tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2170237526012357403.post2036977745314717309..comments2024-03-26T15:35:56.004-04:00Comments on Delta's D&D Hotspot: Wandering Monster NumbersDeltahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00705402326320853684noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2170237526012357403.post-42877136028586468692010-08-20T10:42:36.916-04:002010-08-20T10:42:36.916-04:00Yeah, the former. XP by Monster Level: 1-50, 2-100...Yeah, the former. XP by Monster Level: 1-50, 2-100, 3-200, 4-400, 5-800, 6-1600. <br /><br />You may notice that this approaches the Sup-I/BXCMI XP table at the higher levels -- e.g.: (assume 1 special ability) Level 4, average 5 HD, 300 XP; Level 5, average 6 HD, 500 XP; Level 6, average 9 HD, 1600 XP -- without reducing the low-level stuff to insignificance. <br /><br />Sort of a simple mean between the LBB system and Sup-I. Definitely a work in progress. I suppose it doesn't distinguish between types of giants/dragons, etc.Deltahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00705402326320853684noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2170237526012357403.post-90667792010183947372010-08-20T10:27:12.185-04:002010-08-20T10:27:12.185-04:00As a side note, I'm also awarding XP on the sa...<i>As a side note, I'm also awarding XP on the same basis, starting at 50XP for a level 1 monster, 100XP for level 2, etc.</i><br /><br />Can you expand on what you mean by this? Are you saying any monster found on the level 1 table is worth 50 xp, any monster on the level 2 table is worth 100 xp, etc, regardless of what level they are encountered on?<br /><br />Or are you using the 100 xp/HD rule and multiplying or dividing by difference in level encountered? The latter would imply that an orc on level 1 is worth 100 xp, on level 2 50 xp, etc. And that an ogre found on level 1 is worth 3200 xp?Paulhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06885070668246799352noreply@blogger.com