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Sep 30, 2018 Pathfinder RPG- Combat Maneuvers: The Basics - Duration: 9:38. Rogue Exposure 6,420 views. Pathfinder Kingmaker: How To Respec Trash Characters Into Good Characters!
- Dec 05, 2015 Since both 3.5 and Pathfinder stat blocks provide Ability Scores rather than Ability Mods, you will need to calculate the new bonuses yourself. Luckily it’s easy, and can be done one of two ways; derive the new bonuses from existing Ability Scores, or derive them from newly calculated scores. The following formulas support these methods.
- Be sure to read the Dungeon Master's Guide section on monster creation, pages 273 through 283. You can click on the table to the right to fill in values for a given and adjust to taste. You can hover over the individual labels for a short description of how each attribute contributes to a monster's CR. You can also hover over each feature.
- Treasure Monsters With Treasure. Every monster has a treasure rating (indicating how much treasure it has, although for some creatures the rating is “None”).
- Each character has six ability scores that represent his character’s most basic attributes. They are his raw talent and prowess. While a character rarely rolls a check using just an ability score, these scores, and the modifiers they create, affect nearly every aspect of a character’s skills and abilities.
- The format should be like this: 3 vs 16 crit 19 2 dmg 1d4+2. You have to drop the '-20' from the critical range. Also the CRITEXTRA field is just for things that do more damage on a critical hit beyond the 2x damage you have already specified (e.g. A flaming burst sword).
Home > Treasure Index > Treasure
Monsters With Treasure
Every monster has a treasure rating (indicating how much treasure it has, although for some creatures the rating is “None”). The tables found below are used to determine the specifics. After referencing the level and kind of treasure (coins, goods, items) found in the creature’s description, roll on the appropriate row and columns of the proper table.
When generating an encounter dealing with monsters away from their lair, remember that a creature only takes what it can easily carry with it. In the case of a creature that cannot use treasure, that generally means nothing. The monster safeguards or hides its treasure as well as it can, but it leaves it behind when outside the lair. Intelligent creatures that own useful, portable treasure (such as magic items) tend to carry and use these, leaving bulky items at home. Treasure can include coins, goods, and items. Creatures can have varying amounts of each, as follows.
Standard
Refer to the treasure tables and roll d% once for each type of treasure (Coins, Goods, Items) on the Level section of the table that corresponds to the creature’s Challenge Rating (for groups of creatures, use the Encounter Level for the encounter instead). Some creatures have double, triple, or even quadruple standard treasure; in these cases, roll for each type of treasure two, three, or four times.
None
![Damage Damage](/uploads/1/2/5/4/125423865/447094556.png)
The creature collects no treasure of its own.
Nonstandard
Some creatures have quirks or habits that affect the types of treasure they collect. These creatures use the same treasure tables, but with special adjustments.
Fractional Coins
Roll on the Coins column in the section corresponding to the creature’s Challenge Rating, but divide the result as indicated.
% Goods or Items
![Calculate Calculate](/uploads/1/2/5/4/125423865/854004032.png)
The creature has goods or items only some of the time. Before checking for goods or items, roll d% against the given percentage. On a success, make a normal roll on the appropriate Goods or Items column (which may still result in no goods or items).
Double Goods or Items
Roll twice on the appropriate Goods or Items column.
Parenthetical Notes
Some entries for goods or items include notes that limit the types of treasure a creature collects.
When a note includes the word “no,” it means the creature does not collect or cannot keep that thing. If a random roll generates such a result, treat the result as “none” instead.
When a note includes the word “only,” the creature goes out of its way to collect treasure of the indicated type. Treat all results from that column as the indicated type of treasure.
It’s sometimes necessary to reroll until the right sort of item appears.
Using The Treasure Table
Cross-reference the level of the treasure on the left with the type of treasure. The level of the treasure is equal to the CR of the monsters in the encounter. A standard treasure (one that includes coins, goods, and items) requires three rolls, one for each category.
Encounter Level | Treasure per Encounter | Encounter Level | Treasure per Encounter |
---|---|---|---|
1 | 300 gp | 11 | 7,500 gp |
2 | 600 gp | 12 | 9,800 gp |
3 | 900 gp | 13 | 13,000 gp |
4 | 1,200 gp | 14 | 17,000 gp |
5 | 1,600 gp | 15 | 22,000 gp |
6 | 2,000 gp | 16 | 28,000 gp |
7 | 2,600 gp | 17 | 36,000 gp |
8 | 3,400 gp | 18 | 47,000 gp |
9 | 4,500 gp | 19 | 61,000 gp |
10 | 5,800 gp | 20 | 80,000 gp |
On average, the PCs should earn one treasure suitable to their level for each encounter they overcome.
