Bedrockgames
I post in the voice of Christopher Walken
That's not really true though. Looking at 3e, mostly because that's the system I'm most familiar with, a 35 point buy character is operating in all respects at one level higher than a 25 point buy character - his HP, AC, saves, bonus spells, skill bonuses - are all one level higher.
Whether you consider that to be broken or not is a matter of taste, but, the math certainly says its a pretty big advantage.
I mean, if you were to go to your DM and say, "Ok, I'll make a 25 point buy character instead of 4d6 drop lowest, roll twice. But, I start at 2nd level instead of 1st like everyone else," do you think any DM would go for it?
Heck, can I play an 18 point buy character in your game, but start two levels ahead of everyone else? Would that be perfectly fine?
At the end of the day, die rolled characters are almost always higher value than point buy characters. And that's a balance issue. It might not be a huge one, but, it does make a difference. I know that my earlier D&D experiences vary wildly from, say, [MENTION=4937]Celebrim[/MENTION]'s because we were very generous with character generation. The idea of a fighter that didn't have a percentile strength was a foreign one to my groups. Why would you play a fighter if you didn't have percentile strength?![]()
I certainly won't deny that point buy characters produce greater parity and so yes, they are probably going to give you tighter balance and be further on the balance spectrum. I would contend though that does depend on how you define balance and what you want from it. Personally I find random results produce balance by having a fair starting point (every one has the same odds) and by eliminating the likelihood of power builds (because you can't customize as easily when your stats are random). But yes, characters will have greater parity using the point buy method. That is a whole different argument from what folks are talking about here. What is being debated is why people like 4d6 drop the lowest and I think it is a little bit nuts that posters are essentially calling those who say they like 4d6 because its random, liars. This is what I am objecting to. If you find point buy more balanced, I am fine with that. We can disagree on some of the distinctions surrounding the word and still respect each other's opinions.