D&D 5E Warlock's Revealed in Livestream


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Ofcourse, which is what I ment about a game built around warlocks, I guess it's just a matter of personal taste.

Warder

Who's that "a game built around warlocks"? It's a striclty chivalrous Arthurian setting, and I adapted a warlock to its milieu. If you give me an example of a campaign that fits your personal taste, I can offer a way to adapt a warlock to it.
 

Does this guy count as heroic? He seems me to be the quintessential warlock in may respects.

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I reckon he'd fit as a warlock. I wouldn't label him as heroic, more of an anti-hero. A heroic warlock (who makes a pact in exchange for abilities beyind those of mortal men) remind me a bit of:

shazam.jpg
 

I would hope, like 4E, your Warlock can have power sources/binding with nicer and fluffier and more heroic things than just the Hells. Like Fae or whatever, not that it worries me, as we generally play S&S heroes, not heroic ones!

I seem to have a predilection for rubbish classes, loving the Warlock from 3E and Monks and Bards from the older editions. So anything that brings those flumphs of classes to useful life is good for me.

Now where is the gnome illusionist? ;)

I love the illusionist class and the gnome. In addition, the warlock construct for the class gives me some hope other 4E classes may be brought into the fold. The most important to me is the 4E shaman, even if the give it a different name like an Animist.
 

The most important to me is the 4E shaman, even if the[y] give it a different name like an Animist.

Could you provide some links to sources or pre-gens or discussions or examples or story-hours about how to use a PC shaman? The character examples that I have seen (mostly in the D&D miniatures) tend to be the bad guys: kobold shaman, orc shaman, lizardfolk shaman, gnoll shaman, etc. The only non-monster shaman I've seen was a human "Crow Shaman," which is highly situation-specific. (There are dozens of examples of mages and clerics and rogues and fighters, but the shaman is largely given a miss.)
 



Who's that "a game built around warlocks"? It's a striclty chivalrous Arthurian setting, and I adapted a warlock to its milieu. If you give me an example of a campaign that fits your personal taste, I can offer a way to adapt a warlock to it.

I appreciate your offer very much, but I don't need your help in order to adapt the warlock to my help, I'm sorry if I sounded curt or rude, it's just that I broke my right elbow several hours after the live steam so the pain plus being forced to use only the left hand cause me to write as little as possible.

Warder
 



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