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Worth mentioning:
I wonder how many of those human fighters were made just so that people could use them to argue about GWM/SS/PM![]()
Partially a jab, but look at that insanely lop-sided the race distribution when compared to every other combination, and remember that variant humans get a feat at level one, which makes them ideal for both low level feat testing and circumventing the main penalty when multi-classing (which is not getting ASI on time)
More interestingly:
The Cleric has been knocked out of the "core 4".
Aasimar are the rarest of all characters, even more rare than birdmen. Though it doesn't specify if this is the DMG's or the Volo's Guide's take of the race.
Well, I agree about the human part, but the fighter part? Not so much.Most traditional fantasy and mythic heroes tend to be what D&D calls fighters. And human. Plus both are some of the most relateable class and races. I seriously doubt that it's merely just new players gravitating towards them.
I'm not sure that human fighters would have been chosen for the feat since this is looking at the free content which includes a total of two feats, so the majority of these likely aren't taking variant human as only those who have invested in the app would have a reason to do so.
From memory, the free aasimar is the DMG version.
Is the revised ranger available in DnD beyond? I thought it was only the original.I wonder how much of the Ranger's relative popularity has to do with the Revised Ranger.
Did he cast spells? Heal with a touch? Have an animal companion? No. He was the inspiration for the ranger, but since then there've been skills added to cover what spells did so haphazardly for the early ranger, and the ranger has 'evolved' to use all sorts of actual spells much earlier. He might have been a 4e ranger or UA spell-less ranger, but not a PH ranger. Paladin is right out. In 5e, Outlander Fighter.Well, I agree about the human part, but the fighter part? Not so much.
Aaragorn is totally a paladin. Or a ranger, depending on your view.
Bilbo was at least mistaken for a Rogue.Gimli, Sam and Merry might be fighters, but Frodo and Sam are not. Bilbo is a rogue.
Howard's depictions of Conan didn't go in so heavily for the Rage thing, and certainly didn't invoke totems... Fighter or MC works at least as well. And, Barbarian, should have been a background like it was a kit in 2e. ;PConan the Barbarian. Its right in the name.
Doesn't cast spells, doesn't do anything D&D-identity-crisis-rangery, really.Robin Hood is totally a Ranger.
Wu Xia use weapons, lots of them, often armor.Wu Xia stories default to the monk class.
Sure, always healing people by laying on hands and casting spells.King Arthur is pretty much an iconic paladin as well.
Are self-referent.D&D novels ...
He'd likely fly into a rage and snap you neck if you said that to his face. Y'know, in ancient Greek... ;PHeracles is totally a barbarian.
Most of the characters you just mentioned. The rest of the Knights of the round table. Basically every other 'knight' that didn't run around casting spells and laying on hands. Roland and almost all of Charlemagne's Paladins, ironically (and one of them was vaguely a Warlock or something, too, weirdly enough). Beowulf. Hector. Pretty much the cast of GoT who aren't clearly rogues.So, who are these legendary Fighter types?
Essentially, percentages to the third decimal point.No, they're statisics: characters per 100k characters. There aren't 109k characters in DDB, there could be any number, less than 100k (if it were a lot less the numbers'd start looking weird) or more - could be a lot more, even millions.
Robin hood was an assassin, I read it in White Dwarf years ago...