I just think in practical purposes, they were awful mechanically. Not just because it's highly unlikely you were rolled at least three 15s, a 12, and an 10, but at bare minimum, you couldn't start being a bard until you were level 11. And most people didn't play to that level.
Oh, I don't know. I saw a number of 1E bards in my AD&D 1E/2E days. One of the things to remember is it wasn't really "11th level" like we think of it today because of the XP tables.
5th-level Fighter: 18,001
5th-level Thief: +10,001
So, rounding up a bit let's say 30000 XP to "become a bard" (assuming you didn't shift right away).
The equivalent is:
- Cleric: 6th level
- Druid: 6th level
- Fighter: 5th level
- Paladin: 5th level
- Ranger: 5th level
- M-U: 5th level
- Illusionist: 5th level
- Thief: 6th level
- Assassin: 6th level
- Monk: 5th level
So, XP-wise becoming a bard didn't really take long. It was also one of the reasons why nearly every demi-human was multiclassed.
Granted, the four 15's were harder to get, but most tables just rolled until you got what you wanted to play what you wanted.
shrug
Ah... ninja'd...
You had to be a 5th level fighter(18k xp) and a 5th level thief(10k xp), so 28k xp total. Even if you were single class only, neither of those two classes would be anywhere near 11th level. Thief being the easiest class in the game to level would only be level 6 with 28k xp. So while the levels would total 11, 5/5/1, they really wouldn't be 11th level with regard to what level people played to. They'd reach bard when the other classes(except thief) in the party were 5th level, which pretty much every game played to if they didn't die/TPK first.
Precisely!
You also have the stat requirements off by a little. It's not three 15s, a 12 and a 10. It's two 15s, a 17-18 strength, a 12 and a 10. To switch classes you had to have a 17 or 18 in the original class, which had to start as a fighter.
This, however, is incorrect. To dual-class you had to have a 15 in the first class, 17 or better in subsequent classes.
having to start over at level 1 three times, being unable to use prior class abilities(except hit points) until you exceed the former class(s).
While this the rule for DUAL-CLASSING, the path to a Bard wasn't that. You could freely use your fighter abilities while gaining your thief levels. I could see how someone might play that way, but strictly speaking that wasn't the rule in the book.
shrug
Remember, one of those 15's(strength) had to be a 17-18 or you couldn't switch classes to thief
Again incorrect. You are conflating dual-classing rules with the rules for the bard path. Different things. Again, nit-picky and I guess I could see someone playing that way... just not in the rules.
We always interpreted the bard rules to mean you could overwrite that requirement, but in hindsight, we were probably doing it wrong and the bard section is a typo.
No, I think you were correct. Otherwise it would have specified a 17 Dexterity. I think they already saw the four 15's as punishment enough to get the class...
It is also a reason why it was separated from other classes. Why not just be a Fighter/Thief/Druid with STR 15, DEX 17, WIS 17, and CHA 17 if they wanted to follow normal dual-classing rules? Bard was not a dual-class path but its own thing in my opinion.
I have this one as well! One of my favorites.
