steeldragons
Steeliest of the dragons
Can? Sure, you can. But why *should* you?
The cavalier has two shticks that make the class stand out - mounted combat and knighthood/noble title/oaths.
Well, I guess I see the possibilities of characters taking oaths and/or being easily doable without an attached "knighthood/noble title." Being devoted/a member of a specific order doesn't necessarily mean you have to get a knighthood/title, for example. Or even a desire to be a member...I can easily picture a PC who's story is something like: they know of this order in the game world. They know some of the "code/oath" they live by. They want to emulate and hope to become a member some day...when their renown or whatever warrants such an initiation...or even just working up the capital to pay the dues to be a member. This could be a fighter. Could be a cavalier. Neither has to be a/of noble/aristocratic decent or attitude.
If you work without the latter, you're just doing "melee combatant who is good on a horse".
And morale booster, some leadership/inspiring stuff, commander/strategist, diplomatic ability?
Why should this *not* be a branch of being a fighter?
No reason it can't be. I just am not seeing the need for it to be one or the other...I've yet to see why it couldn't be both.
If you put in in the fighter, the player gets a good way to choose how far he or she wants to dip into being a mounted fighter, instead of it being all-or-nothing. Depending on the rest of game design, I don't think you gain a whole lot from pulling just that one aspect of combat out into a separate class.
Well, as noted, it wouldn't be all there is to the separate class.
To analogize - if you're doing that, why aren't you pulling all the wizard school specializations out as separate classes?
Who said I'm not/wouldn't?
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