Ryujin
Legend
If the exchange rate for GP to dollars was 1:144, then you could have bought one. In 1992. Maybe...bike that costs 125 Gold Pieces.

If the exchange rate for GP to dollars was 1:144, then you could have bought one. In 1992. Maybe...bike that costs 125 Gold Pieces.
If the exchange rate for GP to dollars was 1:144, then you could have bought one. In 1992. Maybe![]()
ExactlyGold pieces in 5e weight .02 pounds each (1/50 of a pound).
125 gold pieces is 2.5 pounds of gold.
There are 16 ounces in a pound.
Therefore, 125 gold pieces is 40 ounces.
As of the time that I am writing this, the spot price of gold in $1,996.00 per ounce.
So 144 gold pieces is ... $287,424.00
Exactly
EDIT - The ratio I mentioned would be if 1gp = $144.00 (US).
Time for GP edition wars? 'Cause weight of a GP depends on edition1 GP is 0.02 lbs, or 0.32 oz.
By today's prices, that's 1 GP = $638 or so, which is plenty.
By 1994 gold prices, that's 1 GP = $123 or so. Which is close enough for government work, I think.
I know how heavy 40 oz is…’cause reasonsGold pieces in 5e weight .02 pounds each (1/50 of a pound).
125 gold pieces is 2.5 pounds of gold.
There are 16 ounces in a pound.
Therefore, 125 gold pieces is 40 ounces.
As of the time that I am writing this, the spot price of gold in $1,996.00 per ounce.
So 144 gold pieces is ... $287,424.00
Tim for GP edition wars? 'Cause weight of a GP depends on edition![]()
I know how heavy 40 oz is…’cause reasons
Oh weight volume…disregard…
You know, in 1st edition AD&D, fighter-types got a legion of followers -- sometimes enough to form their own mercenary company. Those were some of my favorite Dragon magazine articles, the ones by James A. Yates expanding followers for the various classes: "Tables and tables of troops" (#99), "More range for rangers" (#106), "Fighters for a price" (#109), "Clout for clerics" (#113), "Elven Armies and Dwarves-At-Arms" (#115), "The Mystic College" (#123), and "Armies From the Ground Up" (#125). Think about the tax base you're bringing along on your adventures! Hommlet never knew what hit it!I don’t know, but I’d like @CleverNickName to weigh in on whether a wizard’s familiar is considered a dependent for tax purposes. Seems like yet another place wizards outshine fighters to me. WotC really needs to fix that to be like fighters in 2e which attractedtax deductible dependentsfollowers at level 9.