Thanee
First Post
Hiyas!
With the new specialization rules one school of magic has been given a special place... Divination. The only school with a "light" restriction (i.e. lose only Necromancy or Enchantment) when specializing.
Dropping two schools is hard, especially now they made the schools a bit more balanced (transmutation having less alround coverage, conjuration being more useful, etc). Divination spells are always handy, so there's no real loss if you gain a slot limited to divinations per spell level (there's usually a good spell to fit into, like Detect Magic, Comprehend Languages, See Invisibility, Arcane Sight, True Seeing, etc).
So will most Wizards now choose to become Diviners to avoid the second prohibited school?
Of course, not the ones with a concept in mind, that evolves around a school of magic (would be kinda dumb to play a Diviner focused on Evocation magic, altho it's probably more effective than an Evoker).
What do you think?
Bye
Thanee
With the new specialization rules one school of magic has been given a special place... Divination. The only school with a "light" restriction (i.e. lose only Necromancy or Enchantment) when specializing.
Dropping two schools is hard, especially now they made the schools a bit more balanced (transmutation having less alround coverage, conjuration being more useful, etc). Divination spells are always handy, so there's no real loss if you gain a slot limited to divinations per spell level (there's usually a good spell to fit into, like Detect Magic, Comprehend Languages, See Invisibility, Arcane Sight, True Seeing, etc).
So will most Wizards now choose to become Diviners to avoid the second prohibited school?
Of course, not the ones with a concept in mind, that evolves around a school of magic (would be kinda dumb to play a Diviner focused on Evocation magic, altho it's probably more effective than an Evoker).
What do you think?
Bye
Thanee