Size Chart


Here's a way to determine how big and how scary certain monsters and creatures are withing a world in comparison to eachother. Please aslo refer to the Third Edition D&D Players Handbook for some examples (Note - the Giant Red Dragon there is about scale 3)
SCALE:DIMENSION: WEIGHT
Scale ¼less than 6 inches1/8 lbs. or less
Scale ½6 inches - 2 feet1/8 lbs. - 8 lbs.
Scale 12 feet - 15 feet8 lbs. - 4,000 lbs.
Scale 216 feet - 63 feet4,000 lbs. - 256,000 lbs.
Scale 364 feet - 255 feet256,000 lbs. - 2,028,000 lbs.
Scale 4256 feet - 1023 feet2,028,000 lbs. - 16,224,000 lbs.
Scale 51024 feet - 8191 feet16,224,000 lbs. – 259,584,000 lbs.
Scale 68192 feet and above259,584,000 lbs. or more
Here are some examples from various Jaystorm campaigns: You get the idea. For personal reference and comparison, the average room size is around 10 X 12 feet and ususally about 8 to 10 feet high.
The World Trade Center Twin Towers in NYC were 1,368 ft high, making them both Scale 5 if they were a living creature or golem of sorts.
Mount Everest is 29,035 high
The Statue of Liberty from base to torch is 151' 1" making her Scale 3 (even though her arm is extended - even if it were down, she'd still be scale 3 - and that isn't including the pedestal she stands on - her index finger alone is 8 feet!) - and for comparison to human size, think back to GhostBusters II...

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