Scribe
Legend
Do Tieflings cover this niche now? Formerly despised child of two worlds forging their own path...
No, its different tropes.
Do Tieflings cover this niche now? Formerly despised child of two worlds forging their own path...
"I've been a puppet, a pauper, a pirate, a poet, a pawn, and a king". And your characters must have lead some pretty boring lives before adventuring if they fit 100% into any one background based on the sixteen.Further, what you're not getting is, they may have to essentially WASTE the +2/+1. For example. You want to play a Wizard, you want them to have backstory X. Backstory X dictates Background Y.
And thus remove any need for the player to role-play this particular moment within an adventure with their character. Kind of takes all of the fun out of it for me. I would rather deal with the challenge of having my character find an armor smith who could make the adjustments to my newly acquired suit of armor.
Does the assumption really have to be that design is for short time PCs? I don't recall hearing that anywhere.Well, I'm sure it utterly impossible to... oh wait, you mean it is trivially easy to make that change if you want it? Okay. Knock yourself out.
But, see, Wizards of the Coast has to write the rules for people who are only going to get to play that 5th level Dragonborn on a two-shot adventure where they are never going to get the opportunity to find an armorsmith. And since they don't want "wearing armor or clothes" to be a hindrance on this ability as part of the mechanical power of it.... then they went with the option that is easy to skip this issue.
You want to bring it back? Knock yourself out. But don't act like they didn't have a coherent reason for doing it outside of "everything is energy"
To me it looks like you're trying extremely hard, actually, given the bizarre example.I'm not particularly trying here.
Aren't there 17 possible stat combos? I'm maybe doing the math wrong?My main worry is how imbalanced the first level feats are. Given that literally 50% of backgrounds will match your primary stat there will be a lot of options.
Aasimar, the children of a mortal and an eternal, ethereal being that is distrusted by their mortal side and can never live up to the standards of their immortal parents seem to over the trope well.Do Tieflings cover this niche now? Formerly despised child of two worlds forging their own path...
There are 6 Abilities. Esch Background gets 3 Avilities assigned that the ASIs can float between when the player choose where to pit their bonuses. Ergo, each background has a 50-50 shot of letting the PC choose a +2 in their Classes primary attribute.Aren't there 17 possible stat combos? I'm maybe doing the math wrong?
Yeah but there are 16 Backgrounds and 17 combinations of stats. Therefore one combo (hopefully INT WIS CHA or at least something containing INT, the worst stat) has to be excluded. So it's not going to be exactly 50%, is it? Have I gone crazy? Lost my damn mind?There are 6 Abilities. Esch Background gets 3 Avilities assigned that the ASIs can float between when the player choose where to pit their bonuses. Ergo, each background has a 50-50 shot of letting the PC choose a +2 in their Classes primary attribute.
I've never heard this argument raised about Aarakocra though, so if they can be winged why not Dragonfolk
I wager that within a relatively short amount of time, the amount of backgrounds is going to explode. Between old backgrounds being converted (unofficially and then officially), new backgrounds in future products, 3pp products and rules in the DMG for creating them, I suspect there will be no lack for appropriate backgrounds that mix just the right collection on ASI, skills and feats. Maybe you don't like the noble background, but perhaps the courier or Waterdhavian noble will be more to your liking."I've been a puppet, a pauper, a pirate, a poet, a pawn, and a king". And your characters must have lead some pretty boring lives before adventuring if they fit 100% into any one background based on the sixteen.
For example the second son of a noble family (the first is the heir, the second goes to the military, the third the church), had their army defeated, and is now trying to put their life back together as their family was executed has been a noble (clearly), a soldier (went off to war), and is now probably a wayfarer - and that assuming that they went off to war using sword not spell. Which do they use as their background? Whichever they consider most relevant. Or let's take a monk whose monastery has been dissolved and is now looking for their place in the world. Are they an acolyte? Possibly - but they may have been the entertainer within the monastery, possibly someone without a vocation and thus a charlatan, an artisan (you don't think that they spend all day on their knees?), and more. I'm not particularly trying here.
- Acolyte
- Artisan
- Charlatan
- Criminal
- Entertainer
- Farmer
- Guard
- Guide
- Hermit
- Merchant
- Noble
- Sage
- Sailor
- Solider
- Wayfarer
And this is, to me, working as intended. It's encouraging people to think about their backgrounds rather than just have half a line, and that gives them narrative hooks about their character.
My main worry is how imbalanced the first level feats are. Given that literally 50% of backgrounds will match your primary stat there will be a lot of options.