Lanefan
Victoria Rules
Indeed, and for accuracy substitute "more Fighter characters than any other class" for "many Fighter characters".That is part of why I am motivated to speak, yes. It is not the argument, however, which is that none the following statements are logically equivalent, and none of them can be simply substituted for one another:
There are many Fighter characters on DDB.
The Fighter class is the most well-liked class in 5e.
The Fighter class would be hated if anything whatsoever were changed about its design.
The first of these three statements is inarguable from the data.
Note however that the DDB data also lines up with data and anecdotes from every previous edition. This isn't a one-off surprise, it's a continuation of a lasting pattern established in the 0e-1e days.
The third statement doesn't map to any argument I've seen here, though I might have missed it somewhere.The other two are not. Yet people have repeatedly treated these statements as though they are logically equivalent, and that is incorrect.
The second statement is the gray area. We don't know how many of those Fighters were created becuase players were specifically looking for a simple class/character to play, or because they love-love-loved the Fighter's mechanics, or that the party just needed a front-liner at the time, or whatever other reason.
I'll gently dispute it: my first 3e character was a Fighter, and I thought the Fighter-y bits of it worked well. My newbie mistake was trying to tack on a small bit of Wizard, which kinda butchered the character's mechanics.Yes...and why is it popular, even when most folks agree the design really is bad (e.g. 3e, which literally not one person has thus far come along to dispute)?
If anything, the pattern was stronger in the early editions.Why has every single version of the Fighter been among the most widely-used classes in D&D, no matter what edition you consider? (It is possible one of the early editions breaks this pattern, I haven't actually seen data about them. But for all WotC editions it is true. Fighter is always in the top 3 and usually #1.)
It's because they are and always have been the easiest class for a new player to jump in and play with, end of story.There could be some complex reason involving the evolution of game design or what have you, but Occam's razor tells us to keep it simple. The simple explanation is that people will choose to play Fighters regardless of quality or power. That the reason it remains one of the most widely played classes regardless of the rules it uses is that the rules it uses aren't why people choose to play it in the first place. Thus, even if they ARE popular, it isn't because of their design. It's because of their theme.