Difference between revisions of "Talk:Extra Player and Weapon Sizes (5e Variant Rule)"

From Dungeons and Dragons Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
m (Player Weight Note: Oops)
 
Line 19: Line 19:
  
 
Therefore, if a player character with a given density (which should be considered a constant across size categories - the exact number of which is irrelevant so long as it is understood to remain the same) increases their dimensions from a single square to four of them - a 5ft tall character becoming 10ft tall - then their weight should also be doubled to maintain overall proportion and density. --[[User:Max7238|Max7238]] ([[User talk:Max7238|talk]]) 21:27, 2 January 2020 (UTC)
 
Therefore, if a player character with a given density (which should be considered a constant across size categories - the exact number of which is irrelevant so long as it is understood to remain the same) increases their dimensions from a single square to four of them - a 5ft tall character becoming 10ft tall - then their weight should also be doubled to maintain overall proportion and density. --[[User:Max7238|Max7238]] ([[User talk:Max7238|talk]]) 21:27, 2 January 2020 (UTC)
 +
 +
: A size increase of 10x would actually be a weight increase of 1000x, since 1,000,000 (mass of 100 cm cube from example above) / 1,000 (mass of 10 cm cube) = 1,000. An easier way to think of it that would be more relevant to players (since they don't actually grow 10x) would probably be mass increasing by 8 every time they double in size. I've made the change to the article, but feel free to revert it if you want. --[[User:Ghostwheel|Ghostwheel]] ([[User talk:Ghostwheel|talk]]) 10:36, 25 August 2020 (UTC)

Latest revision as of 10:36, 25 August 2020

Player Weight Note[edit]

Refer to the following example as explanation for the rule presented:

A cube with a side of 10cm and a mass of 1000g has a density of 1g per cubic centimeter.

10cm*10cm*10cm = 1000 cubic cm

mass = 1000g

1000g/1000cm = 1g/cm

If the same cube's sides are ten times longer, 100cm, and it has the same density, what does its mass become?

m/100cm^3 = 1g/cm (m=?)

Simply by resolving the volume calculation, it becomes easy to see, in the example, what the new mass would be.

1,000,000g/1,000,000cm = 1g/cm

Therefore, if a player character with a given density (which should be considered a constant across size categories - the exact number of which is irrelevant so long as it is understood to remain the same) increases their dimensions from a single square to four of them - a 5ft tall character becoming 10ft tall - then their weight should also be doubled to maintain overall proportion and density. --Max7238 (talk) 21:27, 2 January 2020 (UTC)

A size increase of 10x would actually be a weight increase of 1000x, since 1,000,000 (mass of 100 cm cube from example above) / 1,000 (mass of 10 cm cube) = 1,000. An easier way to think of it that would be more relevant to players (since they don't actually grow 10x) would probably be mass increasing by 8 every time they double in size. I've made the change to the article, but feel free to revert it if you want. --Ghostwheel (talk) 10:36, 25 August 2020 (UTC)