Really? So I'm just a lying SOB when I said it happened in my game?
I've seen 1e DMG "Method III" produce some crazy characters.I've seen hundreds of characters rolled up over the decades, maybe over a thousand, and I've never seen 3d6 or 4d6 drop the lowest generate stats like that. I have seen it with 5d6 drop the lowest 2 like a friend of mine likes to have players roll, but that's his system and not D&D.
Everybody's a comedian...It's all just joke fodder to me now.![]()
I've seen 1e DMG "Method III" produce some crazy characters.
Quite a bit. I have enough D&D hours to qualify as an expert on D&D, and so have you and many others here.But, ultimately, what's an un-verifiable, anonymous, on-line anecdote about events 30 or 40 years ago worth?
Not sure what was humorous about that post.
While I didn't laugh, it's funny because of the incredibly obvious presumptions on your part. You are presuming that just because you haven't seen it, it must be incredibly rare and therefore not worrying about.
It apparently doesn't occur to you that the irony here is that the reverse could easily be true. You are the outlier and just haven't seen something. I mean, for S&G's, I just used your rolling method and banged out 20 sets of stats. Three had multiple scores above 16 and nothing below a 12. So, using your stated rolling method, it's not rare IME, to get extremely high powered characters.
But, apparently, despite seeing "thousands" of characters generated, you have avoided the odds that say you should have seen at least one character like [MENTION=6801845]Oofta[/MENTION] mentioned.
So, yes, your post was really, really funny. At least, it made me laugh.
Hey, that's our system too and it's certainly D&D to us.... I have seen it with 5d6 drop the lowest 2 like a friend of mine likes to have players roll, but that's his system and not D&D. ...
Hey, that's our system too and it's certainly D&D to us.![]()
I used your method, [MENTION=23751]Maxperson[/MENTION], because that's the method you said you use.
So, you claim that you've never seen such high stats, but, I was able to see them pretty quickly using your die rolling method.
And excuse me if I don't quite take your math at face value.![]()
So, your idea of a high stat character is limited to 18, 18, 17, 16, 14, 14? Well, sure, I can see how that would be pretty hard to achieve. Thing is, that's not the limit of what I consider a high stat character. I mean, good grief, 16, 16, 14, 14, 13, 12 is an VERY high stat character in 5e. THAT'S what I'm talking about when I say high stat. That array will play merry hell with the math of the system.
Eh, no. Even in bounded accuracy +1 isn't good. You'd need to roll a 14 just to hit a DC 15.You've claimed multiple times that a +1 is unimportant in 5e. But, that ignores bounded accuracy. When the vast majority of checks should be about DC 10-15, a +1 is a HUGE benefit.
This isn't 3e or 4e where a single +1 doesn't matter. This is a system where a single +1 is all you get.
Eh, no. Even in bounded accuracy +1 isn't good. You'd need to roll a 14 just to hit a DC 15.