delericho
Legend
Sorry, no, just an internet post based on that poster's memory...
Oh well. Thanks anyway.
Sorry, no, just an internet post based on that poster's memory...
Except it's 30 cubic metres of stuff, which is unreasonable for a a full round action.
Unless you think the wording of the Haversack is meant to suggest that the backpack is making a telepathic connection with the user and is bringing the desired object to the top (I do not think it is, but I can see how one could get that), then I still stand by my earlier suggestions.
So, according to the SRD, the smallest bag is 30 cubic feet, not meters. That makes it a shade under 1 cubic meter. (0.87782 cubic meters, to be exact).SRD said:Bag of Holding: This appears to be a common cloth sack about 2 feet by 4 feet in size. The bag of holding opens into a nondimensional space: Its inside is larger than its outside dimensions. Regardless of what is put into the bag, it weighs a fixed amount. This weight, and the limits in weight and volume of the bag’s contents, depend on the bag’s type, as shown on the table below.
Type I 15 lb. 250 lb. 30 cu. ft. 2,500 gp
Type II 25 lb. 500 lb. 70 cu. ft. 5,000 gp
Type III 35 lb. 1,000 lb. 150 cu. ft. 7,400 gp
Type IV 60 lb. 1,500 lb. 250 cu. ft. 10,000 gp
If the bag is overloaded, or if sharp objects pierce it (from inside or outside), the bag ruptures and is ruined. All contents are lost forever. If a bag of holding is turned inside out, its contents spill out, unharmed, but the bag must be put right before it can be used again. If living creatures are placed within the bag, they can survive for up to 10 minutes, after which time they suffocate. Retrieving a specific item from a bag of holding is a move action—unless the bag contains more than an ordinary backpack would hold, in which case retrieving a specific item is a full-round action.
If a bag of holding is placed within a portable hole a rift to the Astral Plane is torn in the space: Bag and hole alike are sucked into the void and forever lost. If a portable hole is placed within a bag of holding, it opens a gate to the Astral Plane:
The hole, the bag, and any creatures within a 10-foot radius are drawn there, destroying the portable hole and bag of holdingin the process.
Moderate conjuration; CL 9th; Craft Wondrous Item, secret chest.
So, according to the SRD, the smallest bag is 30 cubic feet, not meters.
<snip>
Is the bag making a telepathic connection? Who cares? By whatever mechanism or rationalization, the item you want is always on top. It says so right in the item description.
I don't think anyone is suggesting it can't happen; just that it shouldn't be the default assumption.To suggest that a DM should simply rule that mistakes and accidents can't happen is, well the word "Generous" doesn't quite seem to cover it, but you get the idea.
So, according to the SRD, the smallest bag is 30 cubic feet, not meters. That makes it a shade under 1 cubic meter. (0.87782 cubic meters, to be exact).
The largest bag, at 250 cubic feet, is a xhade over 7 cubic meters. (7.0792 to be exact).
So, if we presume a roughly bag-shaped interior, you might have to stretch to reach all of the inside of a small bag, but it's pretty much all reachable.
Next question: The rules don't say that there's gravity inside the bag.
Next answer: They also don't explicitly say that there's gravity in a normal backpack. Or, in fact, anywhere in the game world. There are falling rules, yes, but nothing that explicitly says when or how someone falls.
Next question: The rules don't say you can accidentally overload a Bag or Haversack.
Next answer: They also don't explicitly say you can accidentally overload a horse, or yourself.
Does this mean that you only have a carry limit if you're consciously thinking about it, or intentionally exceeding it?
Does it imply that there is no actual limit to the Bag of Holding or Handy Haversack? That you can stuff as much as you like in there, so long as you don't think about it?
Found it. Apparently, the table is on page 110 of the 3.0e PHB. Or, the same data can be found here:
http://www.wizards.com/default.asp?x=dnd/rg/20040406a
Well, similar data - we seem to have lost the 3.0 rules, but we can have them in metric![]()
How big/what shape is the inside? I'd always taken that as variable. Think of the inside as made of Spandex or some similar material. It probably starts about the same size as the outside, but can stretch as needed. That's why you can fit your 10 foot pole in there, even if it's the small bag that's under a cubic meter. The dimensions can change as the situation demands, but the total volume still has a maximum limit.
What makes me think that? Because if it's holding an amount similar to a backpack, everything's within reach and can be withdrawn as a move action. You only go to full-round action when you exceet that standard, and the bottom might stretch out of casual reach. If the inside were always at maximum extent then that rule about move action v full round action wouldn't be there.
Backpacks and sacks (mundane, not magical) will certainly fill with water if immersed, though it may take time. Unlike magical bags, they aren't air tight when closed (See rules on suffocation inside)
But mundane backpacks and sacks don't have rules that specifically say they tear or rupture if they have too much in them. Magical bags do.
Is the air space inside the same for all the bags? Seems wrong, since some have a bigger capacity than others. But if the interior space stretches as needed then it would make sense that the air space in any given bag at any given moment would be the same, since the total volume of any given bag changes to meet demand. That accounts for a standard 10 minutes of air for all the bags, since the internal space will always be "occupant plus gear plus X", where X is 10 minutes of air.
Plus, historically, the source for the item was a "wallet" given to Perseus in Greek mythology, one that would "Expand to fit whatever you place inside it." He used it to carry the head of Medusa.