• Troy@lemmy.ca
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    30 days ago

    I let my players make checks: “what would my character know in this situation?” History roll. Me as DM: “your character would have gone to kindergarten and learned the number 2”

    • tetris11@lemmy.ml
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      30 days ago

      M is 1000 in Latin, or 8 if you convert from binary, which is 3+3+2, and as we all know 3 ~ π, so M is ~ 2+2π = 2(1+π), and we all know that π goes to 0, for small values of π, leaving us with M = 2. So, Fry was right.

    • imPastaSyndrome@lemm.ee
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      30 days ago

      It would be d…

      O n e a n D T h r e e 1 2 3 4 5 6 5 4 3 2 1

      Or not including one and three

      It’s between one and three, not Including one or three

      “And”

      Or “N”

  • Thebeardedsinglemalt@lemmy.world
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    29 days ago

    I was guest-DMing. After 1 person hilariously failed a challenge that another player came up with a completely different solution, they were presented with a thick stone door. On the door was 5 markers. On each marker was a different symbol…a flame, a bolt of lightning, a snowflake, skull and another I cant recall maybe a star.

    The person who hilariously failed the first challenge kept trying to push the markers with their bare hands, and each time I said “nothing happened”, so she tried a different one, tried pushing it harder, tried pushing 2 at a time, tried hitting it with her weapon, which I asked if it was magical and she said so, then kept trying the same thing over and over again. She kept talking over everyone and I even think she said “this puzzle is stupid”. I was seconds from scream “look at the symbols” when someone took a swing at it with their radiant sword that things started clicking into place in their heads. The dumb one then tried using a level 2 fire spell and I think let out an audible groan.

    In advance I made sure all players had cantrips of these particular damage types while building this puzzle and she wants to use a level 2 spell. For reference she’s an OP druid (because she cheats on all her rolls), has a higher AC than our barbarian and more HP than our paladin, yet considers herself “squishy” and stays in the back peaking out behind cover to shoot with a crossbow, and takes it as a personal attack that everyone hates her if any enemy does damage to her.

  • zaph@sh.itjust.works
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    30 days ago

    Had a puzzle thrown at me by my DM this weekend.

    I have scales but no wings, I guard treasure, precious things. Though I breathe no flame or fire, My riddles stir minds to inquire. What am I?

    !a book!<

    He admitted it was written by ai. I did not guess correctly.

    • Wandering Star@dice.camp
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      30 days ago

      @zaph @Stamets It should be “a bank.” People make bank inquiries. Traditionally they have scales to measure precious materials. They of course guard treasure and precious things.

      • Archpawn@lemmy.world
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        28 days ago

        That’s what I was thinking at first, but since when do banks have riddles? Though maybe in-universe riddles are considered top of the line security.

        • reinei@lemmy.world
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          28 days ago

          Well ever set a password or pin or security question for a bank? You might be able to construe these as riddles…

          • Klear@lemmy.world
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            28 days ago

            I’m pretty sure a riddle is a bunch of glowing question mark-shaped trophies scattered randomly across a city.

      • BluesF@lemmy.world
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        29 days ago

        AI doesn’t have a mind to do mental leaps, it only knows syntax. Just a form of syntax so, so advanced that it sometimes accidentally gets things factually correct. Sometimes.

        • Archpawn@lemmy.world
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          28 days ago

          It’s more advanced than just syntax. It should be able to understand the double meanings behind riddles. Or at the very least, that books don’t have scales, even if it doesn’t understand that the scales that a piano has aren’t the same as the ones a fish has.

          • BluesF@lemmy.world
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            28 days ago

            It doesn’t understand anything. It predicts a word based on previous words - this is why I called it syntax. If you imagine a huge and vastly complicated series of rules about how likely one word is to follow up to, say, 1000 others… That’s an LLM.

            • Archpawn@lemmy.world
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              27 days ago

              It can predict that the word “scales” is unlikely to appear near “books”. Do you understand what I mean now? Sorry, neural networks can’t understand things. Can you make predictions based on what senses you received now?

              • BluesF@lemmy.world
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                27 days ago

                Well given that an LLM produced the nonsense riddle above, obviously it cannot predict that. It can predict the structure of a riddle perfectly well, it can even get the rhyming right! But the extra layer of meaning involved in a riddle is beyond what LLMs are able to do at the moment. At least, all of them that I’ve seen - they all seem to fall flat with this level of abstraction.

                • Archpawn@lemmy.world
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                  25 days ago

                  It shows that one failed that time. I just asked ChatGPT. I can’t be sure how original the riddle is. It’s possible it copied the description of the double meaning from somewhere. But it looks like it understood it, and based on how LLMs work, there’s no reason it shouldn’t.

                  Make an original riddle. Explain the double meaning behind it.

                  Riddle: I hold many keys, yet open no doors. I sing without voice, yet keep perfect scores. Though I’m struck, I never feel pain; What am I, in sun or rain?

                  Answer: A piano.

                  Explanation of Double Meaning:

                  Literal Interpretation
                      “Hold many keys, yet open no doors” refers to the piano's keyboard, which holds musical keys instead of physical keys for doors.
                      “Sing without voice, yet keep perfect scores” alludes to how a piano produces sound through musical notes (without a voice) and follows written scores (musical notation).
                      “Though I’m struck, I never feel pain” describes how piano strings are struck by hammers to create sound, but, of course, the piano doesn’t feel.
                  
                  Play on Words
                      Keys are often associated with doors, but here, they reference musical notes.
                      Scores traditionally refer to results or outcomes, but in this context, they represent musical compositions.
                      Struck typically implies being hit and possibly feeling pain, yet here, it refers to the mechanical action within a piano that produces music.
                  

                  Each line has a figurative layer connected to musical terms, creating a double meaning based on the dual use of “keys,” “scores,” and “struck.”