billd91
Not your screen monkey (he/him) 🇺🇦🇵🇸🏳️⚧️
The dude had a holy sword, and "The hands of a king are the hands of as healer." That's totally paladin with healing magic, sorry, I'm going to flat out disagree with you here.
There's nothing about the sword that's necessarily holy. It's got quite a lineage in a setting where things like that matter, but no evidence of holy in the way D&D treats things as holy. And Aragorn's healing skills can be modeled in a number of ways from skill use (good Medicine skill or Healing from previous editions) to moderate healing spells to laying on of hands. There's nothing necessarily paladineque about it. So right back atcha.
Aragorn is defined by his healing hands, you know. Supernatural abilities innate to the heirs of Numoir is actually a whole thing. That's actually very central to his identity. He also got spirits on his side, and used magical scrying orbs in a direct challenge against the Dark Lord. He's pretty darn magical for Middle Earth's standards.
What's most central to Aragorn's identity is his lineage. He wrests control of the palantir because it's his by right. He calls the legion of the dead to service because he can by right. And he's got enough strength of will, body, and soul to pursue those things that are his by right. But it's ultimately Right makes Might in Middle Earth. That's an element of LotR and Tolkien's vision of Middle Earth that no D&D game has significantly covered in its mechanics.