5E really doesn't scale that high. Even a Wizard with wish isn't doing a fraction of what Strange and Scarlet Witch can.5E needs to reference the MCU almost lol
maybe the highest highs don't quite match but i feel there's a good amount of general overlap where MCU could provide a decent reference point for 5e characters.5E really doesn't scale that high. Even a Wizard with wish isn't doing a fraction of what Strange and Scarlet Witch can.
Okay, fair enough. What would you consider to be good examples of higher level characters from literature?
It did name drop Robin Hood (as Ranger), Little John (as Fighter), Alan-a-Dale and Will Scarlett (as Bards), and Lancelot, Gawain, and Galahad (as Paladins). Not Arthur, Aragorn, or Conan though.As far as I recall, 1e didn’t name drop Arthur, Conan, Aragorn or Robin Hood as class examples.
Sorry, I was going off of memory there on the examples. But yes, totally agree. D&D is its own type of fantasy and none of those characters could really be emulated in 2e. I still think overall, while sword and sorcery was an inspiration, D&D never really was about truly emulating any of those characters either.It did name drop Robin Hood (as Ranger), Little John (as Fighter), Alan-a-Dale and Will Scarlett (as Bards), and Lancelot, Gawain, and Galahad (as Paladins). Not Arthur, Aragorn, or Conan though.
I'm ambivalent about these examples, because on one hand they were really cool and inspiring, but on the other hand they were brazen lies. Player Classes weren't based on these figures! Player Classes were a patchwork of ideas mostly plucked from ~1940s-1970s American and British sword and sorcery. If mythology and folklore came into it, it was indirectly: it went through the wringer and came out wrong, changed, unrecognisable. And to be clear, that's fine! Adapting and remixing older material over and over is how civilisation works, we're not supposed to put that stuff on a pedestal and never touch it.
However, namedropping mythical figures in the PHB set up some unreasonable expectations. Mages in myth and legend don't drop fireballs. You can't emulate Merlin, Circe, or Medea (2nd Edition's examples) with D&D rules.
So imo, picking historical and (ah) public domain examples, only marginally related to the classes, while excluding recent fantasy material that was MUCH more relevant, created a dissonance, at least in some cases.
There's also an issue with 2nd Edition's eurocentrism, but the PC examples are only a symptom, and I'm NOT getting into that. Just, you know. Let's not be blind to it, it's huge.
I think the issue is that high level 2e PCs translate to low level 4e or 5e PCsAD&D had plenty of representations of fictional exemplars who were high level in D&D stats. You just have to look in Deities & Demigods (1e) The series of recurring Down to Earth Heroes articles in Dragon, and 2e Legends & Lore.
Mostly they were baseline a bit above what PCs could do with better stats, multiple human classes, and one off powers.
The first hero statted out in the 1e and 2e god books is 15th level. The lowest level American Indian hero exemplar is 10th.
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