Not sure why you'd want it? What would it offer that the 3.5 one doesn't?I think 3.0 SRD is the only one that is a bit hard to come by. Archive.org looks to have 3.5 SRD and Modern d20's SDR.
Not sure why you'd want it? What would it offer that the 3.5 one doesn't?I think 3.0 SRD is the only one that is a bit hard to come by. Archive.org looks to have 3.5 SRD and Modern d20's SDR.
I thought the 3.0 had more init.Not sure why you'd want it? What would it offer that the 3.5 one doesn't?
Found it on the Internet Archive with some digging: d20 - System Reference DocumentI think 3.0 SRD is the only one that is a bit hard to come by. Archive.org looks to have 3.5 SRD and Modern d20's SDR.
Honestly, without ever seeing that SRD, I do not know if it contains anthing not available in 3.5, beyond the rule tweaks between the two.Not sure why you'd want it? What would it offer that the 3.5 one doesn't?
Thanks.Found it on the Internet Archive with some digging: d20 - System Reference Document
Actually, there are several things in the 3.0 SRD that you won't find in its 3.5 equivalent. It's a pretty motley collection, and a lot of it is stuff that 3.5 saw fit to excise, but not all of it, including:Not sure why you'd want it? What would it offer that the 3.5 one doesn't?
This reminds me of one of the funniest changes in 3.5, where they decided that special rules for small characters wielding weapons was too confusing and so they decided to make separate size categories and damage for every single weapon in the game. Definitely less confusing.Honestly, without ever seeing that SRD, I do not know if it contains anthing not available in 3.5, beyond the rule tweaks between the two.
My favourite representation of this is Belkar's daggers getting tinier in the very first Order of the Stick comic.This reminds me of one of the funniest changes in 3.5, where they decided that special rules for small characters wielding weapons was too confusing and so they decided to make separate size categories and damage for every single weapon in the game. Definitely less confusing.
It's especially funny when the archetypal "halflings" are famous for wielding Elven daggers as swords.