The higher they are, the more fall damage. Of course, if there's enough of them, 30 feet may be enough.
Archpawn
Paladin: Slays the dragon
Bard: Lays the dragon
Minecraft Speedrunner: Yes
In D&D, your life generally is permanent. It's just that you'll only spend a little of it on the material plane.
Eugenics is interesting from a dragon's perspective. They might live long enough to actually see the results.
I had a fixed schedule. Then found out that not every country starts and ends daylight savings time on the same day.
"...and then at the end of the session I found a magic item that lets me cast Wish three times per short rest. Oh, was that a goof? Oh well."
That sounds neat. Can I hire a Herald to do that when I die?
Simply containing each number sequence is a significantly weaker property than having them all occur at the right frequency. Still, while nobody has proven it, it's generally expected to be true.
Figuring it out on your own is science, but I have a feeling OP didn't actually personally search the world for one-horned horses or pointy eared-people with long lifespans. I bet they didn't even work out how biology changes with scale and how evolution works to show that there can't be tiny winged people.
A commoner has 1d8 hitpoints. In 3.5 their hit die was d4, but it wasn't clear how many levels the average commoner had.
Fun fact: a level 14 Creation Bard can create a loaded antimatter rifle. Arguably, they could do it at level 3. Since it doesn't have a value, it certainly doesn't have a value of more than 20 times the bard level in gp. The problem is that it's not clear if you can count that as one object.
Also, Creative Crescendo mentions channeling power from the Song of Creation, but nothing about actually singing it. And it's not a spell with a verbal component. I see no RAW reason you wouldn't be able to use it by miming.
Does anyone actually run an unmodified 5e tarrasque? Outside of a joke campaign?