Grognards: Was the Dex Check a Common House Rule Before 1e?

We used the dex check and other attributes checks in our old games. We didn't use percentage dice for the random stuff, we usually just used a d6. So, 2 in 6 chance this place has plate mail to sell and stuff like that.
 

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I recall few of the "ability checks" (roll under) cutting my teeth with the LBBs however we often pitted ability score against ability score , obviously monsters not having one necessitated rolling it on the spot-often with a penalty or bonus depending on the creature (e.g. rolling a STR score for a goblin would often get a penalty, whereas rolling Dex for a Giant Snake would get a bonus)

When I started playing Runequest I stole the Ability score x 5 (or 4, or 3, etc) = a percentage chance of success.
 

Well, obviously, you and I never spoken about this before ;) Philotomy (I think), Geebo, and a few other posters here and at another forum mentioned the percentile resolution and the purely fiat resolution when I was working on my own house rules document for OD&D+Chainmail about a year back.

You know, now that I started to recall back to those days, I suddenly remembered that one DM *did* use 1D6 to determine random stuff like whether you can buy plate mail or a magic item in town (just like Crothian noted) and a friend of mine even created a D20 table for stuff like this.

But it was a lifetime ago and my memories from those days are shaky at best... ;)
 

This is going back to 1977, when we played using the Holmes blue box set. We used percentile dice to determine whether someone succeeded at a non-combat task not otherwise codified in the rules, and didn't even think about the PC's relevant ability. The DM (me, all of 13 years old) simply set the odds.
 

Yep. The dm would generally roll some dice and narrate the result, or sometimes let the player roll, while he had a number in his head, based on how tough he thought the task might be.
 

In case you're asking about this because you're researching alternate skill resolution methods for your own OD&D/BD&D game, I recently stumbled upon a copy of Delving Deeper for use with Labyrinth Lord that may be right up your alley.
 


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