Zhure
First Post
Slings aren't really twirled around one's head. They are spun on on partial rotation before being loosed. A slinger can put them in a loop, so they are spun to hold the stone in place, but it's the same technique a roper (one using a lariat, not the monster) uses to keep a lasso in motion before a toss.
The actual slinging part is only one rotation, and usually less than a full rotation.
Mechanically, I like to treat slings as thrown weapons even though that's a house rule.
Historically the sling was more powerful than a bow and easier to make and the ammunition was cheaper, but training a slinger is even harder than training an archer. Plus slings don't penetrate armor as well as bows do, which isn't really reflected in the 3e mechanics.
Greg
The actual slinging part is only one rotation, and usually less than a full rotation.
Mechanically, I like to treat slings as thrown weapons even though that's a house rule.
Historically the sling was more powerful than a bow and easier to make and the ammunition was cheaper, but training a slinger is even harder than training an archer. Plus slings don't penetrate armor as well as bows do, which isn't really reflected in the 3e mechanics.
Greg