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I'd like to create a villain that can take on a party of level 4 characters all by herself. In other words, if she were a standard monster, she would have a Challenge Rating of 4.

What's the right way to do this? The best model I've thought of is to follow the guidelines on p. 82 of the DMG for XP threshold and use it for both the PCs and the monster. So, for example:

Party XP threshold = 5 × 375 for a hard encounter = 1875 XP

So, I look that number up in the table, and I see that a single 10th level character contributes 1,900 to a hard encounter XP budget. So, to match a party of five 4th level characters, I would create a single 10th level monster following the PH character creation rules.

Does that sound right?

UPDATE: I tested my theory against the one linked below by @Miniman. My theory says level 10, so I used the level 10 Dragonborn Sorcerer pre-rolled character from WotC. Looking at the average of the Defensive Challenge Rating and the Offensive Challenge Rating (as DMG p. 274 suggests), I came to... drum roll... CR 4. So, that's just one example, but it worked out pretty well.

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    \$\begingroup\$ Possible duplicate: If I design a PC for use as an NPC, how much XP should he give when killed? \$\endgroup\$
    – Miniman
    Commented Aug 26, 2015 at 5:58
  • \$\begingroup\$ Thanks, @Miniman. I wasn't using the right keywords to find that answer. As much as that doesn't give me a quick-and-easy way to make the NPCs I want (I need to roll up three of these puppies), it's probably the best one. \$\endgroup\$
    – GuidoInLFP
    Commented Aug 26, 2015 at 6:03
  • \$\begingroup\$ @daze413 Presumably all 3 aren't going to be in the same encounter :) \$\endgroup\$
    – Miniman
    Commented Aug 26, 2015 at 6:08
  • \$\begingroup\$ The party is entering a morally ambiguous situation, and they could choose three (primary) ways to resolve it. I'd like to give them a fun combat at the end of any of those paths. Hence three. I could also just roll one, though, and plug those stats into the appropriate NPC in each choice. \$\endgroup\$
    – GuidoInLFP
    Commented Aug 26, 2015 at 6:09
  • \$\begingroup\$ related, possibly duplicate. \$\endgroup\$
    – daze413
    Commented Aug 27, 2015 at 0:56

1 Answer 1

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That would be misleading as there is no correlation between CR and PC level.

However, there is a guideline in page 283 of the Dungeon Master's Guide under "Monsters with Classes". It doesn't help very much, honestly, and I ended up having to:

1.) Modify a Monster

Page 273 of the DMG gives us an idea of simply taking stats from an existing creature in the Monster Manual and modifying it to our needs. This is, by far, the easiest way to make a monster. For your case, I would choose an Evil Mage Stat Block and add Sorcerer levels to it. This would have the following effects to it:

  1. It gains Hit Dice of its normal type (d4 for tiny, d6 for Small, d8 for Medium and so on...) for each level you add to it.
  2. It gains Sorcerer features of your choice, the benefits to this are not reliably quantified so you should judge for yourself if the class level added would increase the creature's CR.

What I found while tinkering with adding PC classes to NPCs is that for each relevant class level added, you increase the CR by 1. (I found an answer supporting this, but although it is for Pathfinder, it should give you an idea of how CR increases in relation to adding Class levels). For example, adding 3 levels of Barbarian(a relevant class) to my Bugbear NPC (CR 1) made him CR 4, pitting him and a few of his lackeys to balance out the encounter made for a fun challenge for my group.

Caveat: A sorcerer level would most likely not increase an Evil Mage's CR by a full 1, play testing and additional calculations will be needed. The reason for this is because an Evil Mage already has "Spellcasting", which reduces the "added value" of a Sorcerer level to be limited only to the Sorcerer's features until she gains more Sorcerer levels than her current spellcasting ability.

2.) Give her Legendary Actions

The downfall of solo creatures versus a party is that one side is limited to the number of actions per round it can do and in the case of the poor solo, he gets 1 Action while the players have as many Actions as they have players. This is why page 82 of the DMG raises the budgeted XP for an encounter for every creature pitted against a party. So it is a good idea to give a solo creature Legendary Actions.

Legendary Actions are a specific set of Actions a creature can take in between another creature's turn, giving more Actions (usually, 2-3 more) to the poor solo-creature.

Caveat: Legendary Actions count when calculating DPR for your OCR, adjust accordingly.

3.) Give her Legendary Resistance

Another problem for a solo creature is that it will get debuffed by a PC, and once one debuff lands, it's basically at the PC's mercy (which tends to be not a lot). Legendary Resistance gives the creature the option to succeed on a failed Saving Throw which increases its survivability against a full party with spells flinging left and right against her. Legendary Resistance increases a creature's Effective HP for each use depending on the CR as shown in DMG page 280.

When taken all together, your Evil Mage should be ready take on a party of 4 by her lonesome.

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    \$\begingroup\$ Good answer. I think the Legendary Actions and Legendary Resistances are really important for a solo creature. \$\endgroup\$ Commented Aug 27, 2015 at 2:02

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