Talk:Expanded Size Categories (3.5e Variant Rule)
Ratings[edit]
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Mecheye favors this article and rated it 4 of 4! |
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Having something beyond Colossal is pretty useful especially since things can get a LOT bigger than that.
Specifically when designing vehicles for later-era games such as Battleships, ending at Colossal simply doesn't cut it |
Cool
No rating this time. Instead, I just want to say that this is really cool and I plan to be using this in some of my future homebrew, supposing it can be finished. On that same note, I was wondering if I could lend aid in developing this rule. I was also wondering why you used such weird formatting for the carrying capacities. Why does it have to be 20^9? Can't it just be 5.12x10^11? -Hammerhead
- Why thank you. This actually needs finishing one day (I want to find out how to collapse the tables, otherwise this will be very large indeed), but the important ones are done. This is partly cribbed from the Immortal's Handbook, though I believe our scaling differs too.
- As far as the 20^9, if memory serves I remember picking up relative sizes of things from somewhere else, perhaps Wikipedia. Sadly math was my dump stat so I didn't bother fixing it lest I mess it up. Feel free to help! -- Eiji-kun (talk) 07:11, 3 December 2014 (UTC)
- You should just go ahead and let it be a big page, if you can't make it auto-collapse. Either that, or find a person who actually knows how to collapse things and get the information. Though, if you want, I could take your numbers and make them prettier. To help me help you, could you give me a comprehensive list of what each size you've already created is supposed to correspond to. Also, instead of having a series of individual tables, why not simply have it all be one table? Were you wanting to go with any particular formula for the tables? How would you feel about comments and footnotes that give the reader an idea of what's supposed to be going on? Should there be additional rules when a creature is large enough that a planet is an Ioun stone to them? (Planetary Ioun magic item: It's a magic satellite.) Just vomit all your thoughts out. -Hammerhead
- Eiji - add "mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" to the class declarations at the start of the table. Ex: {| class="zebra d20" -> {| class="zebra d20 mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" - Tarkisflux Talk 07:27, 3 December 2014 (UTC)
- Yocto - Neutrino
- Zepto - Proton
- Atto - Atom
- Femto - Smoke Particle
- Pico - Red Blood Cell
- Nano - Dust Particle
- Micro - Insect
- Standard - Human
- Macro - Mountain
- Mega - Planet
- Giga - Star
- Tera - Solar System
- Peta - Nebula
- Exa - Spiral Arm of a Galaxy
- Zetta - Galaxy
- Yotta - Supercluster
- I'm pretty sure this is accurate. The Nebula/Spiral Arm of Galaxy/Galaxy bit should probably be chopped up a bit into "Large Nebula"/"Spiral Arm of Milky Way Galaxy"/"Large Galaxy". It's difficult to get accurate parallels when we're talking about something that fills a noticeable portion of the visible universe. -Hammerhead
(RESET INDENT) Time to buckle up and stop being lazy, time to get to work. -- Eiji-kun (talk) 02:18, 18 January 2015 (UTC)
- I don't believe you succeeded at buckling down. :P My offer to adopt still stands, by the way. -Hammerhead
- Hey! Glad to see you've gotten this underway. Actually spent a fair portion of the last few days developing some rules for this. Now I'm wondering if you still plan to pass it over to me or if you wanna do it yourself. If the latter, would you like me to post what I've got? (You're probably just adding the subpages like you suggested, but I don't wanna move ahead if it's not clear.) -Hammerhead
- No problems here. It's actually nothing unusual, you may be able to determine the pattern here. Each size doubles the last, and so the numbers and categories get pretty crazy. Though I've made up to Yotta, I imagine due to the exponential rate of growth we'll probably end early when we hit "size of Observable Universe". It goes the other way in reverse, growing exponentially smaller and smaller too until "Planck Scale".
