As a stormtrooper, I only use Imperial units. ….this may explain why I keep missing with my blaster.
Yes, I understood the question. I would not refuse to play a game based on its choice of measurement units. Was that the wrong answer?To make it easier, picture D&D or Pathfinder (any editions really) that use Meters instead of Feet.
Would you still play them with that change?
You can move 10 meters, aka 10 squares.
You fall 4 meters and take 1d6 damage.
etc
In fact you don’t even have to ‘work’ in the measurement. The game isn’t going to make you convert them as you go. It’s just a unit of 1. Call them giraffes or bizzleberries or something. You can move 10 feet. You can move 10 metres. You can move 10 bizzleberries. As long as you know it’s 10, the word after it is irrelevant.I think what Morrus is saying is that this change is not very important, and the ease or difficulty of working in metres rather than feet would not be significant to him. Like me, he's from the UK, which uses metric units for many things. Most British people, apart from the very old, can work with either system.
US, yes.Let's say a new TTRPG came out, and for its measurement of moving, ability/spell distance, falling, etc, they used Meters instead of Feet. Would you be fine with that, and would you play it?
I apologize. Your initial answer didn't give me enough context to let me know if that were a yes or no, so I decided to give more context.Yes, I understood the question. I would not refuse to play a game based on its choice of measurement units. Was that the wrong answer?![]()
That's it! I'm making a game where measurements are in cubits (~18 inches) and weight is in stones (~14.4 pounds)!In fact you don’t even have to ‘work’ in the measurement. The game isn’t going to make you convert them as you go. It’s just a unit of 1. Call them giraffes or bizzleberries or something. You can move 10 feet. You can move 10 metres. You can move 10 bizzleberries. As long as you know it’s 10, the word after it is irrelevant.
I can move 30 bizzleberries and my bow has a range of 120 bizzleberries. Those squares are 1 bizzleberry each. Or 5 bizzleberries. Or whatever scale the map uses.