Cass_Ponderovian |
My Home game is playing a game to test OP builds. The Starting stat Array is 27,25,24,22,18,17 (Done by GM Random rolls) and then we rolled a d6 to assign them.
My Array is:
Str 25
Dex 27
Con 24
Int 22
Wis 18
Cha 17
Combat stats are pretty close together, but the high Int is intriguing. What would you do with these stats. I just feel overwhelmed by the class options (in a good way).
Umbriere Moonwhisper |
My Home game is playing a game to test OP builds. The Starting stat Array is 27,25,24,22,18,17 (Done by GM Random rolls) and then we rolled a d6 to assign them.
My Array is:
Str 25
Dex 27
Con 24
Int 22
Wis 18
Cha 17Combat stats are pretty close together, but the high Int is intriguing. What would you do with these stats. I just feel overwhelmed by the class options (in a good way).
these stats have no value in testing how OP a build is, in fact, the Data would be quite flawed, here is what i would do if i was given such an array. i would take this as a chance to play builds i normally wouldn't get a chance to because the stats are usually so hard to get and the classes are so MAD that you would turn them down. with those stats, there isn't a class that won't be effective.
i would probably use this as a chance to play something suboptimal or something difficult to build
a monk or battle cleric are good recommendations, as are paladin, ranger, or barbarian to a lesser extent.
Raymond Lambert |
I concur with moonwhisper, these stats are so overpowered themself, all you are going to do is prove how strong the stats were themself. ANY and I mean any class should give you an overpowered pc with that ridiculous array.
Too truely test how good a.design is, you need to pick a fair point buy or array AMD compare them to similar arrays. Fair point buys would be either 15, what the iconics are designed with or 20, what Pathfinder Society uses.