Wicht
Hero
So in 3e, you felt it was a house rule to exempt prestige classes from the multiclassing restrictions, because that rule was not in the first three core books?
So what book was it in?
So in 3e, you felt it was a house rule to exempt prestige classes from the multiclassing restrictions, because that rule was not in the first three core books?
Got confused, so I went back to your original post. Here's the premise I was looking at:
Then why is object specifically listed for some spells/powers/etc.?? Answer that if the ability to attack objects was always the rule??
EDIT: In other words if that was the intended rule then listing object as a specific target for any powers/spells/etc. would have been redundant.
And again what does 3e and prestige classes have to do with anything?? You're rambling.
So what book was it in?
Ya, I've started to realize on this thread that this, or something like that, is true for many ("4e-ish"?) games. I honestly didn't know before.I think I was substituting "hit" for "success" and "miss" for "failure" in my mind. That's the way I tend to run things.
What if the sub-class feature were worded this way?
Great Weapon Fighting: When you attack with a melee weapon you are wielding with two hands which has the two-handed or versatile property, the huge sweep of your weapon causes you to automatically make at least glancing contact with one target you can see, dealing damage equal to your strength modifier. In addition, make an attack roll as normal, and if your attack roll hits, you do damage as normal less your strength bonus (which was already applied).
I am not sure where you're losing the line of thought here. I'll break it down as simple as I can:
1) If it specifies that objects are targets, then an object can always be a target for that spell;
2) If it does not specify objects as a target, then as the glossary explains, "With your DM’s permission, you can use a power that normally attacks creatures to attack objects."
Is that clear? It's the difference between always applying to objects, and only sometimes applying if the DM deems the circumstances warrant such application.
I am not rambling at all, you're just not understanding why I raised that. I assure you, others do recall how a "core-level" rule came from an expansion book during 3e, which is what happened in 4e with this "objects being targeted" rule.
For example, Burninator just repeated the argument which is in my view entirely defeated by that mutliclassing issue from 3e. It's a proper analogy. In both cases, a "core rule" was accidentally not put in the first three books WOTC released, and they had to correct that by putting the rule in a later book and then retroactively applying it.
In other words, if you're not getting the prestige class issue, don't worry about it. I think others do, and it is relevant to some of what's being said here.
One of the first four expansion books. I don't recall which one. I am sure someone else does. It was quite the debate here at the time. The rules as written in the DMG and PHB stated that multiclassing incurred the XP penalty, and prestige classes were multiclassing. Then one of the expansion books said whoops, prestige classes are exempt from that multiclassing XP penalty. And then WOTC went back and retroactively changed the rule in future reprints of the core books (and they included it in the FAQ as well).
Did 4e ever go back and add the rule to reprints of it's core?
I don't know one way or another. I don't believe they ever reprinted the core books with their accumulated rules updates, but it does appear in the errata/updates file and was included in the rules compendium.