architect.zero said:For something like the default "points of light" setting I'd guess somewhere in the vicinity of 1 heroic (i.e. classed and <10th level) person per 10,000 people. Maybe 1 paragon per 500,000, and 1 epic per 5,000,000 or more. That's pure guesswork though.
I'm guessing that the incidences of classed individuals in Forgotten Realms would be much higher. In Eberron, probably a greater number of heroic persons, but extremely rare epics.
My personal preferences lean towards, maybe 1-3 epic individuals per setting and only a couple handfuls of paragons spread out all over the place. The rest would be heroics at roughly the 1 to 50,000 scale (or so).
Roman said:What do you think 4E D&D demographics will look like? What percentage of the population will have classes and at what level? (Note: I think there was a statement somewhere that there will be no NPC classes and these will instead be treated as monsters.)
I think two things:Roman said:What do you think 4E D&D demographics will look like? What percentage of the population will have classes and at what level? (Note: I think there was a statement somewhere that there will be no NPC classes and these will instead be treated as monsters.)
Irda Ranger said:But Two, I think the DMG will explicitly say that classes are for PC's and or NPC's that the DM sees a campaign-specific need to stat up, and that's it. 99% of NPC's don't need the full class treatment and will have a simplified model to represent them. Therefore, there will be no "demographics" at all, with respect to "class."
They'll probably be just "3rd level humans" then, with maybe three or four categories similar to monsters.Kid Charlemagne said:I think that there still needs to be a demographic - even if its just to say that 95% of all NPC's are unclassed individuals. That harkens back to 1e and 2e in that most NPC's were 0-level.