Morrus said: Interestingly, there are more 3rd-5th level characters than there are 1st-2nd level. Click to expand...

D&D Beyond has said before that under 10% of games make it past 10th level, but these figures show the break point as being bit lower than that. Click to expand...

That makes perfect sense - it takes very little time in play to get through levels 1 and 2. So, people will plow right through those levels, and them pile up in levels 3-5.Um... no, they don't! My apologies, but this is a science-literacy point that is highly relevant in today's life, outside of gaming. So... I'm gonna lecture:This is a common thing with charts like this - you have a rounding error to deal with: You have four columns listed as "0%". Those columnsadd up to 0%. Or to "negligible". By common rounding procedures, each of those columns could be up tohalf a percent each, and so together could add up to nearly 2%, which is not negligible.This is true foractually - that 6% at 8th level might be like 6.45%. You can even see this in the chart - look at 9th and 10th levels - both listed at 4%, but clearly visually different heights!When you are in the single-digits, the tenths place can matter if you are summing columns, so you can't do that off the chart - youin this data set to have confidence in the results. You can make significant errors if you go off the column labels. Don't do it!