Type | Average Result |
---|---|
Gem | 275 gp |
Art object | 1,100 gp |
Mundane item | 350 gp |
Minor magic item | 1,000 gp |
Medium magic item | 10,000 gp |
Major magic item | 40,000 gp |
Level | d% | Coins | d% | Goods | d% | Items |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1st | 01-14 | -- | 01-90 | -- | 01-71 | -- |
15-29 | 1d6 × 1,000 cp | 91-95 | 1 gem | 72-95 | 1 mundane | |
30-52 | 1d8 × 100 sp | 96-100 | 1 art | 96-100 | 1 minor | |
53-95 | 2d8 × 10 gp | |||||
96-100 | 1d4 × 10 pp | |||||
2nd | 01-13 | -- | 01-81 | -- | 01-49 | -- |
14-23 | 1d10 × 1,000 cp | 82-95 | 1d3 gems | 50-85 | 1 mundane | |
24-43 | 2d10 × 100 sp | 96-100 | 1d3 art | 86-100 | 1 minor | |
44-95 | 4d10 × 10 gp | |||||
96-100 | 2d8 × 10 pp | |||||
3rd | 01-11 | -- | 01-77 | -- | 01-49 | -- |
12-21 | 2d10 × 1,000 cp | 78-95 | 1d3 gems | 50-79 | 1d3 mundane | |
22-41 | 4d8 × 100 sp | 96-100 | 1d3 art | 80-100 | 1 minor | |
42-95 | 1d4 × 100 gp | |||||
96-100 | 1d10 × 10 pp | |||||
4th | 01-11 | -- | 01-70 | -- | 01-42 | -- |
12-21 | 3d10 × 1,000 cp | 71-95 | 1d4 gems | 43-62 | 1d4 mundane | |
22-41 | 4d12 × 1,000 sp | 96-100 | 1d3 art | 63-100 | 1 minor | |
42-95 | 1d6 × 100 gp | |||||
96-100 | 1d8 × 10 pp | |||||
5th | 01-10 | -- | 01-60 | -- | 01-57 | -- |
11-19 | 1d4 × 10,000 cp | 61-95 | 1d4 gems | 58-67 | 1d4 mundane | |
20-38 | 1d6 × 1,000 sp | 96-100 | 1d4 art | 68-100 | 1d3 minor | |
39-95 | 1d8 × 100 gp | |||||
96-100 | 1d10 × 10 pp | |||||
6th | 01-10 | -- | 01-56 | -- | 01-54 | -- |
11-18 | 1d6 × 10,000 cp | 57-92 | 1d4 gems | 55-59 | 1d4 mundane | |
19-37 | 1d8 × 1,000 sp | 93-100 | 1d4 art | 60-99 | 1d3 minor | |
38-95 | 1d10 × 100 gp | 100 | 1 medium | |||
96-100 | 1d12 × 10 pp | |||||
7th | 01-11 | -- | 01-48 | -- | 01-51 | -- |
12-18 | 1d10 × 10,000 cp | 49-88 | 1d4 gems | 52-97 | 1d3 minor | |
19-35 | 1d12 × 1,000 sp | 89-100 | 1d4 art | 98-100 | 1 medium | |
36-93 | 2d6 × 100 gp | |||||
94-100 | 3d4 × 10 pp | |||||
8th | 01-10 | -- | 01-45 | -- | 01-48 | -- |
11-15 | 1d12 × 10,000 cp | 46-85 | 1d6 gems | 49-96 | 1d4 minor | |
16-29 | 2d6 × 1,000 sp | 86-100 | 1d4 art | 97-100 | 1 medium | |
30-87 | 2d8 × 100 gp | |||||
88-100 | 3d6 × 10 pp | |||||
9th | 01-10 | -- | 01-40 | -- | 01-43 | -- |
11-15 | 2d6 × 10,000 cp | 41-80 | 1d8 gems | 44-91 | 1d4 minor | |
16-29 | 2d8 × 1,000 sp | 81-100 | 1d4 art | 92-100 | 1 medium | |
