So a long story short through luck rolls and creative thinking my players managed to capture a pair of saber tooth tigers and they want to sell them I can't find any information on how much monsters sell for so can anybody help?
Okay thanks I'm kind of surprised no one has made a 5th edition chart that prices monsters based off of their CR rating especially since how easy it is for players to get a hold of cages manacles and chains that are needed to catch most monsters
A range of 100-150 gp sounds like a reasonable starting place. You might be able to wrangle more depending on the buyer- some rich guy wanting to have a couple for his private zoo located in a kingdom that has no saber tooths might be someone you could negotiate a better deal with, for example.
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Find your own truth, choose your enemies carefully, and never deal with a dragon.
"Canon" is what's factual to D&D lore. "Cannon" is what you're going to be shot with if you keep getting the word wrong.
This is just one of those classic DM rulings you gotta make. Depending on how it all goes down, charisma checks may have an impact in determining price as well.
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So a long story short through luck rolls and creative thinking my players managed to capture a pair of saber tooth tigers and they want to sell them I can't find any information on how much monsters sell for so can anybody help?
Two males
Okay thanks I'm kind of surprised no one has made a 5th edition chart that prices monsters based off of their CR rating especially since how easy it is for players to get a hold of cages manacles and chains that are needed to catch most monsters
I'd say around 100-150 gp, but they would have to shop around for a buyer in a large city.
A fool pulls the leaves. A brute chops the trunk. A sage digs the roots.
My Improved Lineage System
A range of 100-150 gp sounds like a reasonable starting place. You might be able to wrangle more depending on the buyer- some rich guy wanting to have a couple for his private zoo located in a kingdom that has no saber tooths might be someone you could negotiate a better deal with, for example.
Find your own truth, choose your enemies carefully, and never deal with a dragon.
"Canon" is what's factual to D&D lore. "Cannon" is what you're going to be shot with if you keep getting the word wrong.
This is just one of those classic DM rulings you gotta make. Depending on how it all goes down, charisma checks may have an impact in determining price as well.