FrogReaver
The most respectful and polite poster ever
Single player isn’t how d&d is played either. It must be 1 PC in the group context to match with your point.Ok then lets go with a single player. That is what I used in my original example that was supposedly a "corner case"
We are evaluating the effect a low stat has on a player, if we are testing this with a party where that is dilluted based on the number of players in a party is not a fair test of that. Heck we could go with an 8 person party and it would have even a smaller overall affect than a 4-person party, but in all these cases the effect on the player and their rolls is the same.
If we are testing the effect on a PC and we are using a party made up of more than one PC then every PC needs to have that effect.
Finally if all backgrounds are nearly equal, and any differences are meaningless, why would 3 out of 4 people in a party have one that is aligned well?
If it’s really that impactful, why the hesitation to show it in that context?