Difference between revisions of "Size"

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How bloomin' big it is!
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A creature's '''Size''' represents its mass and how much space it occupies. The table below lists the Size levels, as well as some typical weights (in pounds), and typical heights (in feet). Size is more about a creature's mass than its dimensions, therefore there are examples which may fall outside these ranges.
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The Size gets subtracted from [[Attack Roll]]s and [[Evasion Roll]]s. Therefore, a positive number is a penalty and a negative number is a bonus. When creatures of different sizes engage in combat, the smaller one is harder to hit and inversely, the larger one is a bigger target. Your Size is also used to calculate your ''Weighted Damage'' score, since an attack from a larger creature deals more damage than one from a smaller creature. See ''Chapter 10: Combat'' for more information about attacks and damage.
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You must also apply your Size score to a few skill checks, such as certain uses of [[Stealth]], [[Perception]], and [[Search]]. In feats of strength, larger creatures are many times stronger than smaller ones, so certain uses of [[Might]], [[Grip]], and [[Gymnastics]] allow larger creatures to add a bonus for each point in Size difference. See ''Chapter 6: Skills'' for more information about the involvement of Size in various skill checks.
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{|
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! Size !! MUS !! HP  !! Typical Weight    !! Typical Height !! Example
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|-
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| −6              || −30            || 1  || 0–0.5            || 0–0.25        || Toad, mouse
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|-
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| −5              || −25            || 3  || 0.5–2            || 0.25–0.5      || Bat, gray squirrel
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|-
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| −4              || −20            || 5  || 2–10              || 0.5–1          || Human infant, brown rat, cottontail rabbit
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|-
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| −3              || −15            || 10  || 10–25            || 1–1.75        || Human toddler, falcon, house cat
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|-
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| −2              || −10            || 20  || 25–50            || 1.75–3        || Lynx, beaver, border collie
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|-
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| −1              || −5              || 25  || 50–100            || 3–5            || [[Firnoy|Firna]], grey wolf, cheetah
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|-
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| 0              || 0              || 30  || 100–250          || 5–7            || [[Men|Human]] adult, mastiff, wild boar
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|-
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| 1              || 5              || 35  || 250–500          || 7–9            || [[Kulgeris|Kulgeri]], Gorilla, black bear, bull shark
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|-
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| 2              || 10              || 40  || 500–1,000        || 9–11          || Grizzly, tiger, bottlenose dolphin, alligator
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|-
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| 3              || 15              || 55  || 1,000–2,500      || 11–13          || Horse, bison, tiger shark
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|-
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| 4              || 20              || 75  || 2,500–5,000      || 13–16          || Hippopotamus, white rhino, great white shark
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|-
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| 5              || 25              || 100 || 5,000–10,000      || 16–20          || [[Jurens|Juren]], elephant, stegosaurus, colossal squid
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|-
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| 6              || 30              || 200 || 10,000–25,000    || 20–25          || ''Tyrannosaurus rex'', ''triceratops'', orca
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|-
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| 7              || 35              || 350 || 25,000–50,000    || 25–30          || ''Apatosaurus louisae''
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|-
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| 8              || 40              || 675 || 50,000–100,000    || 30–40          || Sperm whale, humpback whale
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|-
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| 9              || 45              || 1250 || 100,000–250,000  || 40–60          || ''Argentinosaurus'', fin whale
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|-
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| 10              || 50              || 2500 || 250,000–500,000  || 60–90          || ''Amphicoelias fragillimus'', blue whale
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|-
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| 11              || 55              || 5000 || 500,000–1,000,000 || 90–150        || Rampaging radioactive reptilian monsters
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|}

Latest revision as of 22:39, 19 January 2020

A creature's Size represents its mass and how much space it occupies. The table below lists the Size levels, as well as some typical weights (in pounds), and typical heights (in feet). Size is more about a creature's mass than its dimensions, therefore there are examples which may fall outside these ranges.

The Size gets subtracted from Attack Rolls and Evasion Rolls. Therefore, a positive number is a penalty and a negative number is a bonus. When creatures of different sizes engage in combat, the smaller one is harder to hit and inversely, the larger one is a bigger target. Your Size is also used to calculate your Weighted Damage score, since an attack from a larger creature deals more damage than one from a smaller creature. See Chapter 10: Combat for more information about attacks and damage.

You must also apply your Size score to a few skill checks, such as certain uses of Stealth, Perception, and Search. In feats of strength, larger creatures are many times stronger than smaller ones, so certain uses of Might, Grip, and Gymnastics allow larger creatures to add a bonus for each point in Size difference. See Chapter 6: Skills for more information about the involvement of Size in various skill checks.

Size MUS HP Typical Weight Typical Height Example
−6 −30 1 0–0.5 0–0.25 Toad, mouse
−5 −25 3 0.5–2 0.25–0.5 Bat, gray squirrel
−4 −20 5 2–10 0.5–1 Human infant, brown rat, cottontail rabbit
−3 −15 10 10–25 1–1.75 Human toddler, falcon, house cat
−2 −10 20 25–50 1.75–3 Lynx, beaver, border collie
−1 −5 25 50–100 3–5 Firna, grey wolf, cheetah
0 0 30 100–250 5–7 Human adult, mastiff, wild boar
1 5 35 250–500 7–9 Kulgeri, Gorilla, black bear, bull shark
2 10 40 500–1,000 9–11 Grizzly, tiger, bottlenose dolphin, alligator
3 15 55 1,000–2,500 11–13 Horse, bison, tiger shark
4 20 75 2,500–5,000 13–16 Hippopotamus, white rhino, great white shark
5 25 100 5,000–10,000 16–20 Juren, elephant, stegosaurus, colossal squid
6 30 200 10,000–25,000 20–25 Tyrannosaurus rex, triceratops, orca
7 35 350 25,000–50,000 25–30 Apatosaurus louisae
8 40 675 50,000–100,000 30–40 Sperm whale, humpback whale
9 45 1250 100,000–250,000 40–60 Argentinosaurus, fin whale
10 50 2500 250,000–500,000 60–90 Amphicoelias fragillimus, blue whale
11 55 5000 500,000–1,000,000 90–150 Rampaging radioactive reptilian monsters