Patryn of Elvenshae
First Post
But you can't really expect one balancing tool to work at its full effectiveness if another one its related to is relaxed.
I absolutely agree with that. However, I'm just offering additional support for my overall position, which is "Yes, in theory the spell learning % chance and the maximum number of spells known per level served to balance wizards; in practice, I don't believe they did as much as many people are claiming they did, for the reasons stated."
RC said:Oh, yeah, and you didn't have the huge number of castings per day that you got in 3e, so most casters had to marshal their spell resources carefully, IME. When I was playing a magic-user, the ability to give intelligent advice during exploration + whatever uncast spells I had left were always of greater value than whatever spells had already been cast.
Walk with me a moment ...

The difference between a 1st-level Wizard in 3E and a 1st-level Wizard in 2E (the non-3E+ version I'm most familiar with) is: 1 1st-level spell (due to bonus from Int) and 3 Cantrips.
Now, for some reason, I don't have the 2E spell progression tables memorized (

Accepting that cantrips aren't particularly useful spells most of the time, I don't see that there's all that many spells more in 3E than in 2E ...
... until you start counting self-crafted scrolls.
That's where I really see the difference showing up - the well-prepared 3E wizard has a lot more triicks up his sleeve, simply because he can, with a relatively modest amount of gold and XP expenditure, ensure that his "useable once in a blue moon spells" are always availble, and fill his memorized slots with "needed on a daily basis" stuff - like combat spells.
The real problem with scrolls is that D&D's always had a bit of a psychosis in regards to them (and most other magic items, too). The previous editions of the rules made them out to be ridiculously rare and nigh-impossible to create (requiring basilisk blood ink and cockatrice feather quills to scribe a simple scroll of Sleep), but then tossed them around willy-nilly in treasure troves. This is one of those things that never made sense to me - and 3E's solution (even low-level wizards can scribe low-level scrolls) has created its own problems.
As far as the traveling mage and spellbooks go, isn't that why people created traveling spellbooks?