There is one race with some heavy weaknesses that is being left out of all of this:
Griffons.
Griffons get the shaft on enchants, eq, eq building, and RP-enforced enemies.
What do they get to balance this? A few extra points at CC.
All that stuff in the help files about resistances to acid, charm, cold, etc is all a bunch crap. None of those resistances count for anything. The only time I've had a griffon resist a charm (and there have been plenty of opportunities for me to test this) was once when, after getting charmed for the twentieth time in a row I sent up a pray asking to have griffon charm resistance looked at. An annonymous imm showed up, created a "weak spell" wand of charm, and we did a little testing on the "resistance." Now, we're talking a charm spell that a lvl 15, max wis helf could resist 4 out of 5 times. My griffon resisted once. Out of something like six zaps.
The main race to look at if you want to see the complete and total imbalance of weaknesses vs strengths is griffons. All their supposed "resistances" are worth literally nothing.
Another example. A max con griffon shaman brewing, vs a low-Healthy con, naked human priest brewing. The griffon actually takes MORE damage from a critical fail brew acid blast than the human. So much for resistance to acid. So much for the toughness bonus to damage reduction.
Yet ANOTHER example involving griffons. Griffon weakness involving eq slot limitations (leaving building completely aside for this, just refering to the number of slots available). Easy enough to comprehend the effects of the weakness: succeptibility to massive, and I do mean massive, melee damage, and severe limits on enchants. This, in regards to spells, is made worse by the (imo, ridiculously low) max wis of 18. The melee side is made greatly worse by the max dex of 21. *21* for a cat-like race, when helf, delf, and bloody HALFLINGS (yes, little stumpy-legged halflings) get a dex of 22.
So, yes, lots of races have weaknesses and supposed benefits. The weaknesses outweigh the benefits by far, though, and especially in the case of griffons.
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