Nightmask wrote:So apparently you miss the third option, that the prices given are in fact factoring in price reductions due to mass production, since you can turn out a lot of something and still have it be pretty pricey (just look at cars).
I already went through the 'third option' with Nekira - you going on about mass production is utterly pointless if it does not counter my main point - the price of the gun is too high!
Please no more mass production posts that lead to absolutely nothing new...
Uh no, the BOOKS make it quite clear that there are places where you can practically trip over laser rifles (look at the tables for the war on Tolkeen, there are options to run across entire gun caches completely unguarded). Of which none of that is going to have any particular bearing on the costs of things like laser rifles just like in RL people finding caches of guns or other items don't affect the market price of those items.
Could you give an example of the size of the cache found/number of guns found in RL that your refering to? If it's like ten or so, I'm not going to consider it much of an example of not affecting the market.
Guns are plentiful RL and yet the prices still remain fairly constant and at a not very cheap level.
You could probably buy a gun for the same price as a couch.
If you think a couch in rifts costs as much as a laser rifle, okay, you begin to make a point (atleast for your idea of rifts couches)
Otherwise its a false comparison.
So even if every Brodkil is carrying a laser rifle and every laser rifle is recovered intact by a PC group it's going to have zero impact on the price of laser rifles on the open market.
You were talking about tolkien battlefields filled with gats before, not what the PC's do.
Really, you're obsessing on the price at which Laser Rifles are sold
More to the point I don't obsess on the things you obsess on. That is, if you thought it fine to bring up obsession, it must be fine to mention you obsess as well, right?
and in spite of the evidence against it insisting that it must mean that the weapons are rare
Okay, I think here is the big problem - you keep reading 'rare' into my argument and so do others.
I do not care whether its rare.
I care about
A. Book price
B. That dudes with laser rifles will use the damn things to stop others from taking them - ten dudes with a 3D6 MD laser rifle is kind like 3D6x10 MD! Almost like a boom gun! No, I don't imagine it's that easy for brodkil to steal these - if the brodkil can come en masse, why can't (especially given how much you rant the guns aren't rare) can't the gun owners be en masse as well? 6D6x10 MD!! Trying the 'oh, the brodkil the PC's always run into were the lucky ones who found just a few dudes and outnumbered them' runs into my sense of contrivance.
or that somehow used items being resold would have massive economic impact which again is not a given nor supported by the book material.
If the text says the people are dying of thirst and gives no hint of them drinking the water, they have to die of thirst. That's the argument, is it?
I know you minimised it down to just the PC's doing it at this point in your argument, so as to make the only resell effect you're talking about a minute one. If it were just the PC's reselling or gathering weapons, I would grant your point.
If you find the NPC you're using against the PC weak then given them the gear commonly expected of them, mages are going to be carrying around mainly magical items and Brodkil are going to be carrying around mainly technological items.
No, they are going to be carrying around what they could get - not necessarily what they want.
I think you and Nekira play in a way where NPC's have all the things they want. Okay. I just don't want to play that way. Call that a dreadful stubborn thing if you want.
If your motivation is to always keep the PC broke by ensuring they never have anything they can resell like keeping Brodkil basically naked in spite of them being a tech-using/favoring race well then there really isn't any room for a reasonable discussion since you're always going to find excuses for why 'oh no that's just too rare/impossible for them to have' even when they should have relatively easy access to it
I know this is your pet peeve. Unless you state how much money you'd want per session or combat or whatever, this sort of complaint is just annoying. It's you as a player, not your PC, who thinks you're owed something in real life as to what you can fill out in your credits section on your character sheet - okay, tell us exactly how much?
I started a campaign with the goal of 5th level - got there and then wanted to continue, so the next goal is 9th and one of them is very close. My players know what they want and told me - they wanted to continue.
If I were less confident though, I think it would be a not nice way to treat an unconfident GM by going on about game money as if something bad is happening, but never saying how much you actually want.
(after all you expect the people robbing other people to be better armed than those who aren't going around robbing people).
I'm not sure what this means? Yes, I do - you expect the robbers to be less well armed and armoured than those they rob? Is this a side effect of any number of RPG's and CRPG's where when you fight bandits in the woods your PC glows with magic crap while the robber has like a club or some crud?