by Happygun » Sat May 24, 2014 6:04 pm
Depends. If he/she were, say, a fighter or rogue, his sheet would be completely filled out and he'd have around two addendum sheets listing his possessions/assists, followers, and henchmen. If he/she were a spellcaster, add another sheet or two to the list for spells. The sheets would probably be in pretty rough shape unless the stats had been regularly transcribed to fresh ones. I'd be hesitant to assign classes to any of the characters, though it should be noted there is a difference between "natural' lycanthropes and "infected" lycanthropes and that most varieties are inherently evil (including werewolves). Yes, I know this isn't exactly what you asked for, but I'm not going to list out approximations of every character's statistics for reasons hinted at above.
Running high level campaigns in D&D - particularly 3rd edition especially - is a major hassle. Almost by necessity the game must shift to an emphasis on roleplaying and problem solving rather than combat; at that level, any worthy battle will last the entire session. It's even worse in Faerûn given the power creep inherent in the setting. Furthermore, running a campaign true to the lore is nearly impossible given its level of detail (not even counting the novels). That's part of the reason why its popularity has dwindled.