Paul Farquhar
Legend
The ones with pictures where especially popular.Manuals of martial maneuvers were a real thing IRL
Oh, you said martial, sorry.
The ones with pictures where especially popular.Manuals of martial maneuvers were a real thing IRL
DPR doesn't make you a god. Hecatoncheires, perhaps.woah. There’s no way fighter could have been dpr in 2E. Everyone swears to me wizards were god on these forums.
Specialists got a new spell at each level, and even in 1e, though it may have been a bit obscure, magic-users got learned a new spell when they achieved a new spell level.Wizards eventually became gods in 2E, but it was far more conditional than 3E. First off, you had to get to a higher level before it was really the case, in 2E. Second off, and this is often forgotten, you only really got spells two ways in 2E, by looting dead wizards' spellbooks and by copying from scrolls. .... Whereas in 3E you got spells on level up. There were many other factors to and I could write a multi-page essay on it but suffice to say, wizards, especially Transmuters, could become godlike, but it took a smart player, the right spells, and more levels than 3E.
I can't recall the 2e details, but in 1e, the fighter benefited disproportionately from 18 STR, due to % bonuses, though, really, only significantly if you rolled over 50, and from more proportionately, from 17 or 18 CON.Rolled stats also helped Fighters more than really any other class in 2E and were the norm (indeed generous rolling variants were the norm by the mid 90s, with 3d6 down the line seen only in rare, brave cases).
DPR doesn't make you a god. Hecatoncheires, perhaps.
Specialists got a new spell at each level, and even in 1e, though it may have been a bit obscure, magic-users got learned a new spell when they achieved a new spell level.
I can't recall the 2e details, but in 1e, the fighter benefited disproportionately from 18 STR, due to % bonuses, though, really, only significantly if you rolled over 50, and from more proportionately, from 17 or 18 CON.
Thing is, CON was pretty likely to go down as your career progressed (both aging and getting raised, among other things), and STR could obviated by magic items (DEX certainly could be, too) and those were useable by Clerics & Thieves & their sub-classes, as well as fighters. OTOH, caster stats would go up as you aged, though their impact was no where near as dramatic as in 3e.
Specialists got a new spell at each level, and even in 1e, though it may have been a bit obscure, magic-users got learned a new spell when they achieved a new spell level.
I can't recall the 2e details, but in 1e, the fighter benefited disproportionately from 18 STR, due to % bonuses, though, really, only significantly if you rolled over 50, and from more proportionately, from 17 or 18 CON.
Thing is, CON was pretty likely to go down as your career progressed (both aging and getting raised, among other things), and STR could obviated by magic items (DEX certainly could be, too) and those were useable by Clerics & Thieves & their sub-classes, as well as fighters. OTOH, caster stats would go up as you aged, though their impact was no where near as dramatic as in 3e.
In 2E?
Wizards eventually became gods in 2E, but it was far more conditional than 3E. First off, you had to get to a higher level before it was really the case, in 2E. Second off, and this is often forgotten, you only really got spells two ways in 2E, by looting dead wizards' spellbooks and by copying from scrolls. This meant that if the DM didn't want you to have a spell, you basically couldn't have it. So many problematic or synergistic spells simply never reached PCs. There were technically other ways (spell research, for example), but they were either limited and also DM-bounded. Whereas in 3E you got spells on level up. There were many other factors to and I could write a multi-page essay on it but suffice to say, wizards, especially Transmuters, could become godlike, but it took a smart player, the right spells, and more levels than 3E.
Whereas Fighters just needed to specialise in a good weapon, and maybe take two-weapon-fighting/ambidexterity proficiencies, and go to town with multiple attacks. Add in a high STR, either natural or often from a belt or gauntlets, and maybe a magic weapon or two and the became terrifying, especially in magic full plate (and perhaps a magic shield). Combat and Tactics made them even better. Moreso than the magic equivalent did for casters.
Rolled stats also helped Fighters more than really any other class in 2E and were the norm (indeed generous rolling variants were the norm by the mid 90s, with 3d6 down the line seen only in rare, brave cases).
[The above attacks per round table] excludes melee combat with monsters (q.v.) of less than one hit die (d8) and non-exceptional (0 level) humans and semi-humans, i.e. all creatures with less than one eight-sided hit die. All of these creatures entitle a fighter to attack once for each of his or her experience levels (See COMBAT).
I never saw gauntlets of ogre power of girdles of giant strength ever when I played ad&d. And it disappointed me when I started playing 3.x/PF and they were just common gear to keep up with the game.Re: specialists, that's one of the "other methods" I was referring to. It rarely had much impact in my experience. Re: a new spell at each level, wasn't that random off a chart, though? Which is a completely different situation to "You have leveled up, now pick the most powerful couple of spells at this spell level (or keep picking from old levels if this level sucks!)" of 3.XE, which lead directly to caster supremacy, by giving them the ability to min-max (well, max, at least) on a whole new axis.
