05-22-2016, 03:04 AM | #31 | |
Join Date: May 2016
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Re: The "Size Discount for ST -- Why?" Discussion
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05-22-2016, 03:21 AM | #32 |
Join Date: Dec 2007
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Re: The "Size Discount for ST -- Why?" Discussion
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05-22-2016, 04:01 AM | #33 |
Join Date: May 2016
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Re: The "Size Discount for ST -- Why?" Discussion
I'm staying subscribed on this one since I don't think I can reach a consensus quite yet...
The main reason I even ask is because size discounts are one of the only non-linear modifiers. You may as well have SM act as a balance of density and have huge gasbag aliens able to ride the wind or be pushed around by it. There's a concept! |
05-22-2016, 04:05 AM | #34 |
Join Date: Feb 2016
Location: Melbourne, Australia (also known as zone Brisbane)
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Re: The "Size Discount for ST -- Why?" Discussion
Interesting question! I have the original Cosmos series by Carl Sagan on DVD. In that series he speculates that balloon like creatures could exist high in the atmosphere of gas giant planets where the atmospheric pressure is much higher than on Earth. The closest Earth native I can think of is the jellyfish, which is helpless on land. At any rate I don't think balloon creatures are likely to inhabit the same environment as human-like creatures so any strength comparison between the two is irrelevant.
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05-22-2016, 04:08 AM | #35 |
Join Date: May 2013
Location: Ellicott City, MD
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Re: The "Size Discount for ST -- Why?" Discussion
ST assumes you can choose where something goes. Balloons are limited by physics, which really don't care about your ST score. I don't care how strong you are, you're sinking to the bottom of a lake of liquid helium (assuming you somehow had the ability to not die almost instantly in said lake).
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05-22-2016, 07:01 AM | #36 |
Join Date: Dec 2006
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Re: The "Size Discount for ST -- Why?" Discussion
Just realised another interesting way that size should factor in:
Let's say a sm0 human and an sm+5 giant are friends; They decide to hit the gym together and start a strength building regime. The giant can, should, and does see greater overall return for time spent working out vs numerical St increase. (Ie they both work or sufficiently to get 10 cp worth if strength gains, that's 1 point for the human, but two for the giant) |
05-22-2016, 07:08 AM | #37 |
formerly known as 'Kenneth Latrans'
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: Wyoming, Michigan
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Re: The "Size Discount for ST -- Why?" Discussion
Really though, being a bulky size should just be a Disadvantage that gives you points and most large entities should have high ST to reflect their size. The net of something like SM+1[-25] and ST+5[50] is [25] worth of advantage which seems appropriate to me. Worse off than SM 0 with ST 15 but clearly much better off than SM+1 with ST 10.
The first problem with making it a discount on ST is that it really doesn't pay off at the low levels to meet the minimum reasonable ST for a given size, encouraging disproportionately strong giants. The second problem is that the ST itself is not made less potent by virtue of coming out of someone larger. No Fine Manipulators gives a discount because without hands, you are more limited in how you apply your strength; being bigger doesn't really do this. If the point is to encourage building large things with appropriately large ST, why does an SM+9 giant pay the same for his ST as an SM+8 one? Or an SM+20 giant, for that matter? Why does and SM+5 giant wolf get no help buying up his ST to the (higher) appropriate levels than an SM+4 one? It's almost like the problem with the Cannot Wear Armor limitation on DR; just making it a Disadvantage and pointing out possible justifications and combinations would make it way easier on everyone (except the DF Barbarian who is, unabashedly, designed around exploiting this kludge).
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05-22-2016, 10:55 AM | #38 | |
Join Date: Dec 2004
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Re: The "Size Discount for ST -- Why?" Discussion
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In contrast, ST 20 overwhelms ST 10 but ST 60 has only a moderate advantage over ST 50. DX 15 and ST 10 is probably evenly matched with DX 10 and ST 20 - in fact the strong PC is likely to have the advantage hand to hand. The DX makes up in other cases. In contrast, DX 15, ST 50 is likely to be much more effective in game terms than DX 10, ST 60. I could list suggested changes but that would be drifting too much from the thread. We should probably add something like that to the GURPS wiki. Getting back to the original question, the ST discount as stated is a patch to make it more practical to buy large characters on a reasonable budget. As already noted, it breaks down a little when considering large creatures that don't necessarily have exceptional ST. Bruno's suggested cost of -15/level sounds about right. |
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05-22-2016, 11:17 AM | #39 | |
Join Date: Dec 2004
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Re: The "Size Discount for ST -- Why?" Discussion
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If you check weight lifting records, that fits - the records for the heaviest classes are higher but lower as a percentage of the lifter's weight and follow that 2/3 power curve fairly closely. There's also the practical problem that extra bulk in a lot of cases either wouldn't affect use of ST or would actually aid it. For real world examples, take a look at sumo wrestlers or NFL nose tackles. I would say excess bulk in GURPS is best represented by reduced DX. |
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05-22-2016, 01:12 PM | #40 | |
Join Date: Jul 2008
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Re: The "Size Discount for ST -- Why?" Discussion
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I don't know any 3e, so there is no chance that I am talking about 3e rules by accident. |
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Tags |
discount, size, size modifier, strength |
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