GoodKingJayIII said:As I understand it, the paladin can only mark one foe anyway (despite it being an aoe) So a lot of your example situations wouldn't have worked anyway.
I'm aware of that, that doesn't change any one of my examples. The paladin will frequently be battling one foe that choose to stay engaged with him, while he would like to influence another foe to attack him. (Can I say "draw aggro" without opening up a new can of worms?!)
Dragonblade said:Two issues.
First, I think you are expecting the Divine Challenge to be something its not. Its not intended to draw nonadjacent foes to the paladin. Its intended to keep melee foes engaged with the paladin.
Well, I can't rule out misinterpretting it. But when I read the fluff: "You boldly confront a nearby enemy, searing it with divine light if it ignores your challenge." I have to disagree - that sounds a whole lot like more getting a nearby guy to engage you (or face the consequences) than to force someone already committed to fighting you engaged. In fact, for a foe that has willingly chose to come up and attack you, the Divine Challenge is nearly pointless.
Dragonblade said:Second, you can't write rules for "common sense". That way lies madness... I think one of WotC's goals is to provide a stable framework for D&D so that all players can play the same game and expect it to be played the same way.
Those are valid and important points. No argument on those.
To be clear though, my problem was not that they tried to have a clear concise rule, but rather that for the sake of being clear and concise they came up with a 'fix' for exploitative behavior that crushes several common and legitimate applications of the power.
Writing clear concise rules does lead to some rules lawyering, but its better than endless table arguments and it helps protect DMs from abusive players and helps protect players from bad DMs.
True for the most part, but if they're clear it should reduce lawyering. As the rule stands now there is really no arguing about it. We can not like it, whine, or house rule it, but it no longer lends itself to a debate on the interpretation of the rule.
Thanks for the feedback...