30-85 | 5d4 × 100 gp | |||||
86-100 | 2d12 × 10 pp | |||||
10th | 01-10 | -- | 01-35 | -- | 01-40 | -- |
11-24 | 2d10 × 1,000 sp | 36-79 | 1d8 gems | 41-88 | 1d4 minor | |
25-79 | 6d4 × 100 gp | 80-100 | 1d6 art | 89-99 | 1 medium | |
80-100 | 5d6 × 10 pp | 100 | 1 major | |||
11th | 01-08 | -- | 01-24 | -- | 01-31 | -- |
09-14 | 3d10 × 1,000 sp | 25-74 | 1d10 gems | 32-84 | 1d4 minor | |
15-75 | 4d8 × 100 gp | 75-100 | 1d6 art | 85-98 | 1 medium | |
76-100 | 4d10 × 10 pp | 99-100 | 1 major | |||
12th | 01-08 | -- | 01-17 | -- | 01-27 | -- |
09-14 | 3d12 × 1,000 sp | 18-70 | 1d10 gems | 28-82 | 1d6 minor | |
15-75 | 1d4 × 1,000 gp | 71-100 | 1d8 art | 83-97 | 1 medium | |
76-100 | 1d4 × 100 pp | 98-100 | 1 major | |||
13th | 01-08 | -- | 01-11 | -- | 01-19 | -- |
09-75 | 1d4 × 1,000 gp | 12-66 | 1d12 gems | 20-73 | 1d6 minor | |
76-100 | 1d10 × 100 pp | 67-100 | 1d10 art | 74-95 | 1 medium | |
96-100 | 1 major | |||||
14th | 01-08 | -- | 01-11 | -- | 01-19 | -- |
09-75 | 1d6 × 1,000 gp | 12-66 | 2d8 gems | 20-58 | 1d6 minor | |
76-100 | 1d12 × 100 pp | 67-100 | 2d6 art | 59-92 | 1 medium | |
93-100 | 1 major | |||||
15th | 01-03 | -- | 01-09 | -- | 01-11 | -- |
04-74 | 1d8 × 1,000 gp | 10-65 | 2d10 gems | 12-46 | 1d10 minor | |
75-100 | 3d4 × 100 pp | 66-100 | 2d8 art | 47-90 | 1 medium | |
91-100 | 1 major | |||||
16th | 01-03 | -- | 01-07 | -- | 01-40 | -- |
04-74 | 1d12 × 1,000 gp | 08-64 | 4d6 gems | 41-46 | 1d10 minor | |
75-100 | 3d4 × 100 pp | 65-100 | 2d10 art | 47-90 | 1d3 medium | |
91-100 | 1 major | |||||
17th | 01-03 | -- | 01-04 | -- | 01-33 | -- |
04-68 | 3d4 × 1,000 gp | 05-63 | 4d8 gems | 34-83 | 1d3 medium | |
69-100 | 2d10 × 100 pp | 64-100 | 3d8 art | 84-100 | 1 major | |
18th | 01-02 | -- | 01-04 | -- | 01-24 | -- |
03-65 | 3d6 × 1,000 gp | 05-54 | 3d12 gems | 25-80 | 1d4 medium | |
66-100 | 5d4 × 100 pp | 55-100 | 3d10 art | 81-100 | 1 major | |
19th | 01-02 | -- | 01-03 | -- | 01-04 | -- |
03-65 | 3d8 × 1,000 gp | 04-50 | 6d6 gems | 05-70 | 1d4 medium | |
66-100 | 3d10 × 100 pp | 51-100 | 6d6 art | 71-100 | 1 major | |
20th | 01-02 | -- | 01-02 | -- | 01-25 | -- |
03-65 | 4d8 × 1,000 gp | 03-38 | 4d10 gems | 26-65 | 1d4 medium | |
66-100 | 4d10 × 100 pp | 39-100 | 7d6 art | 66-100 | 1d3 major |
For treasures above 20th level, use the 20th-level row and then add a number of random major items.
