Mengu said:
Say you're playing a halfling bard, and want a bit of striking nova power. Picking up Ranger and Rogue multiclass can give you exactly that.
Ranger yes, because
Hunter's Prey can apply to any attack, but
Sneak Attack only applies to light blades, crossbows, or slings. Is the bard really going to
"nova" with those weapons?
Ranger is one of the best M/C feats, as it gives you access to
any Ranger skill, especially
Perception, and
Hunter's Prey applies to
any attack. While
Thievery can be very useful,
Jack of All Trades will get you +3 at
Theivery, which is almost +5. Depends on whether you plan on being the primary trap disabler.
Mengu said:
And you can add two more skills to your arsenal, one of which is thievery that you do not have access to as a bard, and get a racial bonus to.
Skills that, if you had taken
Jack of All Trades instead, you'd already be +3 at, which, I point out at the risk of redundadundancy, is
almost +5.
Mengu said:
A gnome bard could do some fun stuff with paladin multiclass for marking...
Working at cross-purposes with
Misdirected Mark, when is a
very good
At-Will...
Mengu said:
warlock multiclass for eyebite and fade away shenanigans...
Wasting the skill training in
Arcana.
Mengu said:
rogue multi-class for extra damage...
Which is unlikely to apply to any
decent bard attack.
Mengu said:
ranger multiclass for stealth (to put that racial +2 to good use).
Or
Perception, but yes, Ranger M/C is probably the best M/C feat for practically anyone, including most bards.
Mengu said:
but it certainly opens doors for some interesting options.
Perhaps, but it is less good than it looks, I think, for the reasons I've stated.
Artoomis said:
I'd rather have the trained skills plus Bardic Knowledge. +7 for trained skils
Exactly what I said earlier. For those skills
Bardic Knowledge covers, training them can be very worthwhile, while for utility skills, such as
Stealth, Athletics, Perception, and so on,
Jack of All Trades is a very efficient feat.
Artoomis said:
Jack of All Trades is GREAT is most of your skills are untrained, though
Jack of All Trades is very good for those skills that don't really require training but which are likely to be useful, like
Perception, Athletics, Endurance, Heal, Stealth. I'd say if you have three or more skills that are useful to you but are untrained, then
Jack of All Trades can be an excellent choice.
Bard is the first leader class that really appeals to me as a player. While I haven't settled on an order for feats yet, I plan on taking
Jack of All Trades fairly early, and to take
Bardic Knowledge later when I have enough knowledge skills trained. With a gnome bard and starting 18 CHA/INT, that leaves no more than 12s starting in his other stats. I'm not yet certain what multi-classing fits well into that build.
I still don't understand how
Sneak Attack is supposed to be useful to a Bard. My Ranger has M/C Rogue for various reasons, and the opportunity to sneak attack has come up only a few times in the first four levels of play. If a character isn't focused on light blades, crossbows, or god forbid, slings,
Sneak Attack simply isn't going to come up very often.
Usumcasane said:
Human Bard multiclassed into Cleric and Shaman. That nets you all the "knowledge" skills trained, gets you a little extra healing, and with the right armor (Warding Spirit), a bonus to AC vs. Opportunity Attacks. That's 2 feats. if you get Bardic Knowledge and Jack of All Trades, you have a +7 bonus to six skills and a +3 bonus to nine other skills. That is the most efficient use of feats to skill bonuses possible.
I
like how you think.
JBear said:
Arcana can be changed to another skill when you level up and then you can reaquire it when you take, say the wizard multi-class feat.
Although you are trained in it automatically as a bard, I haven't read that it can't be retrained anywhere. Correct me if I'm wrong.
PHB, page 28,
Retraining Skills:
"You can't replace a skill if it's...predetermined by your class..."
Honestly, I haven't seen anything in this thread that refutes my argument in my second post of this thread.
Now I'd consider a house rule along the lines of something like
"If a multiclass feat gives you skill training in a skill that you have already trained, and you cannot retrain that skill, you gain a +1 untyped bonus to that skill for every such multi-class feat." Something.
I
really like
Usumcasane's idea, but my heart is set on a gnome bard for now. I am going to think about his idea, though.
Smeelbo