reanjr
First Post
Dark Psion said:Prestige classes are done differently in this book. Much more detail is given to how they exist. They each get 3 to 5 pages and there are only six total. Also there are Racial Substitution levels for Half Elves and Half Orcs for certain classes.
It's almost unfathomable how happy it makes me that Wizards has finally read the section in the DMG on prestige classes.
Dark Psion said:There are some very noticeable errors here too, Tieflings do not have their Energy Resistance listed in their Racial Traits. The Chameleon PrC requires Spellcraft skill but does not include it as a class skill.
While certainly unusual to require Spellcraft and not grant it as a class skill, I wouldn't jump to it being an error. Given the nature of the class, I would thinj it would be by design. You have to learn a little about spellcraft to be able to use those abilities, yet the class isn't a standard spell slinging class, so...
The one big problem with this book is the Illumians.
Like them, hate them or just indifferent, of this 192 page book, over 50 pages are just for them. Two Prestige classes (10 pages) and 9 feats are exclusively theirs and 40 pages are for their race and culture. But those "Ilumian sigils" that are over at WotC's web site? They are not in the book??
Humans get about 28 pages, Half Elves & Half Orcs about 18 between them and the Other races above just 20 pages all together.
For a race that is just lame to me, this is too much.
Well, if they've cut out 30 useless pages for prestige classes, then I'm OK with that, I suppose. They SHOULD get more cultural explanation for them due to the fact that they are new and have nothing and will have nothing published about them. I'm not too fond of the race, but if one were, then having that information is very nice.
Especially when you consider what other "Human-kin" races could have been included.
Jann as Half Genies, Gensai (elemental, paramental, and quasimental), Tallfellow Halflings as those with Human blood, as well as a Half Dwarf or Half Gnome, the Vampyres from Ravenloft as predatory humans and even the Vistani, Quevari and Aber Nomads could have been used. Also, the races included could have had better detail. In Races of Faerun, Aasimar & Tieflings got a much better description.
I don't know how the license works, but it seems to me that Wizards probably isn't allowed to publish gaming material on Ravenloft specific races. Not to mention, I don't think any of them fit in Wizards' view of D&D.
There is also a lot of wasted space in this book where NPCs are stated and they give the full definition of every class ability, full stats of every familiar and repeat the exact information for a Prestige class ability that is on the previous page.
That's something I really hate. When I see an NPC, I want to be given his Ability Scores and his class levels. If he has some sort of choice (like ranger's fighting style) then tell me that. Other than that, get on with the actual NPC and not the stat block.