Blue Orange
Gone to Texas
They did that in 2e no?Only because they keep making it a spellcaster. Which I have always opposed.
Though really, if we went by actual class popularity, it's Druid that should be culled for being a Nature Cleric.
They did that in 2e no?Only because they keep making it a spellcaster. Which I have always opposed.
Though really, if we went by actual class popularity, it's Druid that should be culled for being a Nature Cleric.
I said "keep," not "trying." 4e is the only version that wasn't a spellcaster, and it was better for it. There are other ways to implement things that don't require spellcasting, but are still holy power. Much as both the Echo Knight and Arcane Archer implement magic without being spellcasters.Um, "trying to make the Paladin into a spellcaster"? There haven't been many times in the game's history when the Paladin wasn't capable of casting spells and spell-like abilities at some point.
In the paradigm of how D&D works right now?Because spells are definitely the ONLY way to do holy things. You couldn't possibly have other mechanics for it. That would be ridiculous.
Again, 4e provides your contradiction, in that it offered a perfectly viable (and, AIUI, quite enjoyable) Swordmage.In the paradigm of how D&D works right now?
Yes, actually.
Lots of things have naturally occurring or innate magic, but that is inevitably framed as arcane. Nothing seems to have innate holiness; they're just other kinds of clerics.
In order to make a non-spellcaster Paladin, D&D would have to accept basic tenets and ideas it is historically afraid of, and we see how well that goes with 50 years without a viable vanilla gish
yeah the ranger was just a sneaky fighter till high level then he got druid spells and then he got magic spells in AD&D. It was basically just multiclassing once you hit high level ranger.The Paladin and Ranger are the base classes. The Fighter is just a hybrid of the two, but using the AND operator.
I didn't really like the sword mage all that much, but yes, there was an attempt.Again, 4e provides your contradiction, in that it offered a perfectly viable (and, AIUI, quite enjoyable) Swordmage.
Nope. Because there is no Saint class for the Warrior + Saint composite.Paaaladin.![]()
It would be cleric plus... slightly more cleric.Nope. Because there is no Saint class for the Warrior + Saint composite.