mkletch
First Post
Re: Re: Re: Re: hrm
I was not referring to your decision in any way. That you have found something that works for you, and communicate it to your players would be more than enough to make me happy as a player in your campaign.
I had never played a bard before, and was unfamiliar with the non-lawful requirement for a bard (which is absurd in any case). It completely shattered my idea for a swashbuckling paladin-bard (in FR, so I could multiclass the paladin) that was a master of languages and diplomacy. I had even considered going weaponless, or improved unarmed strike. Oh well. Sometimes (more often than I like to recall), the rules get in the way of good roleplaying.
-Fletch!
Canis said:I'm not suggesting that these things are immutable, or that I've found an ABSOLUTE TRUTH. I just found a truth that works for me. If I was playing with people who believed otherwise, I would adapt.
I was not referring to your decision in any way. That you have found something that works for you, and communicate it to your players would be more than enough to make me happy as a player in your campaign.
Canis said:Bards have to train their voices, or train themselves to play an instrument. Both of these things take great discipline. But they're required to be NON-Lawful. So, discipline is only a Lawful trait when applied to monks?
I had never played a bard before, and was unfamiliar with the non-lawful requirement for a bard (which is absurd in any case). It completely shattered my idea for a swashbuckling paladin-bard (in FR, so I could multiclass the paladin) that was a master of languages and diplomacy. I had even considered going weaponless, or improved unarmed strike. Oh well. Sometimes (more often than I like to recall), the rules get in the way of good roleplaying.
-Fletch!