TheBladeMasta wrote:
I always though of it that elves age and learn as fast as every other race, but their aging slows right down once they hit their teens so it takes them 250 years to age as much as a human would in 80.
Well, I did it, I crunched some numbers. Brace yourself...
Code:
Yng HEY Vnr Playtime LISN
centaur 9 0.5625 80 71 .95945945945946
drow 101 6.3125 275 174 2.35135135135135
dwarf 41 2.5625 200 159 2.14864864864865
elf 101 6.3125 275 174 2.35135135135135
giant 15 0.9375 85 70 .94594594594595
gnome 62 3.875 200 138 1.86486486486486
gryphon 3 0.1875 65 62 .83783783783784
helf 17 1.0625 150 133 1.7972972972973
halfl 26 1.625 110 84 1.13513513513514
human 16 1 90 74 1
sprite 33 2.0625 180 147 1.98648648648649
mino 12 0.75 85 73 .98648648648649
All units are years.
Just the help age table with two new columns: HEY, the Human Equivalency in Years of the 'maturation' time of a character (the time before we play them,) and LISN, Life In Standard Notation (the time we get to play them.)
Looking at this chart, we see that from young to venerable, sprites age in about 2 years what humans age in 1. The maturation rates from birth to young are different, however: note how an elf grows into a playable character at a 6:1 ratio to humans.There are two theories we could conclude from the data:
First, that the races all Come of Age at different rates, and then stay there at even different rates still. While this could make sense, it doesn't feel elegant to me.
Second, that some of the time between when a race is as physically mature as a human is spent before they are a playable character. This means there are years of other things, such as acculturation, that may take place before we emerge from the halls of creation. For example, if we use the LISN rate, an elf is as able-bodied as a 16 year old human somewhere around the middle of her third decade, but seven more are spent becoming part of elf society, learning the enmity or what have you, and becoming the true 'adult' that a 16 year old human is in more than just physical senses of the term. I think this is a more elegant idea, and it gives basis for the longer lived races to start out with less of the starry eyes of youth and more of the far-off glimmer of their enchanted nature.
Take from it what you will. That's my two serious cents on the matter.