Remathilis
Legend
I wasn't very clear in the argument I was making in so much that I was talking about more than one edition. The 4th Edition fighter can be a very capable ranged combatant with some work. The ranged Ranger can be a very capable ranged combatant without trying. The ranged 4th Edition Ranger who really works at doing damage from range is going to do what the hard working ranged fighter is doing and still having more left over to do even more.
Try that again. Backwards.
In AD&D, rangers were equal to fighters in archery (good attack bonus) and that was it. In UA, they both got weapon specialization (which rangers could only use in archery, IIRC). In 2e, only fighters got weapon specialization (whereas rangers got two-weapon fighting) and stayed that way til 3.5.
In 3.5, a ranger got rapid shot, manyshot, and greater precise shot at 2nd, 6th, and 11th levels. By 11th level, a fighter could have point blank shot, precise shot, rapid shot, weapon focus (bow), weapon specialization (bow), manyshot, and improved precise shot. Of course, he lacks favored enemies, higher skill points, evasion, animal companion, and spells.
However, what you say helps make my point. There is outcry over a wizard outclassing a rogue by using spells which can mimic skills. There is also outcry over a cleric being able to fight like a fighter and still have spells. Why is it that we don't mind having the fighter bleed into the territory that other classes are supposedly supposed to cover?
The problem is spells are 100% effective when they bleed. Knock doesn't just give a wizard a chance to open lock, it automatically wins against DC 1,000 locks! You want to fix Codzilla and Batman mages? Nerf the dang spells!
edit: I suppose I'm also asking why it's bad to give the fighter his own realm and his ranger own realm if we desire to have both classes. If the desire to have the fighter be the king of martial combat outweighs the desire to have both the ranger and fighter as classes with unique spheres of adventuring influence, it makes more sense to me to drop one of them (the ranger) and have it turned into a theme, lense, career path, or whatever you want to call it for other classes.
Perhaps because a ranger isn't just an archer. He's a woodsman, hunter, tracker, scout, monster specialist, and part-time druid. He's a very different man than the solider who specializes in archery. Aragorn is a ranger, Legolas is an archer-fighter.