Gambit37 wrote:I tend to count from one. I never understood why people don't count HoC as level one. Why call it level zero? How can it be level *zero*? Hey, look, I'm playing a level that doesn't exist!
Sorry, couldn't help it! Just seems really weird to me.
Now, I know that you're British and therefore I think that you're weird by *not* counting the screamer level as level 1...
...let me explain.
Consider the example of another thing with multiple levels, a block of flats or offices. With these, the area where you walk in, there's a reception, lobby, waiting room etc etc and above that on each floor there's the "building proper" (i.e. the living or working spaces).
Now I'm willing to bet that you call the level that's up a single flight of stairs from the entrance the FIRST floor. I'm also willing to bet that you do not call the level the entrance is on the ZEROth floor (because that would be daft). The point is that in a block of flats / offices, the entrance level is special and contains something different to every other level and so you call it something different as it does not belong to the same set of levels as the other levels and is therefore not part of the same numbering scheme.
(Of course if you were American, you'd call the entrance level of a building the first floor, but that's just wrong and leads to anyone who isn't American not being able to find you if you agree to meet in a building

).
The same logic applies to DM. The bit where you walk in is special, it's not like the rest of the levels and is called something special (and the designers even helpfully gave you a title - the Hall of Champions). As with the FIRST floor being the level up a single staircase from the entrance (the special level) in a building, the FIRST level is the level down a single staircase from the entrance (the special level) in the dungeon.
So, I conclude that either you are being irrational or inconsistent with your naming of dungeon levels and buildings - which is it?
