Functional Craft Item Rule (3.5e Variant Rule)

From Dungeons and Dragons Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
Homebrew.png
Author: Eiji-kun (talk)
Date Created: 6-22-11
Status: Complete
Editing: Clarity edits only please
 Ratings for this homebrew:
Average:
NA
/ 4

 1 users favored it (4/4).
 0 users liked it (3/4).
 0 were neutral on it (2/4).
 0 users disliked it (1/4).
 0 users opposed it (0/4).

RatingPending.png
Rate this article
Discuss this article


While not as problematic as crafting traps and more rarely used by PCs, crafting items with the craft skill has its share of problems. It's slow, it's terribly slow. It makes you wonder how the armies of nations arm themselves with full plate and shields when crafting such things takes weeks, months, years! And while "realistic" for a gritty world where all commoners work on dirt farms and they're lucky to see a piece of meat once a year, it's not very fun, and I dare argue it's not very D&D-like, not when you have wizards and fairies and golems, and especially not in more advanced settings like Eberron or anything where full plate and magic items aren't a once in a blue moon occurring. So, here's how you speed it up.

Functional Craft Item[edit]

This one is easy, you keep the normal rules, but you always measure it by daily progress, and you measure in gold. That is:

Your progress (check result × DC) is in gold pieces per day.

Everything else can be kept.

Effect on the Game[edit]

Unlike the rule which makes crafting traps easier, crafting other items is both more varied and more likely to have a market and a need for them. Everyone needs a shovel. Lots of people need swords. Plenty of people need clothes. Ultimately, this makes your average NPC richer. How much richer? ×70 more, which given that the average commoner makes an average 71 copper a day, means they now make 50 gold a day. It may seem like a huge number, but given just the basic need for living, buying food for themselves and their family, getting a home, paying taxes, and all those other boring things that PCs don't do because they're PCs, it's not bad. More importantly, the numbers are still low enough that even the best PC crafters will find that spending all day working on items generates a lot less money than simply adventuring, making crafting for profit a feeble venture at best.


Back to Main Page3.5e HomebrewVariant Rules


Eiji-kun's Homebrew (5605 Articles)
Eiji-kunv
AuthorEiji-kun +
Identifier3.5e Variant Rule +
Rated ByFluffykittens +
RatingRating Pending +
SummaryMake crafting items a viable option and not simply a waste of skill points. +
TitleFunctional Craft Item Rule +