Spazmo
Erudite
GURPS was going to be used for Fallout, but then Interplay lost the liscence, which prompted Tim Cain & Co. to create SPECIAL.
Not true.Saint_Proverbius said:Chinese noble women were taught to fight with two long swords.
In the infamous NWN you can get as many as 8 ACShield AC bonus isn't that much.. Maybe 1-3 extra AC, but that's not going to do much when you get twice the number of attacks.
You havent read the 3E manual carefully enough Im afraid SaintYou're talking low levels here. At higher levels, those disadvantages are lessened with the right feats. A higher level fighter designed with dual wielding in mind should be able to bring down an equal level fighter that's using a shield and sword just because the damage rate for the dual wielder is higher.
Indeed dual wielding does not lower your to hit that farIbbz said:I agree exactly. But the thing is they cant. Even at high levels, taking every possible feat that improves dual wielding {All three of them} you'll still end up with -2 to hit in both hands.
morenoise said:Not true.Saint_Proverbius said:Chinese noble women were taught to fight with two long swords.
Your bias that ALL Chinese know Konfu which mainly stems from Chinese movies
is incorrect.
All my life have I lived in that damned country and ive NEVER heared that! :wink:
At what level do you read Chinese, Crap?Constipated Craprunner said:Hehe.
Reading English at a II grade level, huh? Hehe.
These are the people who will replace our superpower?
XJEDX said:At what level do you read Chinese, Crap?Constipated Craprunner said:Hehe.
Reading English at a II grade level, huh? Hehe.
These are the people who will replace our superpower?
J
Heh, Rolemaster... I still like to look at the attack tables. Each weapon has its own, and there are 2200 entries in each table, which fits into one page! I like also the critical strike tables... e.g. Tiny Animal Critical Strike Table...Walks with the Snails said:(I've suffered through Rolemaster enough to realize this ).
I was involved in an awesome 3E campaign that only lasted three sessions. Haven't played since then, but I do like the books a lot. I justify keeping them as a possible resource for a good 3E CRPG, which with ToEE on the way, my justification might pan out.MaullusKaherdin said:Who has yet to play PnP D&D, but for some reason can't stop buying the books.
XJEDX said:Uhh...Rosh, that's not a strawman. A strawman is when you base an argument on tearing apart a poorly constructed charicature of what you're arguing against.
And if we're going back to the argument, Prov said that he read that Chinese noble women were trained to fight with two swords, MoreNoise said (perhaps poorly) that he had never heard that, and he (MoreNoise) had even grown up in China; he then related it to the well-known stereotype that "Asians all know martial arts." Maybe my reading comprehension is at fault, but I don't the point at which you are accusing MoreNoise of needing to brush up on his reading comprehension.
Your bias that ALL Chinese know Konfu which mainly stems from Chinese movies is incorrect.
Well, I disagree. You had already made the point about reading comprehension, and CC was just jumping on the train for no constructive reason.Rosh said:CC's remark doesn't fall into this as he pointed out what it apparently was - someone making an exaggeration over a statement. Personally, I thought he was too lenient in it.
If that really were the case, then it's a red herring, not a strawman.Now try to find where Prov even remotely implied that. In fact, in the context originally presented, the above quote is a straw man in itself if the poster did have some comprehension of English and knowingly made such a bullshit remark. Please read the original posts in question if you need to.Your bias that ALL Chinese know Konfu which mainly stems from Chinese movies is incorrect.
XJEDX said:Well, I disagree. You had already made the point about reading comprehension, and CC was just jumping on the train for no constructive reason.
If that really were the case, then it's a red herring, not a strawman.Now try to find where Prov even remotely implied that. In fact, in the context originally presented, the above quote is a straw man in itself if the poster did have some comprehension of English and knowingly made such a bullshit remark. Please read the original posts in question if you need to.Your bias that ALL Chinese know Konfu which mainly stems from Chinese movies is incorrect.
Here's a useful guide to logical fallacies:
http://www.nizkor.org/features/fallacies/
As I stated before, I didn't so much attack CC as I just slapped him a little because I thought he was just being extra-obnoxious by chiming in on the point you'd already made about reading comprehension. Being that I wasn't arguing, I don't feel implicated in the logical fallacy you're presenting. Otherwise I'm really not invested in the argument between Prov & MoreNoise, or you & MoreNoise.Rosh said:3. Person "XJEDX" attacks position "At what level do you read Chinese, Crap?"
No doubt i'm the straw man you are referring to.Dammit, I get sick of that straw man.
I do think i'm a quantifier over that matter"Lets see how well you speak X language!" or "How well do you speak X language?"(in context of opposition) is so full of bullshit, especially when pertaining to the topic of someone making a fuss over what they assumed was a total quantifier.
OK, that's my mistake.Let me break it down using their own example:
1. Person "Prov" has position "Chinese noble women were taught to fight with two long swords.".
2. Person "morenoise" presents position "Your bias that ALL Chinese know Konfu which mainly stems from Chinese movies is incorrect. " (which is a distorted version of "Chinese noble women were taught to fight with two long swords.").
3. Person "morenoise" attacks position "Your bias that ALL Chinese know Konfu which mainly stems from Chinese movies is incorrect. " (While there were warriors, there were also servants, etc. who weren't taught how to fight and therefore break that "ALL" quantifier. Please note that it is RELATED to the initial discussion point on factors of fighting skills and nationality, and that that "ALL Chinese" would be inclusive to nobles as well, but attacks a set up target.)
4. Therefore "Chinese noble women were taught to fight with two long swords." is false/incorrect/flawed.
OK, I've asked half a dozen of my classmates, but NO ONE had heard in the ShangMost commonly in the Shang Dynasty, there are many of the noble women who led armies and went into battle alongside men, often using the same methods of combat. Of a more recent time off the top of my memory, there was Shen Yunying (I've seen it written as Yun-Ying before, too), who succeeded her noble father when he was killed in battle, moving to lead them in his stead. Then there was the more famous Hau Mu-Lan (Mulan), who impersonated a man to replace her father in battle for 12 years