this post was submitted on 17 Jul 2023
21 points (100.0% liked)
Baldur's Gate 3
6312 readers
6 users here now
All things BG3!
Baldur’s Gate 3 is a story-rich, party-based RPG set in the universe of Dungeons & Dragons, where your choices shape a tale of fellowship and betrayal, survival and sacrifice, and the lure of absolute power. (Website)
Spoilers
If your post contains any possible spoilers, please:
- Use the text [SPOILER] at the beginning of your title, do not include any spoilers in the title.
- Use the appropriate spoiler markup to conceal that content in the body of your post.
Thank you!
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
I thought Advantage/Disadvantage was so powerful/hurtful because you roll 2 dices and take the better or worse roll.
That is what is done, but they're attempting to explain how that actually effects the odds. If you only had a 5% chance to succeed to begin with, advantage only bumps that up to about 10%. On the other hand, if you were at about a 50% to succeed, you jump up to a 75% chance with advantage. Bounded accuracy means that most rolls are balanced to have somewhere between a 30-70% chance to succeed; right in the range where advantage is most impactful.
This is exactly right. I was trying to explain the mechanic in terms of effective bonuses/penalties to show its effect more concretely.
Advantage doesn't actually confer a +5 when the needed dice roll is 11, bur statistically that's what it feels like.
I dropped my statistics class, but I remember the teacher to this day because of the story he told us.
He said he came from India to the US and he didn't eat meat. He went to a restaurant and ordered a hamburger without the meat--just bun and lettuce, tomato, etc. They said sure. He then asked if it was be cheaper because the meat was the most expensive part of the burger. They said that they had to charge him extra for a special order.
Anyway, here is your upvote for your math. Thanks!