Level | Magic Items |
---|---|
21st | +1 |
22nd | +2 |
23rd | +4 |
24th | +6 |
Level | Magic Items |
---|---|
25th | +9 |
26th | +12 |
27th | +17 |
Level | Magic Items |
---|---|
28th | +23 |
29th | +31 |
30th | +42 |
d% | Value | Average | Examples |
---|---|---|---|
01-25 | 4d4 gp | 10 gp | Banded, eye, or moss agate; azurite; blue quartz; hematite; lapis lazuli; malachite; obsidian; rhodochrosite; tiger eye turquoise; freshwater (irregular) pearl |
26-50 | 2d4 × 10 gp | 50 gp | Bloodstone; carnelian; chalcedony; chrysoprase; citrine; iolite, jasper; moonstone; onyx; peridot; rock crystal (clear quartz); sard; sardonyx; rose, smoky, or star rose quartz; zircon |
51-70 | 4d4 × 10 gp | 100 gp | Amber; amethyst; chrysoberyl; coral; red or brown-green garnet; jade; jet; white, golden, pink, or silver pearl; red spinel, red-brown or deep green spinel; tourmaline |
71-90 | 2d4 × 100 gp | 500 gp | Alexandrite; aquamarine; violet garnet; black pearl; deep blue spinel; golden yellow topaz |
91-99 | 4d4 × 100 gp | 1,000 gp | Emerald; white, black, or fire opal; blue sapphire; fiery yellow or rich purple corundum; blue or black star sapphire; star ruby |
100 | 2d4 × 1,000 gp | 5,000 gp | Clearest bright green emerald; blue-white, canary, pink, brown, or blue diamond; jacinth |
d% | Value | Average | Examples |
---|---|---|---|
01-10 | 1d10 × 10 gp | 55 gp | Silver ewer; carved bone or ivory statuette; finely wrought small gold bracelet |
11-25 | 3d6 × 10 gp | 105 gp | Cloth of gold vestments; black velvet mask with numerous citrines; silver chalice with lapis lazuli gems |
26-40 | 1d6 × 100 gp | 350 gp | Large well-done wool tapestry; brass mug with jade inlays |
41-50 | 1d10 × 100 gp | 550 gp | Silver comb with moonstones; silver-plated steel longsword with jet jewel in hilt |
51-60 | 2d6 × 100 gp | 700 gp | Carved harp of exotic wood with ivory inlay and zircon gems; solid gold idol (10 lb.) |
61-70 | 3d6 × 100 gp | 1,050 gp | Gold dragon comb with red garnet eye; gold and topaz bottle stopper cork; ceremonial electrum dagger with a star ruby in the pommel |
71-80 | 4d6 × 100 gp | 1,400 gp | Eyepatch with mock eye of sapphire and moonstone; fire opal pendant on a fine gold chain; old masterpiece painting |
81-85 | 5d6 × 100 gp | 1,750 gp | Embroidered silk and velvet mantle with numerous moonstones; sapphire pendant on gold chain |
86-90 | 1d4 × 1,000 gp | 2,500 gp | Embroidered and bejeweled glove; jeweled anklet; gold music box |
91-95 | 1d6 × 1,000 gp | 3,500 gp | Golden circlet with four aquamarines; a string of small pink pearls (necklace) |
96-99 | 2d4 × 1,000 gp | 5,000 gp | Jeweled gold crown; jeweled electrum ring |
100 | 2d6 × 1,000 gp | 7,000 gp | Gold and ruby ring; gold cup set with emeralds |
d% | Mundane Item |
---|---|
01-17 | Alchemical item |
01-12 | Alchemist’s fire (1d4 flasks, 20 gp each) |
13-24 | Acid (2d4 flasks, 10 gp each) |
25-36 | Smokesticks (1d4 sticks, 20 gp each) |
37-48 | Holy water (1d4 flasks, 25 gp each) |
49-62 | Antitoxin (1d4 doses, 50 gp each) |
63-74 | Everburning torch |
75-88 | Tanglefoot bags (1d4 bags, 50 gp each) |
89-100 | Thunderstones (1d4 stones, 30 gp each) |
18-50 | Armor (roll d%: 01-10 = Small, 11-100 = Medium) |
01-12 | Chain shirt (100 gp) |
13-18 | Masterwork studded leather (175 gp) |
19-26 | Breastplate (200 gp) |
27-34 | Banded mail (250 gp) |
35-54 | Half-plate (600 gp) |
55-80 | Full plate (1,500 gp) |
81-90 | Darkwood |
01-50 | Buckler (205 gp) |
51-100 | Shield (257 gp) |
91-100 | Masterwork shield |
01-17 | Buckler (165 gp) |
18-40 | Light wooden shield (153 gp) |
41-60 | Light steel shield (159 gp) |
61-83 | Heavy wooden shield (157 gp) |
84-100 | Heavy steel shield (170 gp) |
51-83 | Weapons |
01-50 | Masterwork common melee weapon |
51-70 | Masterwork uncommon weapon |
71-100 | Masterwork common ranged weapon |
84-100 | Tools and gear |
01-03 | Backpack, empty (2 gp) |
04-06 | Crowbar (2 gp) |
07-11 | Lantern, bullseye (12 gp) |
12-16 | Lock, simple (20 gp) |
17-21 | Lock, average (40 gp) |
22-28 | Lock, good (80 gp) |
29-35 | Lock, superior (150 gp) |
36-40 | Manacles, masterwork (50 gp) |
41-43 | Mirror, small steel (10 gp) |
44-46 | Rope, silk (50 ft.) (10 gp) |
47-53 | Spyglass (1,000 gp) |
54-58 | Artisan’s tools, masterwork (55 gp) |
59-63 | Climber’s kit (80 gp) |
64-68 | Disguise kit (50 gp) |
69-73 | Healer’s kit (50 gp) |
74-77 | Holy symbol, silver (25 gp) |
78-81 | Hourglass (25 gp) |
82-88 | Magnifying glass (100 gp) |
89-95 | Musical instrument, masterwork (100 gp) |
96-100 | Thieves’ tools, masterwork (50 gp) |
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- 1Falling
Falling
Falling Damage
The basic rule is simple: 1d6 points of damage per 10 feet fallen, to a maximum of 20d6.
