I was looking to publish a subclass I recently brewed to get some peer reviewed feed back, however it is telling me there are external links. Outside of the conditions and actions I have linked via square brackets, I can not find any external links. I have been over the code several times, including using each descriptions </> button. Any Idea what may be causing it? HERE is a link to the homebrew, thank you in advance.
As folks have said multiple times before, do NOT publish homebrew unless you are absolutely sure you know what you are doing. Since it is not even finished yet, you definitely do NOT want to publish it. Publishing homebrew on Beyond is NOT meant for gathering feedback. Once you publish something, you are basically saying that whatever you publish is the final version of it, and it is impossible to edit published homebrew. Unless you are some kind of YouTuber, neighborhood GM, D&D club organizer, or something along those lines and need public transparency, for most users of Beyond, it is not a good idea to publish homebrew.
If you just want feedback on your homebrew or to just share it, there is no need to publish it. You can invite people to your campaign and all your homebrew in your collection can be seen by them.
I was looking to publish a subclass I recently brewed to get some peer reviewed feed back, however it is telling me there are external links. Outside of the conditions and actions I have linked via square brackets, I can not find any external links. I have been over the code several times, including using each descriptions </> button. Any Idea what may be causing it? HERE is a link to the homebrew, thank you in advance.
As folks have said multiple times before, do NOT publish homebrew unless you are absolutely sure you know what you are doing. Since it is not even finished yet, you definitely do NOT want to publish it. Publishing homebrew on Beyond is NOT meant for gathering feedback. Once you publish something, you are basically saying that whatever you publish is the final version of it, and it is impossible to edit published homebrew. Unless you are some kind of YouTuber, neighborhood GM, D&D club organizer, or something along those lines and need public transparency, for most users of Beyond, it is not a good idea to publish homebrew.
If you just want feedback on your homebrew or to just share it, there is no need to publish it. You can invite people to your campaign and all your homebrew in your collection can be seen by them.
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