- Well, I'm pretty good at crunching numbers, and right now, I'm assigning an object to each size category that would be that size category, for example:
- Macrofine - Redwood Tree
- Macrodiminutive - Eiffel Tower
- Macrotiny - Empire State Building
- Macrosmall - Small Mountain
- Macromedium - Mount Vesuvius
- Macrolarge - The Matterhorn
- Macrohuge - Mount Everest
- Macrogargantuan - Island of Aruba
- Macrocolossal - Singapore
- Macrotitanic - French Polynesia
- I'm having trouble at the PETA stage. If I can find objects up to Petalarge, I'll be fine, after that, it's clear sailing, but finding things that are 2294 au across is difficult. You get to the size of the heliosphere, and then there's a huge gap before you get to the size of the Stingray Nebula. I'm still looking, and I've even asked an astrophysics Ph. D. at the local university to try and help me find things. But I went ahead and calculated the largest size in this scale: Yottatitanic, because of your concern, and it comes out at a diameter of 1,678 Mpc, and the observable universe is 8,000 Mpc, so you could actually fit about 100 Yottatitanics into the observable universe and they would still have room to wiggle and move past one another. You have questions about biology and gravitational effects, but, hey, fantasy world.
- I'm planning to incorporate a few optional rules into this page as well, called "size disparity" and "relative size". Don't have them well defined at the moment, but they'll be fun to play around with. -Hammerhead
(RESET INDENT) Sounds like you have a plan. Thank you in advance for crunching numbers for me. I'm surprised, I figured the exponential scaling would hit singularity and we'd be at the universe in no time. Man, the universe really is huge.
I await to hear about your optional rules. Cool. -- Eiji-kun (talk) 02:34, 6 February 2015 (UTC)
- I appreciate that you're taking the trouble to ask an astrophysicist. I want to see this chart list for science reasons as much as anything else now, which warms my poor heart. Thanks Hammerhead. - Tarkisflux Talk 02:50, 6 February 2015 (UTC)
- Oh, I'll be posting the whole thing when it's done. In the meantime, check out my piecemeal construction of the first half of the PETA scale. If someone can check these numbers, make sure I got them correct, it would be much appreciated.
- Teratitanic - Heliosphere (143 au to 286 au)
- Petafine - ProPlyD d053-717 (286 au to 573 au)
- Petadiminutive - ProPlyD L1157 (573 au to 1147 au)
- Petatiny - ProPlyD Beta Pictoris (1147 au to 2294 au)
- Petasmall - L1551-IRS5 Circumstellar Envelope (2294 au to 4588 au)
- Petamedium - Herbig-Haro Object 34 (4588 au to 9176 au)
- Petalarge - Stingray Nebula (9176 au to 18352 au)
- I gave myself a splitting headache wading through a lot of obscure papers today, so I'm not sure this is 100% accurate, but I'm fairly certain that not many people will be able to tell me that it's not accurate. -Hammerhead
(RESET INDENT (because I am not indenting this entire list, damnit!)) Here it is, as promised, the full list of size categories accord to this scale. As you can see, most of the smaller categories are left with simple ranges. This is because there are no known objects in our universe that exist in those size categories, and I know this as a fact, because we looked for those things pretty hard. Of course, if someone else can find something of appropriate size, I'll gladly update the list. Also, the smallest size of a Yoctofine is still 3,827,000,000,000 times larger than the Planck Length. (3.8 quadrillion!)
