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  1. Battlegrinder

    What screams "the author didn't think of the implications"?

    There’s a scene in 2 that makes it clear he's vastly underpaying. A normal high quality suit costs several thousand dollars, let alone a custom tailored bulletproof one. And he buys two of them. Presuming he buys the guns with a coin, you could maybe get the pistol and rifle for that, but the...
  2. Battlegrinder

    What screams "the author didn't think of the implications"?

    Whatever value they have isn't monetary, because what they buy isn't equivalent. They're just a token to represent something else, like favors or influence or something.
  3. Battlegrinder

    What screams "the author didn't think of the implications"?

    Gold is measured in troy ounces, like most precious metals, and most gold counts countain one troy ounce of gold. Which is currently worth $1881 per ounce. A comfortable amount, but everything Wick buys with them costs far, far more.
  4. Battlegrinder

    What screams "the author didn't think of the implications"?

    I don't think it's supposed to be currency, it's more like they're favors or something he's "cashing in".
  5. Battlegrinder

    What screams "the author didn't think of the implications"?

    That's more of just being an evil GM bending the rules to try and kill the players. Tucker's Kobolds is more just making the monsters fight smart against the party and using every advantage they can get against them.
  6. Battlegrinder

    What screams "the author didn't think of the implications"?

    The pathfinder version autokills anything with 3 or fewer HD, so the answer depends on how densely the goblins are packed. But citing cloudkill kinda underscores the idea behind Goblin slayer. That's a fairly high level spell, players with access to that are well past the point where they're...
  7. Battlegrinder

    What screams "the author didn't think of the implications"?

    Goblin Slayer is clearly a setting where the author came up with the core idea of the Slayer and his character first, and then contorted the setting around him, even if that meant his character could only be consistent with that vision at the cost of the world being less consistent.
  8. Battlegrinder

    What screams "the author didn't think of the implications"?

    Huh, no one mentioned TLJ hyperspace ramming. That's new. Ok, to be fair here, there are cleric builds and archetypes that are weapon and equipment light (pathfinder's cloistered cleric comes to mind), and if you botch that starting wealth roll, you can end up with pretty crap gear. I think...
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