Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: hrm
Is this sort of thing a real problem in games, tho'? I mean, if a player came to me and said, "I want to play a bard-paladin, but the rules prevent me from doing so" and I talked the player, found they were thoughtful and serious, I'd gladly waive both the "lawful" restriction for the bard and even the trouble with multi-classing paladins recieve. I strongly suspect all the GMs I play with would do the same thing.
So, like, do rules-lawyer DMs do this sort of thing in actual games? Give players with good ideas hassles because of a mere rule?
Canis said:
No kidding. I had a Paladin-Bard idea bouncing around in my head for a while, but it just won't work unless I can find a DM willing to Rule Zero it for me.
There are some ways around the rules limitation. Someone on these boards pointed out that a Bard doesn't lose his powers for becoming Lawful, he just can't progress further as a Bard. So I realized I could do a Bard who becomes Lawful (perhaps by embracing a LG god of justice after losing someone important to him). But that would necessitate starting as a Bard, becoming Lawful, taking a level or two of something else while I RP the transition from bard to Paladin ('cause I just couldn't justify going right to it), then becoming a Paladin. It just seems so inorganic... Planning out the whole life of a character before you even roll a die. Not what I was looking for (and it doesn't even come CLOSE to the character I had in my head...)
Is this sort of thing a real problem in games, tho'? I mean, if a player came to me and said, "I want to play a bard-paladin, but the rules prevent me from doing so" and I talked the player, found they were thoughtful and serious, I'd gladly waive both the "lawful" restriction for the bard and even the trouble with multi-classing paladins recieve. I strongly suspect all the GMs I play with would do the same thing.
So, like, do rules-lawyer DMs do this sort of thing in actual games? Give players with good ideas hassles because of a mere rule?