EzekielRaiden
Follower of the Way
I don't believe so. It would just be called a false claim. There is a "fallacy fallacy," but that is the incorrect presumption that, because someone's argument contains a fallacy, it must be that the conclusion they were going for is false. It's a fallacy because anyone can use fallacies to argue for things that are true, e.g. "All mammals have hair. Whales have hair. Therefore, whales are mammals." (This is a fallacious argument for a true thing, committing the formal fallacy of the undistributed middle. The correct syllogism would have as the first premise, "All and only mammals have hair.")I feel like this whole post is more of a fallacy than anything it's describing. Is there a name for the Fallacy of 'calling something a fallacy that isn't'?
How is that a "fair complaint"? The whole point is to "eliminate the PHB Fighter" and replace it with one that can elect to limit itself to the PHB Fighter, but is not beholden to being so limited.As evidence consider Fighter 2.0, such that it's built to be of comparable power to the Wizard. It's a perfectly fair complaint that it will essentially eliminate the PHB Fighter - and that's exactly what it will do.
Not at all. The contention being made is, "No, you cannot replace the PHB Fighter--that would make it overpowered relative to the other Fighter-like classes!" That is the fallacy: that because one set of things was built to a low bar, and another set of things was built to a high bar, we not only can but must use the low bar to judge what is allowed and what isn't, even though there are--objectively!--things built taller.The only contention is whether one thinks essentially replacing the PHB Fighter with Fighter 2.0 and making no other changes to the other classes is a good thing or a bad thing. But no matter the opinion, it's not a fallacy.
Having a martial class that is more powerful than the Fighter, but still less powerful than the Wizard, could not under any reasonable definition be unbalanced in 5e. The most it could do would be to reveal how much of a martial/caster gap still remains for all of the classes stuck below that glass ceiling.
Because you literally can't make a Warlord at that power level. It's not possible. Whatever thing you create will simply be inadequate to the task. Now, that does not at all mean that a Warlord would need to be at the (IMO excessive) power/versatility level of the Wizard. But trying to shackle it to the power level of the 5.0 Fighter? Not on your life.My personal opinion on this is that when nearly all the martial classes are near PHB Fighter power level then introducing a martial at Wizard power level would be detrimental to the game.
Or to say it another way, what's wrong with creating a Warlord you are content with at the PHB Fighter's power level? Why is a Warlord better at the Wizard's power level than the PHB Fighters power level?
And that is possibly the single most damning criticism I've ever made of the 5e Fighter. It's so weak, it literally can't power a perfectly functional class from the previous two editions.