Kerrick
First Post
Yeah, aristocrat is one of the better NPC classes, nearly the equal of a PC class.The best part is that I intentionally took the Aristocrat level, even though I could have taken a PC class instead.
I mean really. It's a class with full armor and weapons, some nice class skills (including Speak Language, which was important since in our world there was no Common tongue), and 4+INT skill points. It's actually not a bad choice for a 1st-level character, although it obviously doesn't scale up nearly as well beyond that. And since my character was a nomadic Sorcerer from a family of wealthy merchants/craftsmen, it actually fit really well.
I assume you mean by taking, not rolling a d20 and hoping for a high roll? Wow... no wonder people were telling me the DCs in my artificing system were too low.It's not very difficult for a PC craftsman to hit 35 DC well before 20th; my 3.5E Shaper (with a high INT, an Artiste psicrystal and a luck ring that gave +1 to all skill checks) wouldn't have a problem at 15th level or earlier. Generally speaking, though, the DC modifiers match pretty well to what level the material is made for (+10 DC materials are balanced for ~10th level, etc.)
How do you equate materials with levels of masterwork? I mean, I know you don't really use "levels of masterwork", but how do you determine the bonuses from, say, mithril or adamantium or star metal, as far as attack/damage, ACP, and max Dex?
Silver is softer than iron, but it's a good deal heavier - iron is 26 on the periodic table, whereas silver is 47. Have to agree, though, that silver weapons would probably do less damage - they'd become deformed on a critical hit.I don't agree with the +1 to attack. Silver is softer than iron no? I can't see why it would have the bonus. I could see the reduced ACP. I do believe it is lighter. of course silver armor would prolly have a lower ac...
[qoute]*really what is the dif between iron and 'cold' iron?* [/quote]
Cold iron (the textbook definition, not the DMG one) is iron that's been forged at a lower temperature than normal - cold-forged iron, or wrought iron. It's a little weaker and more brittle than normal iron, and so not often used beyond decoration, but it's great against the fey. I still wouldn't recommend making a large weapon like a cold iron sword, because it runs a chance of breaking (say, 10% chance on a critical hit).