A bow can be a more powerful weapon than a crossbow due to its size, etc. It's appropriate for DnD to provide Composite Bows with strength bonuses, etc. And bows are faster to load, as the rules allow. I don't have much of a problem with them.
But a crossbow is quite simply an improvement over a bow for ease of use. Once loaded, it's much harder to mess up. The bolt is snug in its little home awaiting ejection. But this ease of use is not properly accounted for. In a way, its very design is like a masterwork bow. It limits the wandering around the typical arrow would do while resting on a bow.
The point: A relatively untrained person can use a crossbow more effectively than they can a bow. That's partly why the darn things were invented!
Therefore, what about giving a crossbow an automatic +2 masterwork bonus to attack, and a masterwork crossbow gets a +3 bonus?
I think it more properly represents the strength of the platform while not really taking anything away from the bow. You're only likely to get 1 shot per combat with the crossbow -- might as well count for something!
But a crossbow is quite simply an improvement over a bow for ease of use. Once loaded, it's much harder to mess up. The bolt is snug in its little home awaiting ejection. But this ease of use is not properly accounted for. In a way, its very design is like a masterwork bow. It limits the wandering around the typical arrow would do while resting on a bow.
The point: A relatively untrained person can use a crossbow more effectively than they can a bow. That's partly why the darn things were invented!
Therefore, what about giving a crossbow an automatic +2 masterwork bonus to attack, and a masterwork crossbow gets a +3 bonus?
I think it more properly represents the strength of the platform while not really taking anything away from the bow. You're only likely to get 1 shot per combat with the crossbow -- might as well count for something!