I literally can't remember a 2E campaign where the PCs weren't like, either perma-dead or level 16 or so within about 3-5 years (or much less) of game time. Some pre-gen campaigns had you going like 1-15 in a matter of months (there may have been some dubious rule designed to counteract it but I don't think it was routinely enforced or even known about, esp. given official stuff like Dragon Mountain clearly ignoring it if it existed). The only time aging came into play was ghosts, those bastards. This may have been different in 1E.
And yeah, in 2E, only Warrior classes (Fighter, Paladin, Ranger, and some other later ones like Gladiator) had percentile strength and the top CON bonuses, which, combined with armour (including plate) generally taking your full DEX bonus, meant a fighter with high physical stats (from rolling well) was really, really well-positioned to kill a lot of people very quickly whilst not taking much damage.
Sure, you could put Gauntlets of Ogre power or the like on the Rogue or Cleric. Great, now what? Watch as they make their (often single) attack and miss because of their worse THAC0 and still do less damage than the Fighter because they don't have specialization? Not that it didn't happen! The moment a Belt of Giant Strength or similar appeared, or the Fighter read a book to jump his STR from 18/XX to 19, the Gauntlets got tossed to Cleric or Rogue. I once saw a very bad NPC absolutely get his head pounded in with some lucky rolls on a Cleric with said Gauntlets and a +4 mace of some kind.
Of course the absolute meanest 2E character I ever saw was actually a Fighter/Speciality Priest with a Kit that let him take weapon specialization (which MCs normally could not). It was a miracle of exception-based design exploitation. The Kit was for Fighter/Clerics, but the Speciality Priest in question specifically said that they could take any kit legal for Clerics or Fighter/Clerics, and said that they could multi-class with Fighter (when MC'ing was usually illegal for SPs). As this was a pre-internet age and my player had somehow read the several obscure books enough to actually work this all out, I was more impressed than horrified. There were some other brutal exception-based things going on as well, as I recall.
I saw wizards getting treasures with entire levels worth of spell books back in the day.
I never saw gauntlets of ogre power of girdles of giant strength ever when I played ad&d.
No all level 3 spells things like that not really sure what the DM was thinking.Sure, but they often weren't the spells the players actually wanted.
Sure, but they often weren't the spells the players actually wanted. And after a few spellbooks, about 80-90% of them tended to be duplicates. The first time you found the spell book of say, a 9th level Wizard you'd killed (at like, maybe level or 5 or 6 probably), it was amazing. Suddenly you had a bazillion new spells. But then you noticed most of them were rubbish!
Also in 2E, someone correct me if I'm wrong, but certainly most people seemed to believe you could only memorize each spell once. So you couldn't have like, 3x fireball even if you could memorize three 3rd-level spells, you had to have Fireball, Lightning Bolt and er... some other 3rd-level spell, or whatever. I don't know whether this was correct rules-following, but it was true of the NPC Wizards in every 2E adventure I read (and all the 1E ones I can think of), and that was not the case in 3E for sure. Whereas a 3.XE Wizard can just memorize multiple copies of his best spells if that suits him. He can also use metamagic to use higher-level spell slots to cast lower-level but more useful spells more powerfully. All this created huge power creep for 3E Wizards.
Yeah I think it depends on a lot of factors. If you didn't play solidly for a decade (like week-in, week-out) like we did, or your DM used mostly random treasure (like I did) but you got unlucky with the RNG, or if your DM never used pre-gen adventures (which had a peculiar fascination with certain magic items - including aforementioned gauntlets - which appeared in bunches of 1E and 2E adventures).
It was definitely weird to go to 3E and suddenly see magic items you were in awe of basically be seen as "Minimal Viable Product" by the game system, though.
And yes Speciality Priests were EASILY the best D&D has ever done with Cleric-type classes. Nothing has come remotely close since, in any edition. 5E Clerics are powerful, but most of them are pretty flavourless next to 2E SPs.
2e I don't have the weirdly vivid recall that I have with 1e.Re: specialists, that's one of the "other methods" I was referring to. It rarely had much impact in my experience. Re: a new spell at each level, wasn't that random off a chart, though?
Quite a number of things un-naturally aged you in 1e, particularly otherwise desirable/beneficial things, from Haste to Wish, as a limitation on abuse, in theory (and age-reduction magic always carried a risk of unwinding on you), to the point that the standard 1e goldenrod character sheets had separate space for Age, apparent age, and unnatural aging.The only time aging came into play was ghosts, those bastards. This may have been different in 1E.
Funny thing, though, there were like three different versions thereof. A cursory PH treatment, CPH, and L&L, I think. I preferred CPH and used it extensively for years (from the DM side of the screen), L&L sounded pretty broken.And yes Speciality Priests were EASILY the best D&D has ever done with Cleric-type classes. Nothing has come remotely close since, in any edition.