- Yoctofine - 62-125 yoctometers
- Yoctodiminutive - 125-250 yoctometers
- Yoctotiny - 250-500 yoctometers
- Yoctosmall - 500-1000 yoctometers
- Yoctomedium - 1-2 zeptometers
- Yoctolarge - 2-4 zeptometers
- Yoctohuge - 20 GeV Neutrino
- Yoctogargantuan - 250 GeV Neutrino
- Yoctocolossal - 16-31 zeptometers
- Yoctotitanic - 31-62 zeptometers
- Zeptofine - 62-125 zeptometers
- Zeptodiminutive - 125-250 zeptometers
- Zeptotiny - 250-500 zeptometers
- Zeptosmall - 500-1000 zeptometers
- Zeptomedium - 1-2 attometers
- Zeptolarge - 2-4 attometers
- Zeptohuge - 4-8 attometers
- Zeptogargantuan - 8-16 attometers
- Zeptocolossal - 16-31 attometers
- Zeptotitanic - 31-62 attometers
- Attofine - 62-125 attometers
- Attodiminutive - 125-250 attometers
- Attotiny - 250-500 attometers
- Attosmall - 500-1000 attometers
- Attomedium - Proton
- Attolarge - Lithium Nucleus
- Attohuge - Chlorine Nucleus
- Attogargantuan - Uranium Nucleus
- Attocolossal - 16-31 femtometers
- Attotitanic - 31-62 femtometers
- Femtofine - 62-125 femtometers
- Femtodiminutive - 125-250 femtometers
- Femtotiny - 250-500 femtometers
- Femtosmall - 500-1000 femtometers
- Femtomedium - Wavelength of Gamma Rays (300 EHz)
- Femtolarge - Compton Wavelength of Electron
- Femtohuge - Wavelength of Gamma Rays (75 EHz)
- Femtogargantuan - Wavelength of X-rays (30 EHz)
- Femtocolossal - Wavelength of X-rays (7.5 EHz)
- Femtotitanic - Hydrogen Atom (Empirical)
- Picofine - Oxygen Atom
- Picodiminutive - Carbon Atom
- Picotiny - Diamond Cell
- Picosmall - Quartz Cell
- Picomedium - Nucleotide Adenine
- Picolarge - Phospholipid
- Picohuge - Hemoglobin
- Picogargantuan - Porcine Circovirus
- Picocolossal - Rhinovirus
- Picotitanic - Hepatitis Virus
- Nanofine - Flu Virus
- Nanodiminutive - Rabies Virus
- Nanotiny - Wavelength of Visible Light (Violet-Green)
- Nanosmall - Wavelength of Visible Light (Yellow-Red)
- Nanomedium - Lead Dust Particle
- Nanolarge - E. Coli
- Nanohuge - X Chromosome
- Nanogargantuan - Red Blood Cell
- Nanocolossal - Skin Cell
- Nanotitanic - Human Egg
- Microfine - Dust Particle
- Microdiminutive - Dust Mite
- Microtiny - Tardigrade
- Microsmall - Fairyfly
- Micromedium - Flea
- Microlarge - Mealybug
- Microhuge - Whirligig Beetle
- Microgargantuan - Mill Moth
- Microcolossal - Garden Spider
- Microtitanic - Tarantula Hawk Wasp
- Fine - Hummingbird
- Diminutive - Bluebird
- Tiny - Cat
- Small - Dog
- Medium - Human
- Large - Horse
- Huge - Elephant
- Gargantuan - Giant Squid
- Colossal - Whale
- Titanic - Brazil Nut Tree
- Macrofine - Redwood Tree
- Macrodiminutive - Eiffel Tower
- Macrotiny - Empire State Building
- Macrosmall - Small Mountain
- Macromedium - Mount Vesuvius
- Macrolarge - The Matterhorn
- Macrohuge - Mount Everest
- Macrogargantuan - Island of Aruba
- Macrocolossal - Singapore
- Macrotitanic - French Polynesia
- Megafine - Isreal
- Megadiminutive - Panama
- Megatiny - Italy
- Megasmall - Egypt
- Megamedium - India
- Megalarge - Canada
- Megahuge - Indian Ocean
- Megagargantuan - Earth
- Megacolossal - Kepler-22b
- Megatitanic - Uranus
- Gigafine - Jupiter
- Gigadiminutive - Teide 1
- Gigatiny - Lalande 21185
- Gigasmall - Sun
- Gigamedium - Sirius
- Gigalarge - Beta Canis Minoris
- Gigahuge - RR Lyrae
