Depends on what we play. If the classic "dnd/pathfinder" I always tell that the Traveling food are always dried food or long preserve like they bring with them a piece of fat bacon, pork in salt, honey pot full of honey and hardtack, hardtacks, Almonds sweets, various nuts, dried fruits. While at the tavern real food, usually it's always medieval themed it0s not liek they can order but the tavern keeper says >today some hunters brought some hares, we made them with some carrots and made a stew, if you don't like it we have some whole chickens roasted.
To make it short always in theme of the place and time.
Yep. I find myself using them more as a last ditch 1hp to a downed player vs a meal replacement. Our party wants to eat food food, not just be fed like robots.
They eat whatever they killed in the last encounter. The Monster Menu-al has all of the original D&D monsters and what they taste like. https://coinsandscrolls.blogspot.com/2017/08/monster-menu-all-part-1-ad-monster.html
They are connected to the elven nutrition system and don't have to eat. The nournishment is transported to their stomach by magic rune tattoos connecting them to the elven city, and certain citizens eat a bit more to provide enough sustenance to the adventurers serving the city, so the adventuring parties can focus on their quest without a need to worry about eating or sleeping. .
In my last D&D game, onions. Lots of onions. Early in the campaign, a player got a big haul from a dungeon and decided to spend it all in onions for the lulz. End up with a truckload of onions in the base, cook them for all meals. French onion soup, volcano onions, grilled onions, and hell when they're deep in a dungeon and need a snack, chomp down like an apple. From time to time they would treat themselves with a steak at a local tavern, but otherwise it's just onions. Later in the campaign we started adding psilocybin mushrooms to our onion dishes, and boy howdy.
<<< these dishes
Depends on what we play. If the classic "dnd/pathfinder" I always tell that the Traveling food are always dried food or long preserve like they bring with them a piece of fat bacon, pork in salt, honey pot full of honey and hardtack, hardtacks, Almonds sweets, various nuts, dried fruits. While at the tavern real food, usually it's always medieval themed it0s not liek they can order but the tavern keeper says
>today some hunters brought some hares, we made them with some carrots and made a stew, if you don't like it we have some whole chickens roasted.
To make it short always in theme of the place and time.
Goodberry
>tfw it's goodberry night again
Yep. I find myself using them more as a last ditch 1hp to a downed player vs a meal replacement. Our party wants to eat food food, not just be fed like robots.
I always imagine it to leave you in some kind of weird limbo where you aren't hungry anymore but also don't have that sated feeling after a full meal.
ass lmao
Dicks, too. What the frick do you think we went camping for?
>Lemb-ass
Your daily ration of elf girl ass
>
Girl?
They're elves, they're basically all girls
MREs
Last game was Fallout, so:
>corn tortillas
>wild peppers
>canned beans
>gecko steak
Lembas bread.
One small bite is enough to fill the stomach of a grown man
They eat whatever they killed in the last encounter. The Monster Menu-al has all of the original D&D monsters and what they taste like. https://coinsandscrolls.blogspot.com/2017/08/monster-menu-all-part-1-ad-monster.html
>They eat whatever they killed
Burgers and fries. Ice cream for dessert.
They are connected to the elven nutrition system and don't have to eat. The nournishment is transported to their stomach by magic rune tattoos connecting them to the elven city, and certain citizens eat a bit more to provide enough sustenance to the adventurers serving the city, so the adventuring parties can focus on their quest without a need to worry about eating or sleeping. .
In my last D&D game, onions. Lots of onions. Early in the campaign, a player got a big haul from a dungeon and decided to spend it all in onions for the lulz. End up with a truckload of onions in the base, cook them for all meals. French onion soup, volcano onions, grilled onions, and hell when they're deep in a dungeon and need a snack, chomp down like an apple. From time to time they would treat themselves with a steak at a local tavern, but otherwise it's just onions. Later in the campaign we started adding psilocybin mushrooms to our onion dishes, and boy howdy.
Rations.
Food
MEATBREAD