Agreed. There's usually always at least one Bard in most of the games I run, and they do just fine.Crothian said:I've never had problems with bard sbeing underpowered, they have a nicht just like the other classes and granted it is not as obvious to everyone as say hitting people with a sword but that does not make it any less there.
gizmo33 said:You need to put down the video-game controller...
Yes, and that goes both ways. We've seen plenty of romanticizing of ancient cultures to make them out to be more than they really were before. Just look at all the nonsense people have come up with about the druids or stonehenge for examples. I suspect some of this "the bards knew everything there ever was to know" talk is another example. Were the bards better educated and more knowledgable than your average wandering minstrel? You bet. Were they some sort of ancient repository of all knowledge that ever existed? Hardly.gizmo33 said:People need to understand that what is known about bards in our literate society has passed through a number of layers of abstraction.
Henry said:..., until our Bard happened to glean it out of an old manuscript
Ranes said:Ten out of ten for knowing how to start a fight. (But thanks for the entertainment.)
True, but I hate to see you make too much of a system of writing that was never taken seriously by druids and exists only in the form of a few tomb inscriptions. Bardic knowledge was sacred knowledge, and to write it down was blasphemous. It's like looking for the tenets of Christianity in pornography and trying to draw conclusions from the that. The real direct source of bardic knowledge is verbally trasmitted, and so you don't have it. My crazy thesis here is that only by viewing the written sources through the lense of what anthropology/comparative mythology has to say about pre-literate societies (and this term is prejudiced in assuming some sort of "progress" to writing) can you really do justice to the way that the people of the time period thought. I think a serious attempt at a character class worthy of the name "bard" would recognize what the people who invented the term would have understood about the class.
Again - druidic knowledge is, in fact, unwritten and to the extent that it is not derived immediately from the powers granted by gods, I would argue that such knowledge is in fact BARDIC Knowledge.
gizmo33 said:I believe most gamers do not know enough about bards to do them justice, either as a DM or a module author.
Henry is referring to the D&D bard whereas you are still stuck on the Celtic bard, which is where your confusion (or is it mock-confusion?) stems from. Of course the Celtic bards didn't have access to an efficient means of writing, and if they did, who's to say they wouldn't have used it? After all, unlike the church-scribed Celtic myths, the Greek epic cycles were preserved orally and eventually written down by the same people who had memorised them.gizmo33 said:Your highness, at the risk of suffering the same fate as your other enemies I would like to use you as an example of the EXACT bias I'm talking about when you ask people from a literate society to come up with ideas about bards.
There is an UNBROKEN oral tradition in the universe of bards. It has no need for the mundane scratchings of scribes - "manuscripts" as you say. (Pardon the alliteration.) The details of a person's deathbed confession would have been composed, on the spot, by the household bard into a powerful and stirring poetic epic that would pass through recitation like the black plague across Europe. There's no reason to assume that the bard would ever have to resort to reading manuscripts, or surfing the internet for that matter.
Of course rule Zero is yours to command, my lord. And the campaign is yours to do with as you please. I merely argue for the meekest of your subjects.