Mind of tempest
(he/him)advocate for 5e psionics
no, the giant none human primate, nor are we speaking of master kong fu in case that was on the table.Are you talking King Conan magic axe-wielding Kong?![]()
no, the giant none human primate, nor are we speaking of master kong fu in case that was on the table.Are you talking King Conan magic axe-wielding Kong?![]()
I can see how it might look that way to someone who doesn’t like 4e, but it’s just not true. The 4e ranger and the 4e rogue had very different designs and gameplay feels, and merging them just wouldn’t make sense in 4e’s design framework.4e could have merge ranger a rogue and nothing bad would have come of it or at least the backlash would be no worse than what was already there.
25+kong is cr 20+ at the weakest.
That would be most D&D starter sets and I think it counts fine as D&D.What suffered is coherence but than maybe that's part of D&D's charm. Sure a D&D with four classes (Fighter, Skill Monkey, Magic User, Cleric) and a skill system would be more focused but it wouldn't be D&D and that is what counts.
Heck. There are barely any martial threats past level 10 beyond other fighters and outsiders who use swords.
It's not like the ideas don't exist. We have a big natural no-no-word ravage the world for a year. It's that the designers and fanbase have a lapse of imagination in the wild or martial area since few are outdoorsy, warriors, or experts in either area.
I mean King Kong and Godzilla are level 15+ beasts, right?
Someone summon Mike.
can you elaborate as it seems they could have been merged earlier in the design process?I can see how it might look that way to someone who doesn’t like 4e, but it’s just not true. The 4e ranger and the 4e rogue had very different designs and gameplay feels, and merging them just wouldn’t make sense in 4e’s design framework.
They just aren’t very similar. Their powers do substantially different things. You could make a class with some of the rogue powers and some of the ranger powers (in fact, that’s exactly how the hybrid class system worked), but it wouldn’t really play like a rogue or a ranger. It would play like a different class that had some similarities to both, but was its own thing.can you elaborate as it seems they could have been merged earlier in the design process?
both are martial strikers so it seems odd to have two when you could have one instead.They just aren’t very similar. Their powers do substantially different things. You could make a class with some of the rogue powers and some of the ranger powers (in fact, that’s exactly how the hybrid class system worked), but it wouldn’t really play like a rogue or a ranger. It would play like a different class that had some similarities to both, but was its own thing.
See, I think a huge part of the disconnect people had with 4e was that 4e classes are just a different thing than classes in other editions of D&D are. People are used to thinking of classes as character archetypes, which the mechanics are designed to express. 4e classes are first and foremost sets of powers, which fill a combat role, by way of one or two power sources. In very basic terms, 4e classes are about what you do rather than who you are. Could you combine the narrative elements of rogue and ranger into a new class? Absolutely. But in the 4e design paradigm, that class would have a set of powers that would set it apart from both the ranger and the rogue.