A 10th level barbarian with a warhammer and Strength 22 is standing in front of a strong wooden door (hardness 5, hit points 20, break DC 23 as per the 3.5 SRD). The door is locked and he needs to get through it right away. He has two options:
1. He can use his warhammer to try to bash the door open. He needs to roll a 17 or better on 1d20 to do this, which gives him a 20% chance of success per round. After two rounds, he'll have a 36% chance of having gotten through, and after three rounds, he'll have a ~49% chance.
2. He can use his warhammer to bash through the door. Assuming his warhammer is nonmagical and he's swinging it two-handed, he'll do an average of 13.5 points per hit. At two attacks per round, he'll destroy the door in two rounds, guaranteed, even if he rolls minimum damage on every single attack.
Does this seem a little screwy to anyone else? If the barbarian just tries to bash the door open, he only has a 50-50 chance of getting through it after three rounds. But if he uses his hammer to just completely destroy the door (which, in reality, would be much harder and take much longer), he's guaranteed success after only two rounds.
I guess hinges and latches in D&D are all made out of adamantine, or something....
1. He can use his warhammer to try to bash the door open. He needs to roll a 17 or better on 1d20 to do this, which gives him a 20% chance of success per round. After two rounds, he'll have a 36% chance of having gotten through, and after three rounds, he'll have a ~49% chance.
2. He can use his warhammer to bash through the door. Assuming his warhammer is nonmagical and he's swinging it two-handed, he'll do an average of 13.5 points per hit. At two attacks per round, he'll destroy the door in two rounds, guaranteed, even if he rolls minimum damage on every single attack.
Does this seem a little screwy to anyone else? If the barbarian just tries to bash the door open, he only has a 50-50 chance of getting through it after three rounds. But if he uses his hammer to just completely destroy the door (which, in reality, would be much harder and take much longer), he's guaranteed success after only two rounds.
I guess hinges and latches in D&D are all made out of adamantine, or something....