Eldritch_Lord
Adventurer
So an eladrin spellsword would be a fey Wray?
It's not intuitive: it's historical.I never liked the name gish and, frankly, never thought it very intuitive.
So what are people's problems with the word? From the threads here I can garner two.
"It's non-intuitive." I guess, but so is a lot of gamer jargon. AC, BAB, d%.
"It doesn't mean what you think it means." But words change meaning, and specific words tend to acquire more general meanings. Nothing wrong with language evolving for utilitarian reasons.
Are there any other reasons? Because I find these two unpersuasive.
I don't get what's intuitive at all about the name Armor Class. There's nothing class-like about it.It's non-intuitive, and I don't think you can really compare it to AC (Armor Class? Makes sense) or BAB (Basic Attack Bonus? Makes sense) when they hear "gish" (warrior-mage? ...The hell?
I don't get what's intuitive at all about the name Armor Class. There's nothing class-like about it.
I do have to say, I find it mildly amusing that this is an issue that people want to use compound words for, as opposed to, say, everything else being used in the game these days. Doubly so since "Fighter-Magic User" is based off of two terrible names for classes that I would never use to describe people in-setting.