Undrave
Legend
Caster on caster violence is so disappointing ...Wizard fans found the thread and saw the sorcerer was being less than curb-stomped.
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Caster on caster violence is so disappointing ...Wizard fans found the thread and saw the sorcerer was being less than curb-stomped.
unsurprisingly "sorcerer but nerd" is just a sorcerer subclass rather than an unique class identity.If the sorcerer had any notably identifying mechanics you could have expounded about those instead of whatever this complaint is. unsurprisingly "wizard but hot" is just a wizard subclass rather than a unique class identity
Your rephrasing falls flat because of the source for "wizard but hot". I put "wizard but hot" in quotes because of how many times Crawford has said it over the years.unsurprisingly "sorcerer but nerd" is just a sorcerer subclass rather than an unique class identity.
Wizard but hot, without the dross of Vancian Casting, and with an actual concept the past two editions before 5e decided they were just kids living under the power lines.If the sorcerer had any notably identifying mechanics you could have expounded about those instead of whatever this complaint is. unsurprisingly "wizard but hot" is just a wizard subclass rather than a unique class identity
Which is probably why Crawford shouldn't have been allowed around either.Your rephrasing falls flat because of the source for "wizard but hot". I put "wizard but hot" in quotes because of how many times Crawford has said it over the years.
In the thread talking about 4e we brought up the 'Archer Fighter' problem where people wanted to play a FIGHTER that did archery, but the 4e Fighter wasn't designed for it and only had it as a backup option. To make an archer you were supposed to use the Ranger (who could easily NOT pick Nature and had no specific class features related to stuff like Favored Enemy/Terrain). But people wanted a character sheet with FIGHTER written at the top.
Crawford's opinion is only worth for new version onward. He wasn't there twenty or so years ago when they designed the original class, and he wasn't the lead designer when 5e was first made ten years ago. He doesn't even have monopoly over current sorcerer onward, because there is also Pathfinder out there -and they have greatly shaped the way sorcerer is perceived-, and the distinction has already permeated pop culture in general.Your rephrasing falls flat because of the source for "wizard but hot". I put "wizard but hot" in quotes because of how many times Crawford has said it over the years.
The original 3.5 sorcerer class was something that had an identity distinct from the 3.5 wizard, that's not what we have in 5e. What exists as a sorcerer in 5e is something that depends almost entirely on the identity of a different class. Just like with the fighter tangent that has been running for a while now I think a lot of these problems were created by efforts to simplify & streamline away or "optional(ize)" so many parts of the gameCrawford's opinion is only worth for new version onward. He wasn't there twenty or so years ago when they designed the original class, and he wasn't the lead designer when 5e was first made ten years ago. He doesn't even have monopoly over current sorcerer onward, because there is also Pathfinder out there -and they have greatly shaped the way sorcerer is perceived-, and the distinction has already permeated pop culture in general.