Garnfellow
Explorer
frankthedm said:Those seem much more fitting for thier HP / HD / sizes.
That was one of Dan's original insights -- true giants fall way, way outside the monster creation guidelines:
Daniel R. Collins said:The Giants from the Monster Manual do not comply with the HD ranges in Mr. Williams' [Dragon magazine article, "How to Create a Monster."] All true giants have HD above the range indicated for the Giant type (hill, stone, frost, and fire all have at least triple the listed HD range); so do ettins, ogre mages, and trolls. Ogres are the only giant-type to comply with the Giant HD ranges from the article (and they have the absolute maximum). Note that if one (a) used the suggested "smooth" HD progression, and (b) returned giants to the HD they had in 1st Ed. AD&D (prior to a +50% increase), then they would in fact, in the majority of cases, fall into the proper ranges.
Me, I think lower HD giants are a better design choice primarily because it gives the DM much more room to add character classes, templates, and other cool tools. Racial HD are almost always a suboptimal choice next to class levels, which offer far more interesting and powerful abilities.