Cergorach said:
Am i the only one that can imagine a furrball from hell that drops from the rafters on your head, first scratching out your eyes and then ripping open your juggular? I'm not talking about a kitten or a fat overfed pussycat from todays society, i'm talking about the lean mean 'house' cats that were in medieval villages, the kind that had to hunt to survive...
You are the only one. There are millions of house cats world wide and I cannot find a single case of a house cat killing a human being.
Although making the argument that house cats are effective man-killers warms my heart.
Cergorach said:
Most cats and dogs don't have a kill mentality, they have a play mentality. The 20lb. 'house' dogs that are trained to kill tend to bite humans and that gets them killed fast, so very few owners train their dog that way, most treat their pets as living stuffed animals.
Feral cats do. And they do attack people, however I cannot find a single case of a feral house cat killing a human being.
Cergorach said:
I read the mentioned article, it was an eye opener. Not because it professed some truth about how Albert is a 5th level character, but because it shifted the D&D scope and made it believable. If level one through five is the human condition and level six is or aproaches demigod status (Hercules for example), that gives a whole new perspective on monsters and high level play. High CR monsters would be extremely rare and so would high level magic (very few could even produce a fireball), it doesn't stroke with what the 3E and 3.5E coor books tell us about level distribution, but i find it very interesting.
I read the article and use the animal standard. Anyone with any contact with animals seem to be at least 5th level. Matadors get hit, people running with the bulls, rodeo clowns all are at lest 5th level according to the rules. Nah, Bow hunters (my friend's brother takes down bears with one shot) and knife hunters (people like my cousin he hunts boars with knives) seem to be 5th+ level under the rules.
On Herc...
Let's see... he fought the Nemean Lion let's call it a dire lion at CR 5, 9 or 17. If you think Herc fought a standard dire lion, CR 5, So to defeat it he needed to be at least 5th+ level. He choked it to death, so he was a monk (pankration). The wuss Herc could be CR5, but going after it solo... more like 7th+ level. But if the lion was a advanced dire lion, herc might be 19th+ level. If it was legendary... yow.
The Lernean Hydra, a nine headed critter. CR 8, ah, but it had poison... so CR 9? Ah, but he had a torch bearer to assist him. So Level 10th maybe.
Cerberus he wrestled into submission. Does anyone have the CR for Cerberus? I suspect it's pretty high...
You see the weakness of the article is combat.
Cergorach said:
I don't think that capping at 5th level is very a good idea unless you intend to run a very gritty campaign where the PCs never rise above the masses. Imagine that a level 10 character is to Einstein what Einstein is to us (assuming everyone here is 1st level).
No, not quite. Not in combat. In skills yes, in combat no.