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Advantage: Difference between revisions

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The benefits of rolling with advantage (or the detriments of rolling with disadvantage) change depending on the target number you need on the 1d20 roll to succeed. The bonus from advantage can be as large as 24-25% when needing a 9, 10, 11, 12, or 13  on the 1d20 roll, and as small as 9% if one needs to roll a 19.  
The benefits of rolling with advantage (or the detriments of rolling with disadvantage) change depending on the target number you need on the 1d20 roll to succeed. The bonus from advantage can be as large as 24-25% when needing a 9, 10, 11, 12, or 13  on the 1d20 roll, and as small as 9% if one needs to roll a 19.  


After addition and subtraction include advanatage, If DC is more than 13, consider (dis)advantage 5 or a very high probability ({{math|x}} > 90%) that does not need to be calculated.
After addition and subtraction whole variables include advanatage, If DC is more than 13, consider (dis)advantage 5 or a very high probability ({{math|x}} > 90%) that does not need to be calculated. And if DC is less than 13, it's better to think whether it is a waste of action or not.


( Dice 11 is 50% and 1 of each is 5% )
( Dice 11 is 50% and each of 1 is 5%. )




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