ConcreteBuddha
First Post
"Words in and of themselves are meaningless - concepts hold meaning."
Um...
Please explain this statement so us apes can understand.
Let me touch the obelisk!
"but - it is:
All double moves take the same amount of time as all standard actions with respect to the D&D round system.
The trait "how long each action takes" is the sole identifier being used or allowed. It is far more limited in scope - but that is all I need and all I have proven."
Real World Time has NO place in a turn based game.
Oft quoted DnD definition: a round takes 6 seconds.
Example:
Paul the Paladin rolls initiative. He gets a 12.
Herb the Hobgoblin rolls a 10.
1) Paul takes his action on 12.
2) Herb takes his action on 10.
3) Paul takes his action on 12.
On initiative count 11, how much time has passed?
Two rounds have passed for Paul (12 seconds).
One round has passed for Herb (6 seconds).
Same example, different problem with Real Time:
1) Paul takes his action on 12.
2) ?
How much time has passed by the time we get to initiative count 10?
6 seconds?
Herb stood there for 6 full seconds while Paul attacked him?
.1567 seconds?
But all six seconds of Paul's action happened before all six seconds of Herb's action...
And you may say, "Well the rules just model the fluid nature of the real world."
And I say, "Then I will not be an idiot and mistake the model for the real thing."
Um...
Please explain this statement so us apes can understand.
Let me touch the obelisk!
"but - it is:
All double moves take the same amount of time as all standard actions with respect to the D&D round system.
The trait "how long each action takes" is the sole identifier being used or allowed. It is far more limited in scope - but that is all I need and all I have proven."
Real World Time has NO place in a turn based game.
Oft quoted DnD definition: a round takes 6 seconds.
Example:
Paul the Paladin rolls initiative. He gets a 12.
Herb the Hobgoblin rolls a 10.
1) Paul takes his action on 12.
2) Herb takes his action on 10.
3) Paul takes his action on 12.
On initiative count 11, how much time has passed?
Two rounds have passed for Paul (12 seconds).
One round has passed for Herb (6 seconds).
Same example, different problem with Real Time:
1) Paul takes his action on 12.
2) ?
How much time has passed by the time we get to initiative count 10?
6 seconds?
Herb stood there for 6 full seconds while Paul attacked him?
.1567 seconds?
But all six seconds of Paul's action happened before all six seconds of Herb's action...
And you may say, "Well the rules just model the fluid nature of the real world."
And I say, "Then I will not be an idiot and mistake the model for the real thing."
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