Anabstercorian said:Anubis, please stop shouting. If you must shout, at least spell your words properly. Etiquette.
Um, I'm NOT shouting. What the heck are you talking about?
Anabstercorian said:Anubis, please stop shouting. If you must shout, at least spell your words properly. Etiquette.
Anubis said:
Actually, what I did is called "demonstrating absurdity by being absurd". My post was a COUNTER to someone else's post, someone who used the rules to make a super-powerful creature that had a low CR/EL. I merely did the opposite. That was merely my proof that the ability score thing did NOT break the system.
My PROOF that ability scores should NOT be counted is in characters that are Levels 1-3. This is, always was, and always will be the absolute proof. To estimate that a Level 1 character of ANY core race is anything but CR 1 is absurd, yet by counting ability scores, the system has us believe that a Level 1 character could potentially be as powerful as an ogre, which is ludicrous.
Any which way, sorry for bringing that up again, folks, but I had to refute this guy for his lackluster attempt at trying to make ME look like the one using numbers to break the system.
If with "clear" you mean "there is a single example in the text" then yes, it's clear!They are....is that not clear?11.22 If Touch Attacks are multiplied for the number of attacks, shouldn't Level Drain/Poison/Disease be multiplied?
Al said:
Fair point. I have not been following this (evidently long-running) saga between yourself, U_K, Seasong and Anab. From the responses of the others mentioned, it seems to be too intractable for me to disentangle.
However, I can attack your PROOF. Ignoring the fact that, on balance, a straight-18 powerful first level character can indeed match an ogre in terms of relative power (if not in a stand-up fight), your PROOF is lacking in that it is a non sequitur.
Your assertion that one cannot estimate a level one character as anything other than a CR1 misses the point. CR is a measure of power. Higher ability scores generally means a greater measure of power. If anything, I would argue that ability scores should be used to estimate PC levels as much as monsters. Of course, this will not always be representative, as your counter-example (and the original poster's example illustrate) but the trend is upwards.
Where is the weak link in this chain of logic?
CR is a measure of power (true)
Higher ability scores generally indicate more power (true)
Therefore, higher ability scores should be reflected in a higher CR.
Oh, and don't use capital letters. I'm ambivalent, but some posters can get upset.
Sonofapreacherman said:All right. Check this scenario out.
A party of four typical 1st level characters encounter two 2nd level "fighter class" hobgoblins.
The characters are each CR 1 and therefore PEL 1.
The CR for one of those hobgoblins is 2 and therefore EL 5. Because there are two of them it becomes EL 7.
The party arcane spellcaster casts sleep and rolls the average amount of Hit Dice. Both hobgoblins fail their Will saves and go down for 1 minute. The party kills them in their sleep.
Their reward: 2400 XP.
What the heck? 600 XP each for that? Or worse yet ... 2400 XP for a solitary arcane spellcaster (which is also conceivable using the current system). Something is not right here. Even if the spell failed and the party got involved in melee with the two hobgoblins, 600 XP each seems way too much for such a simple encounter.
A think a change is needed. This is what I suggest. Rather than "averaging" party level, what about calculating PEL the same way EL is calculated for monsters.
Meaning a party of four typical 1st level characters (CR 1 individually) would become PEL 5 (EL +4 for 4 opponents/party members).
Suddenly the above hobgoblin encounter falls to 600 XP or 150 XP each. Infinitely more reasonable (although it still does not solve the solitary arcane spellcaster imbalance who gets 2400 XP all at once).
Any thoughts?
Hey now, I wasn't in thatAl said:Fair point. I have not been following this (evidently long-running) saga between yourself, U_K, Seasong and Anab. From the responses of the others mentioned, it seems to be too intractable for me to disentangle.
Sonofapreacherman said:All right. Check this scenario out.
A party of four typical 1st level characters encounter two 2nd level "fighter class" hobgoblins.
The characters are each CR 1 and therefore PEL 1.
The CR for one of those hobgoblins is 2 and therefore EL 5. Because there are two of them it becomes EL 7.
The party arcane spellcaster casts sleep and rolls the average amount of Hit Dice. Both hobgoblins fail their Will saves and go down for 1 minute. The party kills them in their sleep.
Their reward: 2400 XP.
What the heck? 600 XP each for that? Or worse yet ... 2400 XP for a solitary arcane spellcaster (which is also conceivable using the current system). Something is not right here. Even if the spell failed and the party got involved in melee with the two hobgoblins, 600 XP each seems way too much for such a simple encounter.
A think a change is needed. This is what I suggest. Rather than "averaging" party level, what about calculating PEL the same way EL is calculated for monsters.
Meaning a party of four typical 1st level characters (CR 1 individually) would become PEL 5 (EL +4 for 4 opponents/party members).
Suddenly the above hobgoblin encounter falls to 600 XP or 150 XP each. Infinitely more reasonable (although it still does not solve the solitary arcane spellcaster imbalance who gets 2400 XP all at once).
Any thoughts?
xanatos said:They are....is that not clear?
xanatos said:Perhaps you could add rules for Beholder and other monsters that "Multicast" (and perhaps even rules for monsters that can "multibreath")
xanatos said:On the Magic Immunity... I think it should be connected to the HD of the creature (so a variable adder, +0.x for each HD)... Why? Because if you take the Standard Party (Fighter, Thief, Cleric and Wizard/Sorcerere) a Magical Immune creature will take away probably less than 1/3 of the power of the Cleric and perhaps 2/3 of the power of the Wizard (he can still Buff, but he can't directly attach), so a total of less than 1 player... So you will have a party of 3 PC instead of 4... An example... Take a Goblin with Magic Immunity... And this is true at least till level 20 (Special Abilities of Magical Weapons probably become much more common and powerful after this level, so they must be factored)... A Goblin with Magical Immunity is still a Goblin! Ok... It's a little more powerful, but not too much... How much will his CR raise? Probably he will be a CR 1 creature (and about the fact that you shouldn't give Magic Immunity to Goblins... Think about Weave Elementals... Small Weave Elemental (with 2HD) (the Weave is the magical energy of FR and is diffused everywhere (but you surely know) They could be immune to magic (they are made of magic!)).
xanatos said:Other small things...
11.23 Turn Resistance should be capped at CR +1 (the cost of "Can't Be Turned")
xanatos said:11.25 Perhaps you could add Drow to the Light Sensitivity (they are quite common enemies... Perhaps because this was the Year of the Drow in FR)
xanatos said:Magical Items
Natural Armor: Perhaps it should be a little more expensive than Standard Enchantment... Ok... It isn't good against Touch Attacks, but it stacks with Standard Armor and Shield, and it's invisible (so no one will know that you are "protected"). Perhaps 1500?