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The dice which decides every single action in the game is acting as its own separate entity, the equivalent of you throwing a dice in real life. The outcomes it produces aren't pre-determined by your selected class or your character's attributes. The character attributes seem to have a relatively limited influence on the gameplay, only contributing a +2 bonus to the dice roll in certain situations. Even when you select a character focused on persuasion and charisma, like a bard for instance, and opt for a Bard-specific dialogue option during a conversation, the game still insists on a random dice roll exceeding 15 for success, regardless of your character's specific attributes. Even choosing the strongest class doesn't guarantee victory in battles, as the outcome largely depends on the randomness of the dice roll. There seems to be a lack of purpose in having different classes due to this randomness. It's just so frustrating so why not just go and play real D&D Tabletop at this point?
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Are the other D&D games any good?