Flexor the Mighty!
18/100 Strength!
What is a lazylord? Other than myself that is...
If anyone can be devote, why do clerics need a mechanic to show their devotion?Oo. So close...What the "don't care and/or con-Warlord" folks are saying and the "pro-warlord" folks can't answer is...."Why?"
No promises i won't make the same mistake.Thank you. Just had to get that out. I feel much better now.![]()
A character that does not directly attack the enemy, only buffs and enables allies.What is a lazylord? Other than myself that is...
Battles, yes, in which he is a leader of large bodies of men in war. Nor do we have to exclude any personal prowess from consideration, any D&D character of any level at all will be relatively a great warrior, and the warlord class is still a 'martial' character who can fight on his own. He's just Arthur, leader of men, not Launcelot, invincible warrior.
Again though, a very significant aspect of the character is leadership and inspiration, not brute force. He's an accomplished warrior, like what you'd expect any level 20 character to be considered. There's far less emphasis on his martial prowess than there is for Corum or Elric in his stories though.
True, he's a hard character to categorize because he doesn't stick to a single paradigm in all of REH's stories. Barbarian/Fighter doesn't EXACTLY work for him either.
He drove it off temporarily after it had already wounded Frodo and then regrouped with its fellows to track them and attack again. He didn't actually fight and defeat it. In fact I'd almost say his main accomplishment was bolstering his allies morale and disheartening his opponent.
I think you need to play a 4e warlord and see it. I thought the same thing in 2008, and then I played, and my opinion was utterly changed. No other class introduced since the druid IMHO has such a strong case for it in actual play.
Throw in those teamwork feats in 3rd that nobody took and make them a class feature that your other party members don't have to take and I think you nailed it.![]()
Sounds good.
I mean, the saga noble is way more than a leader, and can easily be built as a purely support guy, or a face, or a dozen other things. The conceptual space is big, which us why I support a name change and using a different game that got it right as the inspiration.
Sounds like you have a good idea!
So why not-
1. Get your desired abilities within the core rules via multiclassing and feats; or
2. Design your desired class (homebrew) and play it in your campaign? See how it works! Playtest it. If it's a good concept, distribute it. Get grass roots support. Maybe something similar will be in a supplement.
A character that does not directly attack the enemy, only buffs and enables allies.
Basically, the 4e warlord had the battle master's commander's strike at-will, and bardic inspiration (+ cutting words). So you build a character who only uses those things and dumps Str. Though it wasn't specifically the warlord. Shaman, artificer, bard and ardent has similar abilities, so you usually a mix.