Killer Cyborg wrote:Max™ wrote:The normal TK power has a reduced range for heavy objects.
Bingo!
So anything over 20 lbs has the range reduced to 15'.
Which makes everything click into place.
When trying to use normal TK to move something as heavy as a person, you CAN do it, but it's going to be slowed down simply because the range is slowed down.
If you can normally move an object out to 60' in one attack (2-3 seconds), that's pretty fast.
Roughly 240' per melee round, which comes to 960' per minute, or about 10.9 miles per hour, if I have things right.
(check my math on this
)
BUT if you drop the range to 1/4 of that, then it's a LOT less useful, moving at only 60' per melee round, or 240' per minute, or about 2.7 miles per hour.
Which is a LOT less useful, slower even than the speed of 6 (about 4 mph) that the MOPs granted.
Which could explain the change from the MOPs to RUE: somebody did enough of the math to know they were way off.
(or they just forgot that they'd ever said it in the first place)
So in RUE, they decided that whatever movement you might be able to accomplish with normal TK, it wouldn't constitute "flying."
Meanwhile, since Super TK lacks that weight restriction, you retain full range of movement regardless of weight, which means that at first level a person with Super TK could move themselves 100' per level.
At first level, this would mean 100' per 2-3 seconds, roughly 400' per melee round, or 1600' per minute, which would come out in the neighborhood of 18.18 miles per hour.
(again, check my math- I'm kinda sleepy)
Not great compared to a jetpack or Fly As The Eagle, but certainly fast enough to constitute "flight."
And since the range increases per level, the speed would be roughly 18 mph
per level.
By 5th level, this would be about 90 mph.
By 10th level, this would be about 180 mph.
Which is actually pretty well balanced.
Originally TK had a weight limit, I think 500 lbs.
Hm.
I can't remember seeing that anywhere, but I never really noticed the weight restrictions on range for normal TK either.
Or, at least, I never paid attention to the implications.
If you can remember when and where you saw it, let me know.
When they changed it to an I.S.P. expenditure based weight amount they forgot to remove all the mentions of a weight limit, except the "15 feet" one.
That's the only one that's necessary to solve, I think, all of our problems here.