WhatGravitas
Explorer
Well, so much was stated in the Races & Classes book. So I assume they're going to stick to it.Hairfoot said:I sincerely hope so. Anyway, we'll all know soon enough.
Cheers, LT.
Well, so much was stated in the Races & Classes book. So I assume they're going to stick to it.Hairfoot said:I sincerely hope so. Anyway, we'll all know soon enough.
As long as we're talking about European cultures, it absolutely does. Anyone who had the wealth to afford it and the available time to train was going to be an armored warrior, and a horseman if he really had the money. It's funny - people wearing armor tended to live longer.Reynard said:But you also get all the ranger "woodsman" baggage on top of it, which has absolutely nothing to do with being a good archer.
Irda Ranger said:As long as you don't have spells granted from a particular deity, or animal companions, I think the Ranger can fit a lot of different archetypes. Like this guy (which is only a good example if you've seen the movie). You're basically just hyper-aware, agile, terrain-savy and ranged-attack-preffered.
Terramotus said:As long as we're talking about European cultures, it absolutely does. Anyone who had the wealth to afford it and the available time to train was going to be an armored warrior, and a horseman if he really had the money. It's funny - people wearing armor tended to live longer.
If you didn't have that money, you were probably a farmer who doubled as hunter. The bow, after all, is a hunting weapon just as much as a warfare weapon, and that would give you the time to get good at using it, just as a knight would be with his weapons. I suppose that in the later middle ages there were archers that weren't really woodsmen, but they were probably poor dirt farmers, and would probably be more appropriately represented as NPC classes.
Terramotus said:Now, that doesn't take into account any cultures that had a martial archery tradition amongst the upper classes. Feudal Japan springs to mind here, and perhaps China.
But, then again, I'm sure we'll see something related in the inevitable Oriental Adventures book.
And they were mostly farmers, when there wasn't a war on.ZappoHisbane said:Erm... correct me if I'm wrong, but wasn't the English army feared for their well-trained masses of lightly armored longbowmen? That's certainly the impression I've gotten from popular history.
Gloombunny said:And they were mostly farmers, when there wasn't a war on.
Reynard said:Everybody was a farmer when their wasn't a war on.
Except for the rich people who could afford armor when they did go to war. Which is exactly what Terramotus was saying.Reynard said:Everybody was a farmer when their wasn't a war on.
= bonus to REF defense and AC?Reaper Steve said:Shields are mentioned as turning aside spears, arrows, and fireballs.
Reynard said:But you also get all the ranger "woodsman" baggage on top of it, which has absolutely nothing to do with being a good archer.