Oh, psionics have their own little niche, I could admit - Mind flayers, Drow, Gray Dwarves, and Skullport (underground Wterdeep FYI, if you didn't know) all have accomplished psioncists, IMO.Nightfall said:Indeed, I think the PHB II classes fit in fine with FR, but require less tweaking than say...incarnum characters or psionic ones.
NiTessine said:Mmh... I think base classes should be as general and widely available as possible.
(snip)
Knights are everywhere. There are knights in Evermeet, knights in Silverymoon, knights in Waterdeep, knights in the dwarfholds, oodles of knights in Cormyr... knights anywhere they follow Tyr, Torm, Helm, or the Red Knight, anywhere they have had a warrior caste.
The PHBII Knight is a knight, such as might be found in the service of any lord of Cormyr, or indeed, as the lord himself. The prestige classes represent knights of specific orders. Unless each lord of the Forest Kingdom should have a prestige class of his own, there is no conflict. Most of the different knightly prestige classes are also quite accessible to knights.3catcircus said:Hmm - then how do you resolve this with the fact that there are specific prestige classes and/or substitution levels for the various knights in the Forgotten Realms (Purple Dragon Knight, Knight-Errant of Silverymoon, Crescent Moon Knight, Darksong Knight, Knight of the Blue Moon, Knight of the Flying Hunt, Knight of the Weave, Mystic Fire Knight, Silverhair Knight, Ruby Rose Knight, Thayan Knight, Triadic Knight, Vengeance Knight, Wary Swordknight)
NiTessine said:The PHBII Knight is a knight, such as might be found in the service of any lord of Cormyr, or indeed, as the lord himself. The prestige classes represent knights of specific orders. Unless each lord of the Forest Kingdom should have a prestige class of his own, there is no conflict. Most of the different knightly prestige classes are also quite accessible to knights.
You do, of course, realise that the name "knight" given to the PHBII class is merely a basic descriptor - one could just as easily rename it Guardian or Protector.3catcircus said:Sorry, I don't buy that. All of the canon for Cormyr is pretty clear on this - a "knight" in Cormyr is a 3rd level Fighter (Cormyr, pg. 26) and "...because of the heroic actions of their leaders, the Purple Dragon knights." (FRCS, pg. 49) indicates that the commanders generally have this prestige class as a form of an order of chivalry or an order of merit - kind of like the US military's officers receiveing the Legion of Merit award - but that there is only *one* knightly order in Cormyr that is based upon fealty to the lords, nobles, and royalty. Any other knightly orders would be religious in nature.
My point is that the PHB2 "Knight" class - he is nothing more than a heavy cavalry soldier with a few tricks thrown in. You can pretty much do the same things with a fighter and the right feats. There is really nothing compelling about this as a base class for me. If I want a super heavy-duty fighter, I'll choose the Gallowglass. If I want a really good mounted combatant, I'll qualify for and take levels in the Cavalier PrC. If I want FR-specific knightly order flavor, I'll pick one of the FR-specific PrC or substitution levels.
Indeed, I'm not trying to sell it. If you don't like the class, suit yourself. I am merely offering my own interpretation of how the class might be inserted into the Realms. Trying to offer examples of how the knight class hasn't been a part of the Realms before isn't really going to achieve anything when the point is to put it there in the first place.3catcircus said:Sorry, I don't buy that. All of the canon for Cormyr is pretty clear on this - a "knight" in Cormyr is a 3rd level Fighter (Cormyr, pg. 26) and "...because of the heroic actions of their leaders, the Purple Dragon knights." (FRCS, pg. 49) indicates that the commanders generally have this prestige class as a form of an order of chivalry or an order of merit - kind of like the US military's officers receiveing the Legion of Merit award - but that there is only *one* knightly order in Cormyr that is based upon fealty to the lords, nobles, and royalty. Any other knightly orders would be religious in nature.
My point is that the PHB2 "Knight" class - he is nothing more than a heavy cavalry soldier with a few tricks thrown in. You can pretty much do the same things with a fighter and the right feats. There is really nothing compelling about this as a base class for me. If I want a super heavy-duty fighter, I'll choose the Gallowglass. If I want a really good mounted combatant, I'll qualify for and take levels in the Cavalier PrC. If I want FR-specific knightly order flavor, I'll pick one of the FR-specific PrC or substitution levels.
Apparently, according to the superb Class Spotlight section on the sadly defunct WOTC 3.5 website section, the spotlight revealed that Duskblades ARE a bastard offshoot of the Bladesinger Style. Except the style was made available for non elves to be used. So Bladesingers aren't quite "fond" of Duskblades due to that.I've mostly been thinking about the Duskblade. It seems like a perfect 20 level core Bladesinger