D&D 5E 5e witches, your preferred implementation?


log in or register to remove this ad


Voadam

Legend
Isnt that just a Warlock?

Warlock is the masculine form of Witch after all.
The 3e warlock was mechanically an arcane class with at will eldritch blast and a few at will powers and no real spells.

The 4e warlock was a high damage dealer striker with blasts and some curse powers.

The 5e warlock has about two spells per short rest, at will strong eldritch blast and some powers.

The pathfinder witch is a full arcane caster with a different spell list and some powers.

Pathfinder 1e Witches are cousins of 5e Warlocks. They get hexes instead of invocations, and get incomplete and slightly odd casting. And are known for having a single spell they spam the living daylights out of (the pathfinder one puts you to sleep).

I'd say they are close but the full caster versus warlock spells is a significant mechanical difference. Also the difference in direct damage focus.
 

The 5e warlock has about two spells per short rest, at will strong eldritch blast and some powers.

They have 1-4 spells per short rest, and assuming a median of 2-3 short rests per long rest (as per the DMG) it's anything up to 16 x 5th level slots per day, plus a 6th, 7th, 8th and 9th level slot, plus a ton of 'at will' invocations, a Pact with an Eldritch Being such as a Devil or an Old One, and a super Familiar and so forth.

Plus the name. 'Warlock' which is just a Male witch, and the fact they spend an awful lot of time running around Cursing and Hexing people.
 

RealAlHazred

Frumious Flumph (Your Grace/Your Eminence)
The thread is about "your preferred implementation of witches." You've made your preferences clear, I've made my preferences clear. Replying to other people stating their preference with something that amounts to "that's basically the same thing as my preference!" doesn't seem helpful to the OP.
 

Whizbang Dustyboots

Gnometown Hero
assuming a median of 2-3 short rests per long rest (as per the DMG)
But almost no group actually follows the pattern of encounters and rests laid out by the DMG, whether it's bold faced or not.
Plus the name. 'Warlock' which is just a Male witch
A lot of people disagree with this, as has been discussed on previous pages. Google shows a lot of people very opposed to this assertion and to the idea that all witches have made pacts with otherworldly patrons.

You can't make Granny Weatherwax with the 5E warlock. You can't make the Wicked Witch of the West with the 5E warlock. You can't make Baba Yaga with the 5E warlock (even with firearm rules ;) ).
 

Greg K

Legend
I'd be interested in WotC doing a survey to see how players and prospective players felt about nuking Druid and Warlock from the next edition and putting in a Witch class that would subsume them as variants, and kicking something up. Feels like a thing to me!
replace Druid with Shaman (druid can be be a subclass) and add witch as a separate class.
 

Greg K

Legend
Uff. Hoping to raise the conversation up a notch, there's a 2019 Time article I've been reading from Pam Grossman (a self-proclaimed witch and author) called Are Witches Real? I've found it to be a wonderfully insightful read. I don't know anything else about Ms. Grossman beyond this article, I haven't read her book, I'm not affiliated with her in anyway – I just thought she was giving voice to something I felt but struggled to articulate far better than I could.

I've drawn on a few quotes, hopefully not too out of context, which were touching when I read them.


Ms. Grossman wonderfully articulates what makes the design space around interpreting a witch for D&D so challenging and invigorating. It is a nebulous concept because the bounding box that ends up being placed around it (out of practical necessity – design "everything" and you design nothing) ends up reflecting the designer's beliefs on some level.

As much as I like the chassis of the witch from Dragon #114 by Bill Muhlhausen, maybe the lesson from Ms. Grossman is if there is a witch class introduced in D&D, the "high concept" class design needs to come from a woman who is versed in the multiplicity of feminist lenses around the witch. So, in part I'm saying we should let women speak for themselves, but further than that, I'm also saying that the right woman for that particular design challenge is probably out there.
I have not read the article. However, from what you have wrote, it sounds like she practices the Dianic tradition of Wicca which arose in the 70's and is a feminist oriented Wicca that views Wicca as "woman's religion" (Britanica.com), but is not representative of all Wiccan traditions. British Traditional Wicca (i.e. Gardnerian (and its offshoot branches such as Alexandrian) and Cochranian (which may or may not be an offshoot of Gardenian) predates Dianic Wicca. There are also other modern Wicca in addition to Dianic Wicca (e.g. 1734 which is an offshoot of Cochranian Wicca)
 
Last edited:

But almost no group actually follows the pattern of encounters and rests laid out by the DMG, whether it's bold faced or not.

Roughly 270 polled.
  • Roughly half (120) average 2-3 encounters.
  • Roughly 1/3 (90 odd) average 4-8 encounters.
  • Only 10 average more than 8.
  • Less than a quarter (60 odd), play rocket tag and not DnD and average 1-2 per long rest.
Of those polled, most also conflated 'adventuring day' with 'session'.

So plenty of groups average several encounters/ short rests per long rest.

From memory, you dont, but that likely causes class balance problems and encounter difficulty issues, but that's your choice and I wont begrudge you for it if thats what you like IYG.

Regardless, its irrelevant. A Warlock is a Witch. In name and in fluff.
 


Remove ads

Top