Considering how Ragnarok has not happened in D&D's interpretation of Norse mythology, and Thor and Odin are very much alive, I don't see why Tyr would be dead...
Oh, you meant in FR.
Oh, yes. I should've been more specific.
Considering how Ragnarok has not happened in D&D's interpretation of Norse mythology, and Thor and Odin are very much alive, I don't see why Tyr would be dead...
Oh, you meant in FR.
So, I absolutely love what I'm seeing here, but I do have one tiny nitpick. (Said nitpick applies even more to the ranger, working under the assumption that the ranger follows a similar pattern.)
I was really hoping that the game had left room for future non-spell-casting rangers and paladins through the use of subclasses. (I loved the 4E martial ranger as an option.) That would've been fairly smooth, simple to accomplish.
Considering how Ragnarok has not happened in D&D's interpretation of Norse mythology, and Thor and Odin are very much alive, I don't see why Tyr would be dead...
Oh, you meant in FR.
But what does that mean? If it means a devout warrior who is not supernaturally empowered, then what you want is a fighter with the acolyte background. If it means your prayers do get answered then that means spells. Alternately you could go Paladin 1/monk X. That way you get the monastic tradition, and some supernatural powers other than spells.
You're not necessarily wrong, although I can at least partly conceive of a version of a paladin whose powers don't take the form of spells.
Truth is, this is a much bigger deal (to me) for the ranger than the paladin. I'm just bringing it up here because this is the only context I have for it, until/unless we get a ranger preview that confirms (as I expect) that the classes share advancement traits.
So, I absolutely love what I'm seeing here, but I do have one tiny nitpick. (Said nitpick applies even more to the ranger, working under the assumption that the ranger follows a similar pattern.)
I was really hoping that the game had left room for future non-spell-casting rangers and paladins through the use of subclasses. (I loved the 4E martial ranger as an option.) That would've been fairly smooth, simple to accomplish.
But it appears paladins (and rangers?) get spells a level before they choose their subclass. Which means, if there ever is to be a spell-less option, it'll require something clunkier/more encompassing than just a new subclass.
As I said, that's me being picky. I'm a huge fan of what we've seen so far, paladin-wise. I just could've been an even huger one.![]()