BillionSix wrote:I think the difficulty lies in the fact that in BASH! it's too easy to get a 5 Brawn, and 5 Brawn is supposed to be Hulk-level strength, like the strongest in the world.
So, when you want to make someone who is "the strongest" it's hard to pull off, at least within the rules.
I agree and disagree at the same time.
It is certainly true that any system with a 5 point scale for super stats is going to have limits on how well it can measure comparative differences.
However, I disagree that Brawn 5 is supposed to be the "strongest in the world". It may represent the Hulk's base strength, but that is far from the strongest in the world. At least back in the 80s, when I was reading a lot of Marvel titles, there were a lot of characters who were in the same strength ball park as the Hulk at his base level of strength. If I recall my Marvel Universe correctly, the Hulk's base strength was rated at about 90 tons, just a hair higher than the Thing (85 tons), and slightly weaker than Thor, Hercules, Juggernaut, Wonder Man, Silver Surfer, some versions of Iron Man, etc. And on a 5 point scale, Brawn 5 would also include all the 75-tonners, including Colossus and a whole bunch of less known bricks (75 tons was a common strength level, IIRC).
EDIT: By the BASH book, 75 tons would probably be Brawn 4, not Brawn 5. For Marvel Universe and the way those characters have been portrayed in other games, I'd argue it should be included in Brawn 5. But that's probably just me... And it doesn't impact the rest of those characters who (I think) were all over the 100 ton mark.
I think Brawn 5 does a good job at simulating characters at that strength range. You can still make finer distinctions with the addition of some Special Attack points - you've got up to 5 more points to help distinguish them, like who is more accurate, or has a more powerful haymaker, etc. Colossus wouldn't have as high of a Special Attack as Hercules or Juggernaut, for example, though Colossus should probably have more Armor than Hercules, etc.
The whole thing about Hulk being the "strongest" is that his base strength wasn't all he had. Depending on who's version of the Hulk you're talking about, he was potentially unlimited in strength if he got mad enough. More practically, even at the most powerful version I ever read about, Thor was still able to stand toe-to-toe against him without being overwhelmed, so I'd say maybe a Cosmic Might of 10 or 15 (so an effective Brawn of 7-8) would do fine for representing a "really * off" Hulk. His theoretical max might be even higher, but as of that time period I had never seen him reach it.
That's just my opinion, though, and of course your mileage will vary.