ryryguy
First Post
All this "it costs a feat and a power to get a power" and "it just costs a feat" argument suddenly made me recall something from my dark and distant past. as a bonus it even involves food! (But not generic food - this is a true story!)
I was about four or five years old, at the swimming pool, going to the snack bar to buy a cheeseburger. Now I don't remember the actual sums and coins involved, let's say I had four dimes and four nickels, and the price of a cheeseburger was 55 cents. My grasp of financial matters was still somewhat shaky, but I did understand that you could give more money than the price and get change back. So I put my 60 cents on the counter and asked for the burger.
The snack bar guy naturally slid one of the nickels back over to me - "It's just 55 cents, kid."
But I pushed it back over. "I know how much it is - now you have to give me change!"
"Right, kid, and here's the change!" Sliding the nickel back to me.
"No, that's not change, that's the nickel I just gave you!" Sliding the nickel back to him.
This repeated a couple of times, with the guy teetering between amusement and annoyance. Finally he picked up all the coins, put them in the register, pulled a nickel back out of the register and handed it back along with the burger. At last I was satisfied. "Took him long enough to understand how this works!" I thought.
So... yeah. It cost four dimes and four nickels to get a cheeseburger and one nickel. Just like it costs a feat and a power to get a power.
Net costs: 55 cents; one feat.
I was about four or five years old, at the swimming pool, going to the snack bar to buy a cheeseburger. Now I don't remember the actual sums and coins involved, let's say I had four dimes and four nickels, and the price of a cheeseburger was 55 cents. My grasp of financial matters was still somewhat shaky, but I did understand that you could give more money than the price and get change back. So I put my 60 cents on the counter and asked for the burger.
The snack bar guy naturally slid one of the nickels back over to me - "It's just 55 cents, kid."
But I pushed it back over. "I know how much it is - now you have to give me change!"
"Right, kid, and here's the change!" Sliding the nickel back to me.
"No, that's not change, that's the nickel I just gave you!" Sliding the nickel back to him.
This repeated a couple of times, with the guy teetering between amusement and annoyance. Finally he picked up all the coins, put them in the register, pulled a nickel back out of the register and handed it back along with the burger. At last I was satisfied. "Took him long enough to understand how this works!" I thought.
So... yeah. It cost four dimes and four nickels to get a cheeseburger and one nickel. Just like it costs a feat and a power to get a power.
Net costs: 55 cents; one feat.
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