Oni
First Post
Bendris Noulg said:I see two problems in this, though.
First, the "odd-pair" may feature moments where one is more important than the other, but it is rarely a case of one always being more important than the other. If such is the case, the matter isn't one of character power but of scenario design (or possibly favoritism). The only true benefit of having a "typical party" of near-same Character Levels is that purchased modules will more easily accomodate them. Outside of that, it is simply the GM's ability to do so that is in the way. I routinely GM mix-leveled parties (my last had a Halfling PsyW4, a Verbeeg ECL8/Fighter4/Rogue2, and a Human Fighter12/Psychic6) and have always managed to keep the game running without a hitch.
Another issue is that believing each character should be equal at all times (hence always sharing the spot light), the idea that everyone gets a chance at the spot light (i.e., the chance to shine as an individual) is becoming a foreign concept, since shinging as an individual has become synonomous with over-shadowing everyone else, which is far from the truth. I have personally seen a player call foul when another PC was able to perform an act no one else could pull off or had any chance of influencing. This same player, however, had seemed to forget that his own character had been the "star" of a session 2 months previous, which (of course) he didn't seem to mind at the time.
I'm not saying that every character needs and equal share of the spot light every moment of every game, and I'm not saying that every character needs to be equally effective in every single situation. What I am saying is when one character is repeatedly more effective in one situation than all the others, that isn't fun. When one character is able to become the "star" 9 out of 10 games because they're able to handle everything before anyone else can, that isn't fun. Imagine you have a 10th level barbarian and a 5th level fighter. The barb is pretty much always going to be the star of the show simply because he'll be better at everthing the fighter does, and the fighter will never have a chance to shine short of completely removing the barbarian from the picture. That isn't fun.
If class A can do the job of class B + whatever else class A does, why bother with class B?