Until lvl 6 yes.I mean the biggest change is the new blade singer gets Int to attack and damage straight away.
So true strike is actually a bit redundant for the most part.
As a connoisseur of gishes, and the many flavors that 5e offers them in, I've come to an opinion. The gishes born from a full caster base class that add a more weapon focused subclass cannot deliver. Because of the mechanics and power budget of 5e class design, the subclass goes to a lot of trouble to produce a character with a slightly stronger basic attack than just using an offensive cantrip, but who's still stronger when using a spell slot. And as soon as you hit a high enough level that you have a spell slot for every round of combat in a day, making a weapon attack is a liability and your subclass is dead.
Bladesinger Wizard, Valor Bard, War Cleric, Moon Druid, it's the same story for all of them. You're a full caster trying to "Hello fellow kids" as a martial warrior and doing a bad job of it. Being a full caster is just better, because it's where a majority of your class power budget still lies. The effective gish subclasses come at it from a martial base class, where a subclass dash of spellcasting is a small but noticeable increase in utility and damage. That or it's baked in from the start, like Paladins.
So no, I don't expect much from the Bladesinger. There's a reason the 2014 version advice was "Take it for the overpowered defensive traits meant to let you survive in melee and just play as a normal full caster." Trying to squeeze a full martial package into a full caster subclass just doesn't work.
I mean the biggest change is the new blade singer gets Int to attack and damage straight away.
So true strike is actually a bit redundant for the most part.
As a connoisseur of gishes, and the many flavors that 5e offers them in, I've come to an opinion. The gishes born from a full caster base class that add a more weapon focused subclass cannot deliver. Because of the mechanics and power budget of 5e class design, the subclass goes to a lot of trouble to produce a character with a slightly stronger basic attack than just using an offensive cantrip, but who's still stronger when using a spell slot. And as soon as you hit a high enough level that you have a spell slot for every round of combat in a day, making a weapon attack is a liability and your subclass is dead.
Bladesinger Wizard, Valor Bard, War Cleric, Moon Druid, it's the same story for all of them. You're a full caster trying to "Hello fellow kids" as a martial warrior and doing a bad job of it. Being a full caster is just better, because it's where a majority of your class power budget still lies. The effective gish subclasses come at it from a martial base class, where a subclass dash of spellcasting is a small but noticeable increase in utility and damage. That or it's baked in from the start, like Paladins.
So no, I don't expect much from the Bladesinger. There's a reason the 2014 version advice was "Take it for the overpowered defensive traits meant to let you survive in melee and just play as a normal full caster." Trying to squeeze a full martial package into a full caster subclass just doesn't work.
If your not spamming Alarm, Unseen Servant, and Tensors Floatig Disk as a wizard, you're missing out as a wizard.
As well as Leomunds Tiny Hut and Phantom Steed at level 5.
As for Bladesingers, seems fine. I expect it will mostly be used in multiclassing with a Martial character.
4-6 times per day covers the majority of the adventuring most groups actually do.Only when they are in Bladesong, which is a boost, but is not all the time especially in tier 1-2.