Consider two different infinite graphs, whose vertices are drawn from $\mathbb Z^2$ or $\mathbb Z^3$. Let $P_d : \mathbb Z^d \times \mathbb N \to \mathbb N$ for $d \in \{2,3\}$ be the function such that $P_d(\mathbf x,n)$ to the number of paths (i.e. walks in which every vertex is visited only once; also known in some contexts as a self-avoiding path) of length $n$ from the origin to $\mathbf x \in \mathbb Z$.
From the Wikipedia article on self-avoiding paths, exactly computing [the sum of] $P_d(\mathbf x,n)$ for all $n$ is likely to be difficult if we restrict ourselves to a finite rectangular region of the lattice — the latter problem is conjectured to be NP-hard. However, do we know how $P_d(\mathbf x,n)$ scales, e.g. in terms of the coefficients $x_j$ of $\mathbf x$, as well as $n$?