D&D (2024) Ranger playtest discussion


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I like this breakdown and find it interesting the counterpoint to it.

1. Hard to say what 1D&D will do, but in 5e, there are at least a few ranger-only spells. The amount of design work to produce those is effectively identical to producing non-magical options.
2. This is one of those things that is probably true but doesn't have to be. Scaling is pure mechanics, the same is true of...
3. Nonmagical features don't need to have noncompetitive mechanics.

For myself, I'm ok with a Ranger that can cast. It's just strange to me that there is this near total unwillingness to explore any non-garbage power budget options outside of spellcasting.
It's because of a self fulfilling issue.

Many groups are PURE COMBAT or barely do exploration. Especially post level 5 exploration.

So few know how to run it except for the groups who do.

So when people ask all you get is "I wanna craft potions and hide in grass".
 

It's because of a self fulfilling issue.

Many groups are PURE COMBAT or barely do exploration. Especially post level 5 exploration.

So few know how to run it except for the groups who do.

So when people ask all you get is "I wanna craft potions and hide in grass".
This is true and to break out of it would require adventure design where there are specific guidance on exploration stuff.
 

It's because of a self fulfilling issue.

Many groups are PURE COMBAT or barely do exploration. Especially post level 5 exploration.

So few know how to run it except for the groups who do.

So when people ask all you get is "I wanna craft potions and hide in grass".
Except that we're only orthogonally discussing exploration. There could be more nonmagical Combat solutions too, and the counterpoints would all still apply.

It'd be nice if more was done with exploration, but it's not like that's the only way to figure out a nonmagical Ranger.
 

Except that we're only orthogonally discussing exploration. There could be more nonmagical Combat solutions too, and the counterpoints would all still apply.

It'd be nice if more was done with exploration, but it's not like that's the only way to figure out a nonmagical Ranger.
The exploration pillar plus healing IS why rangers have magic.
 

The exploration pillar plus healing IS why rangers have magic.
Is this a 1D&D opinion? A thematic opinion? Something else?

Because it is not an opinion well supported by the existing 5e Ranger spell list which includes a bunch of summons, aoe damage, damage mitigation spells, and the (now) definitive ranger spell hunter's mark a (mostly) damage rider spell.
 

Is this a 1D&D opinion? A thematic opinion? Something else?

Because it is not an opinion well supported by the existing 5e Ranger spell list which includes a bunch of summons, aoe damage, damage mitigation spells, and the (now) definitive ranger spell hunter's mark a (mostly) damage rider spell.
Perhaps that's the issue, then? Not that Rangers have magic, but that their magic lacks identity?
 

Is this a 1D&D opinion? A thematic opinion? Something else?

Because it is not an opinion well supported by the existing 5e Ranger spell list which includes a bunch of summons, aoe damage, damage mitigation spells, and the (now) definitive ranger spell hunter's mark a (mostly) damage rider spell.
The ranger had spells to get healing, scrying, speaking to animals, speaking to plants, communing with nature, curing poisons, ESP, etc to copy Aragorn and the Rangers of LOTR.

It expanded with D&DS more magical highlights over time with summons, gaining scent, turning into animals, teleports, jumping in trees, breathing water, ignoring sandstorms, predicting weather, resisting elements.

Rangers barely had damage and damage mitigation spells. The exploration spells came first.
 


L
The 3 biggest hindrances with a nonmagical Ranger are
  1. those who want it can't agree on what it gets
  2. it will likely scale bad
  3. It won't be as good as the half caster

What I think it comes down to is this burning desire by some players to have non-magical "magic". You see it in discussions of fighters. You see it in discussions of nonmagical rangers. You even see it in discussions of psionics. There is a vocal group of players who want all the benefits of magic without casting spells, and usually that equates to "no components, can't be dispelled/countered, etc." Which of course are all big elements of balancing spellcasting. I'm not saying people want nonmagical magic to cheese the system, but hot damn are there a lot of people who want powers akin to spellcasting without actually calling it spellcasting.
 

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