Would seem that since itâs random, you might as well roll for all attributes.
that will take away the minigame: do you chose your lowest stat because its easy to improve, or do you try to improve that 17 str?
Well, itâs a neat perk. Rolling for all makes it almost a given, which I personally would not want.
Could get pretty involved, decision-wise. Fighter with a 15 STR has a 4.63 percent change of rolling a 16 or above to get that extra +1.
If he has an INT of 8 or 12, she has a 74% chance of rolling a 9+, or a 25% chance of a 13+, and if you let that immediately grant a proficiency, she can take a weapon style proficiency which is almost as good.
Marginal DEX characters can grab a point of AC, CON for HP, all sorts of possibilities.
Itâd be interesting to run the numbers on that. I may try to model a random stat roll, then rerolls picking the lowest stat 14 times afterwards, to see what happens.
I probably wonât try it this game, because I used Kieroâs âgroup stat rollâ thing he did for Liberator Mercenary Tyrant, and one of my players had hot dice. Theyâre all already monsters.
Fighting Style is a class prof, though, and wouldnât be eligible to be gained by improving Int.
A variety of excellent mass combat proficiencies (including Leadership and Military Strategy) are general, though, so the idea still stands
Details, details
Iâm perfectly okay with a player giving his fighter an above average Int score⌠itâs a breath of fresh air! We play rolling for stats almost by the book: roll 5 3d6 sets of scores in order, choose your preferred set, then swap any two scores.
This is such a splendid concept that I may steal it for the Heroic Companion!
For the Heroic Companion, it might be interesting to tie it to the XP gained by adventuring, so a character who gains a level with <50% XP from adventure gets no roll, 50%-75% gets 1 roll, and 76%-100% gets 2 rolls on different stats.
Hackmaster 4e had a percentile growth system (based on AD&D 2eâs percentile strength), with the die rolled for growth depending on honor and how important the stat was to the class. That would be another (more complicated) way to do it.
Hackmaster 5E has a similar system. Each stat has a percentile value (just as in 4E).
When you gain a level, assign a die to each stat (except Looks, which isnât a stat in ACKS anyway): d20, d12, d10, d8, d6, d4. Roll the die and add the result to that statâs fractional value. You get to reassign the dice every time you level up; itâs not a permanent thing.
So you can choose to assign the d20 to your highest stat every time, or to your lowest, or to the one thatâs closest to passing 100 and increasing, or whatever.
Certainly! Int and Cha are not at all wasted on a fighter, especially if they can survive into the mid-levels, but they wonât make you a better solo combatant.
How has that gone down with your group? Was everyone pleased that they got to share in that playerâs good fortune, or does that player feel a little cheated that they didnât get to benefit alone?
That (Alex and The Dark) is a really good idea. I did really like that ânon adventuring penaltyâ thing from a little while ago Alex posted.
But bonuses for doing something are always better than penalties for not doing something, so, bang.
Explains the hell out of Conan, too - if he was, say, 12th or 13th when he took Aquilonia, heâd had 24 to 26 rerolls by then, max. (XP from war should count for this too)
WelllâŚI have a nontraditional group.
My wife, my eldest daughter, another adult couple, and their middle son and daughter. Age ranges from 10 toâŚuhâŚ15ish? for the kids.
Only the father is an experienced player, being my college DM. My wife knows the score, but hasnât played a lot for a while (we had a 3E campaign in the early 00âs). The other mother is a first-timer. My daughterâs played a few sessions of ACKS (itâs the only D&D sheâs ever played), and the other kids have only had brief brushes with 4E.
SoâŚmy wife and the other father are super pleased with the results, the others are still really catching up to what those numbers are doing for them. The high-roller was the other father; he being the college DM; and he couldnât be more pleased to have provided those scores to the party.
Hi Lucasdelsur, regarding your options:
I think #1 is fine, though it will hardly ever occur.
I donât think the minigame should favor some classes over others, so Iâm not sold on option #2. In addition, since the chance of failing to equal or exceed a chosen score is fairly high, limiting the number of chances you get to just 2 or 3 (ex: mages & thieves) over the course of a 14 level campaign could make it almost inconsequential.
Here are my thoughts on ability score generation and improving ability scores (for anyone who cares, ha ha!) and how I arrived at my house rules on the subject.
I like random generation and its âthis is the lot you have been given⌠work with itâ philosophy. The primary drawback of random generation methods is that they frequently give sets of scores that most players in my experience are unhappy with. Iâve tried many many score generation systems over the years and ACKS is my personal favorite ability score generation system. What it has going for me:
- 3d6 â the only method for generating a non-skewed, bell-curved set of outcomes between 3 and 18. (I find this desirable.)
- Rolling scores in order â stays true to the âlot youâve been givenâ philosophy and eliminates the tendency of âcookie-cutterâ scores according to class.
- Rolling five sets of scores and choosing one â this significantly mitigates the the chances of getting a set of scores a player is unhappy with and almost always generates at least one set that represents a person of overall above average ability (this latter part I also find desirable).
Now for me, this method frequently outputs interesting and perfectly acceptable sets of scores. But it is not entirely perfect to others Iâve played with â it still often leaves players who want to play a certain character unsatisfied. The method almost always gives at least one score of 14+, but rarely in the right place for the player. Enter my house rule: âSwap any two scoresâ. I find this makes for a happy compromise between the âgifts youâve been givenâ and âtailoring your PC to your visionâ philosophies.
I started (but have not been able to play in a long time) a campaign with a heroic, swords & sorcery feel to it. Iâd like to see characters that feel like Conan, Aragorn, Gandalf, Gotrek and Felix, Fafhrd and Grey Mouser⌠etc. If these characters were given ability scores as in ACKS, they would have mostly average to above average scores across the board. In other words, their score spreads look heroic (and most players like having a set of scores that look heroic). For clarification, I personally set the standard measure of a âheroic setâ to have at least 1 score of 14+ and no scores below 10.
If the player rolled a âheroicâ set of scores at the start⌠then great! Often however, it happens that an average set is rolled, or a good set is rolled but it doesnât look heroic â like a couple 13s and the rest average, or you get a set with an 18 and a 4, 6 and 7, and so on. In other words, you get a set of scores that are totally playable, but they donât feel heroic.
Enter my 2nd house rule: At each new level, choose one of your abilities and roll 3d6. if the result is greater than the chosen abilityâs current score, increase it by one point. So if someone rolled a heroic set right off the bat, then they probably wonât benefit much from this (and they donât need to), but for everyone else who rolled a few average or below average scores⌠over time, they can be great too.
I also like how this 2nd house rule models self-improvement and that the more improved you are, the harder it is for you to improve yourself more.
its true, one improvment throw every level should work fine.
I am totally totally totally TOTALLY stealing these.
OK.
So, over 100,000 characters, rolling straight 3d6 obvs. gets you a character with (ignoring rounding) 10.5 in every attribute.
If we roll those 100k characters, then always try to reroll the lowest attribute 14 times, we get:
12.7
12.6
13.2
13.8
14.6
15.7
which isnât necessarily a good model in practice, but kind of shows how it skews averages.