Parmandur
Book-Friend, he/him
Great books. I came at it the other way, having read them before ever starting into D&D,so my base conception of the Bard were his characterizations of Taliesin and Myrddin.
Think it's fine with them being separate classes, Bard-Druid-Ranger in my own head being a sort of counterpoint to Wizard-Cleric-Paladin.
And as you get further into those books, it's not an exact identity: Bards are Druids, but not all Druids are Bards sort of thing, like monks and priests are not precisely the same.
Think it's fine with them being separate classes, Bard-Druid-Ranger in my own head being a sort of counterpoint to Wizard-Cleric-Paladin.
And as you get further into those books, it's not an exact identity: Bards are Druids, but not all Druids are Bards sort of thing, like monks and priests are not precisely the same.