Kmart Kommando
First Post
My stepdad earned his third brown belt, his black belt, and opened his karate studio all at the same time. 

I would like to state that Arnold must have a Cha of at *least* 15. Afterall he's governer of a capital D state with an R after his name.KarinsDad said:Schwarzenegger with a nail file is intimidating.
Ghandi with a bazooka is not.
Charismatic leaders do not lead by intimidation. They lead by charm (and truth be told intelligence).
Intimidation has virtually nothing to do with Charisma. It has to do with perceived power.
In fact, Intimidation should be easy to change with spells like Polymorph. The Gnome is not intimidating, but the Troll is. Hence, Strength (and even ugliness if that were an ability) should help with Intimidation. So should obvious wealth and power. Only two sets of individuals are intimidating: powerful people and crazy people. CE creatures should be more intimidating than LG ones, but LG ones should be better at Diplomacy.
Sure, there are a few very rare people who can intimidate with a soft voice or pleasant smile, but that is the minority.
Storm Raven said:Or some lead by intimidation. Just walk into a large law firm one of these days. The senior partners are all about intimidation. And they are usually about as physically threatening as a pomeranian.
Storm Raven said:And Charisma is all about how well you communicate your power. You could be really powerful, but speak like Michael Jackson, and suddenly you are not going to convince people to do what you want. And begin to look silly every time you talk.
Storm Raven said:I wonder just how much phsyical prowess would be perceived as "powerful" by those in a D&D world. That gnome, he could be a powerful wizard, able to blow you up with a gesture. Or a rogue able to slice you to ribbons in a heartbeat with a smile on his face. Sure, you don't know that by looking at him, but conveying that possibility is what the Intimidate skill is for.
Storm Raven said:or, alternatively, you just haven't met many. I'd say they are all over the legal and business world.
KarinsDad said:Yes. And they have a Charisma of -2 as well.
It is all about power and the perception of that power, not Charisma. Thanks for supporting my POV.![]()
A first level Sorcerer can communicate all he wants, but a 12th level Barbarian should still be more intimidating, even if the Barbarian takes no ranks of Intimidate.
It's all about the perception of power.
High Charisma is not equal to High Power.
The super friendly, super communicative, and well liked Cheerleader is NOT intimidating.
Yup, they could. The point you are missing is that the Half Orc Barbarian gives the impression of Power automatically. The Gnome Sorcerer does not. Even if the Gnome Sorcerer is really powerful, just him saying that he is powerful should not be a convincing argument.
All over?
Well then, again you illustrate my point.
The defense to Intimidate is 1d20 + character level or Hit Dice + target’s Wisdom bonus [if any] + target’s modifiers on saves against fear. That means that the defense to it is automatically strong since it is basically a level modification. Hence, the game mechanics (even outside of using Charisma as an offensive modifier) do not accurately represent how real intimidation works. If as you say it occurs all over the real legal and business world, then the offense of it should be modified by level automatically, not the defense.
For example, if you perform a violant action while Intimidating, it should give a bonus. There is no such language in the skill.
If my PC cuts off the head of an enemy with a single swing, NPCs should be peeing in their pants. But, the game mechanics do not handle this very important aspect.
Or as per your legal partners example, just walking into their office should be intimidating. Modifiers for that are not part of the skill in the game.