If a character deliberately jumps instead of merely slipping or falling, the damage is the same but the first 1d6 is nonlethal damage. A DC 15 Jump check or DC 15 Tumble check allows the character to avoid any damage from the first 10 feet fallen and converts any damage from the second 10 feet to nonlethal damage. Thus, a character who slips from a ledge 30 feet up takes 3d6 damage. If the same character deliberately jumped, he takes 1d6 points of nonlethal damage and 2d6 points of lethal damage. And if the character leaps down with a successful Jump or Tumble check, he takes only 1d6 points of nonlethal damage and 1d6 points of lethal damage from the plunge.
Falls onto yielding surfaces (soft ground, mud) also convert the first 1d6 of damage to nonlethal damage. This reduction is cumulative with reduced damage due to deliberate jumps and the Jump skill.
Falling into Water
Falls into water are handled somewhat differently. If the water is at least 10 feet deep, the first 20 feet of falling do no damage. The next 20 feet do nonlethal damage (1d3 per 10-foot increment). Beyond that, falling damage is lethal damage (1d6 per additional 10-foot increment). How to delete dmg on mac.
Characters who deliberately dive into water take no damage on a successful DC 15 Swim check or DC 15 Tumble check, so long as the water is at least 10 feet deep for every 30 feet fallen. However, the DC of the check increases by 5 for every 50 feet of the dive.
Falling Objects
Just as characters take damage when they fall more than 10 feet, so too do they take damage when they are hit by falling objects.
Joe and mac caveman ninja free download. Also known as Caveman Ninja in the arcades, the Super NES version will be called Joe and Mac. The game itself however, will be exactly the same. Way back in the past, when men could hardly start fires and women were dragged around by their hair, there lived two extremely cool dudes, named Joe and Mac. Joe & Mac, also known as Caveman Ninja and Caveman Ninja: Joe & Mac, is a 1991 platform game released for arcades by Data East. It was later adapted for the Super NES, Mega Drive/Genesis, Nintendo Entertainment System, Game Boy, Amiga, Zeebo, Nintendo Switch, and PC. A great conversion from the hit arcade game of the same name, Joe and Mac: Caveman Ninja is a fun platform game starring to bumbling cavemen, Joe and Mac. After their “cave-babes” were kidnapped by rival gangs of Neanderthals, the cavemen ninja decide to strike back.
Objects that fall upon characters deal damage based on their weight and the distance they have fallen.
For each 200 pounds of an object's weight, the object deals 1d6 points of damage, provided it falls at least 10 feet. Distance also comes into play, adding an additional 1d6 points of damage for every 10-foot increment it falls beyond the first (to a maximum of 20d6 points of damage).
Objects smaller than 200 pounds also deal damage when dropped, but they must fall farther to deal the same damage. Use Table: Damage from Falling Objects to see how far an object of a given weight must drop to deal 1d6 points of damage.
Object Weight | Falling Distance |
---|---|
200-101 lb. | 20 ft. |
100-51 lb. | 30 ft. |
50-31 lb. | 40 ft. |
30-11 lb. | 50 ft. |
10-6 lb. | 60 ft. |
5-1 lb. | 70 ft. |
For each additional increment an object falls, it deals an additional 1d6 points of damage.Objects weighing less than 1 pound do not deal damage to those they land upon, no matter how far they have fallen.
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Pathfinder How To Calculate Dmg Free
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