Atticus_of_Amber
Explorer
Scarbonac said:OK, I don't think that it's that unbalancing, but I'm also not a big fan of the ''balance'' fetish that seems to have overtaken the game.
*shrug*
It strikes me as reasonable and justifiable, considering the flavor that you're trying to impart; it helps to liven up an otherwise OK but bland PC race, giving it something unique that raises the crunchiness ratio a bit.
As for the feat, I'm not certain if I get your full meaning; this bit --
-- has me kinda scratching my head, but it could be it's because it's late and I should be long abed by now.![]()
As always, examples make things clearer.
We have a human Ftr7/Brb2/Rog1, lets call him Dorin. Dorin sufferes no multiclass penalites because: (a) his favoured class is "any" and thus his highest level class, fighter, doesn't count and (b) his other class levels are within one level of each other.
Dorin wants to take another level of Barbarian but doing so would mean that his rogue and barbarian levels would be more than one level apart and thus he would suffer the 20% xp penalty.
But Doring is lucky enough to be in my campaign!

However if Dorin, being a tad dense, had instead taken Addtional Favoured Enemy (Fighter), he would be in trouble. He'd get to ignore his fighter levels, but he would have been able to ignore them anyway becasue his racial favoured class is "any' and figheter is his highest class level. His rogue and barbarian levels will count towards calculating his xp penalty - since they are more than one level apart, he gets teh 20% penalty. Poor Dorin.

Of course, if Dorin had chosen to be a half-elf, and my house rule applied, he wouldn't have had to worry about all this. In fact, as a half elf, he could have been a Brb1/Drd3/Ftr5/Rgr7/Rog9 and still not collected an exp penalty. Silly Dorin.