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General Tabletop Discussion
*Dungeons & Dragons
Why Balance is Bad
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<blockquote data-quote="Manbearcat" data-source="post: 6248714" data-attributes="member: 6696971"><p>100 HP fighter survives 50 foot fall completely unscathed within the fiction. No sprained ankle. No vertebral damage. No corresponding injury whatsoever, immediate or lasting.</p><p></p><p>Player knows that 50 foot leaps are trivial by way of the falling damage and HP mechanics interfacing with each other. The Fighter knows that he has survived a fall unscathed that would be mortal to most everyone (0 level NPCs even through most 3rd level characters).</p><p></p><p>This little experiment will then be reproduced within the fiction (by way of player decision) multiple times throughout the course of the campaign as the player does the math to ensure the odds of survival trivialize the potential mortality of the leap. The Fighter has now affirmed that leaps that would kill most people are trivial to him. Luck, divine intervention, uncanny skill at dissipating the energy of the fall? Who knows. But its trivial. And the Fighter knows this.</p><p></p><p>I hope that breakout of what I figured was implicit is sufficient to prove I'm not interested in blocking communication and that I've kept my showing off at a low enough threshold to meet your satisfaction.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Manbearcat, post: 6248714, member: 6696971"] 100 HP fighter survives 50 foot fall completely unscathed within the fiction. No sprained ankle. No vertebral damage. No corresponding injury whatsoever, immediate or lasting. Player knows that 50 foot leaps are trivial by way of the falling damage and HP mechanics interfacing with each other. The Fighter knows that he has survived a fall unscathed that would be mortal to most everyone (0 level NPCs even through most 3rd level characters). This little experiment will then be reproduced within the fiction (by way of player decision) multiple times throughout the course of the campaign as the player does the math to ensure the odds of survival trivialize the potential mortality of the leap. The Fighter has now affirmed that leaps that would kill most people are trivial to him. Luck, divine intervention, uncanny skill at dissipating the energy of the fall? Who knows. But its trivial. And the Fighter knows this. I hope that breakout of what I figured was implicit is sufficient to prove I'm not interested in blocking communication and that I've kept my showing off at a low enough threshold to meet your satisfaction. [/QUOTE]
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