Felix said:
I remember this argument for elementary school. I believe my response should be "Yes it is."
. . .
No, never mind. Ditto for the rest of those.
Arcane Trickster
Archmage
Eldrich Knight
Heirophant
Loremaster
Mystic Theurge
Thaumaturgist
Gee, in the DMG, about half. Whaddya know. And the Eldrich Knight isn't going to be any kind of effective in melee without taking more than one Fighter level, so that would be another.
Or perhaps you meant, "Of all the spellcasting PrCs that don't give up any spellcasting levels, how many of them give up more than three spellcasting levels?" Then I'd have to say you are quite right. Or is that what you meant by "(that's their FOCUS)"? So suddenly any spellcasting class that gives up spellcasting levels doesn't have spellcasting as their FOCUS? Good circular logic, that would be.
Well, to begin with, what I actually thought you were originally referring to was spellcasting-focused PrCs *wherein* you must give up more than three levels of spellcasting, not *wherein and/or for which*. My mistake, arguably. Either way, do you honestly believe that - for example - a rogue/caster hybrid shouldn't have to give up any spellcasting levels? Or even, less than the arcane trickster demands?
The eldritch knight - should they not, either?
And so on. Because, to me, these PrCs should have to give up something to gain the exatrordinary amounts of things they do. In fact, more than they must at present. As I have said before.
Terribly sorry, I thought you would have been interested in knowing how a PrCs still have weaknesses.
What, next you will tell me that d4 HD for a purely spellcasting PrC is a balancing factor, a "weakness". . .?

Nope, I don't buy this line.
Wheras gish base classes are signifigantly underpowered. The PrC attempts to bring them back into line with a single-classed build. Snort yourself.
Really. Then why print them at all, as has been done throughout various splatbooks and elsewhere? If they are so underpowered, perhaps it's that the gish archetype is itself "weaker", much as the Bard is "weaker", a common subjective appraisal of the generalist, in general.
So if PrCs are better at their speciality than base class builds, which are more generalized, then they're overpowered. No wonder you have the opinion you do.
It would help if you took the time to read that to which you are responding. I very specifically referred to *having more overall power*. I fail to see how that could reasonably have been misinterpreted as meaning "better at their specialty".
My apologies, there should have been a negative in that statement: "If you don't believe X, then define or defend your opinion" or something along those lines. But since you decided to provide the definition, I'll suggest that if someone is determined to find something, they'll find it: you don't like PrCs, and you've contrived a way to "prove" that it's the case.
Actually, I love PrCs. They were (IMO) a great idea, and I like many of the concepts, and in fact many of the game mechanic designs that I've encountered and - post-tinkering - used. That people find what to them appear to be balance issues in D&D should - I'd have thought - come as no surprise to almost any player or DM. After all, I am hardly the only person to have expressed such a view, IRL or on forums - wherever.
This is similar to the, "Heroin addicts like heroin, more power to them for shooting up." I suppose since I'm such a powergamer and don't have any idea about proper game balance I should just be on my merry and not discuss things like this when the grown-ups are in the forum.

Uh, I was only kidding. Hence the smiley that I chose. It was actually an unintended phrasing at first, then I decided to keep it, but make it clear that I was just being a bit daft. Or something. Eh, never mind. I meant no offense by it, suffice to say.