicking a button on the character sheet and an effect being applied to her character in the combat tracker. When she rolls the skill -openly- (drag into chat or double-clicking), the effect resolves correctly. However, if she rolls it hidden (drag onto dice tower), the effect doesn't resolve at all. I'm assuming this is a bug, because no matter how you roll (hidden or openly) the effect should resolve, as long as you don't miss the dice tray entirely.
P.S. Some may say "As the GM, you could just roll for them - then no one can see the result but you", but I don't want to take this away from the players.