- Gigagargantuan - Pollux
- Gigacolossal - Arcturus
- Gigatitanic - Aldebaran
- Terafine - Rigel A
- Teradiminuitive - Deneb
- Teratiny - Rho Cassiopeiae
- Terasmall - Antares
- Teramedium - UY Scuti
- Teralarge - Jupiter's Orbit
- Terahuge - Saturn's Orbit
- Teragargantuan - Uranus's Orbit
- Teracolossal - Kuiper Belt
- Teratitanic - Heliosphere
- Petafine - ProPlyD d053-717
- Petadiminutive - ProPlyD L1157
- Petatiny - ProPlyD Beta Pictoris
- Petasmall - L1551-IRS5 Circumstellar Envelope
- Petamedium - Herbig-Haro Object 34
- Petalarge - Stingray Nebula
- Petahuge - Eskimo Nebula
- Petagargantuan - Owl Nebula
- Petacolossal - Butterfly Nebula
- Petatitanic - Eye of God Nebula
- Exafine - Crab Nebula
- Exadiminutive - Cocoon Nebula
- Exatiny - Orion Nebula
- Exasmall - Cave Nebula
- Examedium - Rosette Nebula
- Exalarge - Omega Centauri
- Exahuge - Carina Nebula
- Exagargantuan - Tarantula Nebula
- Exacolossal - Leo T Dwarf Galaxy
- Exatitanic - Hercules Dwarf Galaxy
- Zettafine - Small Magellanic Cloud
- Zettadiminutive - Large Magellanic Cloud
- Zettatiny - Mirarch's Ghost
- Zettasmall - Sombrero Galaxy
- Zettamedium - Milky Way
- Zettalarge - Andromeda Galaxy
- Zettahuge - Cygnus A Galaxy (jets)
- Zettagargantuan - Virgo A Galaxy
- Zettacolossal - Hercules A Galaxy (jets)
- Zettatitanic - Local Group
- Yottafine - Maffei Group
- Yottadiminutive - Virgo Cluster
- Yottatiny - Average Void
- Yottasmall - Aztec-3 Protocluster
- Yottamedium - Virgo Supercluster
- Yottalarge - Newfound Blob
- Yottahuge - Laniakea Supercluster
- Yottagargantuan - Pisces-Cetus Supercluster Complex
- Yottacolossal - Horologium Supercluster
- Yottatitanic - Huge LQG
Enjoy geeking out! -Hammerhead
- GGRHZEJSATVCIOPBZ#^*][€+{€?~\,^=SVDYHXEGC!!!!!...
- ...Apparently I have to indent it for it to display correctly. -Hammerhead.
- I think it's time to once again bring up the (not really an) issue of not being able to rate Talk pages. I don't think it would take long for this to be Community Favorite. --Undead_Knave (talk) 21:52, 9 February 2015 (UTC)
- Eh, I can't really get behind this. If it has stats, that generally means you can/want to kill it at some point (see why they statted up gods, but not the Lady of Pain). But most of the stuff on this scale seems more like DM fiat puzzle-monster type stuff, not something you actually kill. As such, I don't really see the point of it. I mean, you're not going to kill something the size of a microbe by sticking a sword into it or the size of a planet by blasting it with fireballs. --Ghostwheel (talk) 11:16, 10 February 2015 (UTC)
space and size[edit]
not entirely sure how space and size actually interact in dnd, with monsters 100 feet long curling up into a 30 foot square, but with things like singapore being macrocolossal, and thus having a space of a 12 mile square, while in reality singapore has an area of 279 square miles. compared to the 144 square miles of space given to it, its obvious that it doesnt fit. of course, thats less than double the space given, and size categories generally represent a doubling of size, which really begs the question of how to represent the space of creatures at the border of one size category and another. Dr.Drako (talk) 19:44, 24 June 2019 (MDT)