💾 Archived View for idiomdrottning.org › fine-character-scale captured on 2023-06-16 at 16:37:18. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content
⬅️ Previous capture (2023-01-29)
-=-=-=-=-=-=-
TL;DR: To convert, add or subtract 16 to DCs or contested rolls, multiply/divide distances by twelve, multiply/divide carrying-weights by sixteen, divide torchlight by four or multiply it by three.
One of the reasons Fudge RPG was invented was actually… fairies! SOS was working on a GURPS Faeries book but it turns out that GURPS’s 3d6 roll-under system is super difficult to get to work for anything other than normal humans. The bell curve makes things difficult to scale and the roll-under-nature makes things difficult to move. Fudge’s zero-centered, dice+adds system is perfect since you can just have different “scales” for different things. Faeries and bunnies can have one scale, normal people another, and kaiju yet another.
Maybe we can cook up something similar for D&D? Which also can use dice+adds.
In 5e, the smallest size category is tiny but in 3e, there were two below that. Diminuitive, and fine. We wanna cook up some house rules for the Fine size.
If you are Fine (like a few inches tall) and you’re doing something in your own world, just do it like a normal human. Humans are like giant kaiju to you. One inch is like a foot to you. If you need to interact with stuff from the human world and your size matters (so str mostly), add 16. For example, opening a bottle your own size is DC 0. Opening a bottle a much bigger size is DC 16.
Distances, an inch is a foot. Divide by twelve. Walking a six mile hex is two hours for a human but three full 8h days if you are fine. Buuut if you’re a fairy maybe you can fly as fast as a human walks?
Light sources scale by the inverse square law so if you have torches and lanterns your size, their light is a fourth if you’re shining in “human scale”, or multiply by three if you’re in your own scale. For example, torches in 5e are 20 bright, 20 dim. A Fine sized torch for fairies are instead 5 foot bright, 5 foot dim, either by divide 20 foot by four or by multiplying 20 inches by three, either way you get five feet. Similarly, a human lantern is 30 feet so a Fine lantern is 7.5 feet, which you also can get to by either method.
Carrying stuff, an ounce is a pound. So with our inventory house rules, just divide strength by sixteen. (Twice halved what a Tiny creature can carry.) So an unarmed Fine creature with strength 10 can carry 150 tiny items or three small items like spellscrolls or daggers.
G.I. Joe dolls and Kenner SW dolls are both 3.75 inches. Tinkerbell in Peter Pan is seven inches. Arietty is four inches. Nils Karlsson Pyssling is 2.5 inches. Muj in “A Night in May” is the canonical faerie but I don’t know how big she is; she uses a handkerchief for clothes. Probably Tinkerbell size. Barbie dolls are 11.5 inches, Lego figures are 1.6 inches.
Gnomes in Will Huygen’s books are six inches.
Gnomes in the 5e PHB: Three and a half… feet! That’s bigger than hin most of the time!
The first change I would make about D&D. Easily. Make faeries and gnomes be smaller. Much smaller.