Parmandur
Book-Friend, he/him
Before being broken matters or not, desirability has to be determined.I would be happier if I thought the move was motivated by playtesting finding that cross class subclasses are mechanically messy or broken.
Before being broken matters or not, desirability has to be determined.I would be happier if I thought the move was motivated by playtesting finding that cross class subclasses are mechanically messy or broken.
I absolutely liked the idea. Though I think it's for the best.Look, I get it. They got pushback on the new take on subclasses and its better to yield to the audience, but the idea of cross class subclasses and the possibility that the game would require all the pcs to be full caster classes appealed to me. It was going to be a one off book and I wish they would have been braver.
That’s 5e for you. Bravery has never been on the table. And I can’t say I blame them, when taking risks got them a split fanbase and playing it safe got them the most financial success D&D has ever seen.Look, I get it. They got pushback on the new take on subclasses and its better to yield to the audience, but the idea of cross class subclasses and the possibility that the game would require all the pcs to be full caster classes appealed to me. It was going to be a one off book and I wish they would have been braver.
They did something like this in Theros with champions to a deity. I think they could have used that framework hereHonestly, they could've kept the ideas in, but instead of being a Subclass, it should've been a Faction/Renown related thing: You still keep your subclass and its features, but you could earn an extra feature on top of what you would normally get.
Blasphemy in the eyes of 5E? Ya. Somehow crazy to understand? Maybe.
Who cares.
cue meme image with all the guns and knives circling around the smug cat, but replaced with my face.
That’s 5e for you. Bravery has never been on the table. And I can’t say I blame them, when taking risks got them a split fanbase and playing it safe got them the most financial success D&D has ever seen.
I’m personally not too disappointed in this particular case because I don’t think 5e classes are structured appropriately for cross-class subclasses to work well. But I feel your frustration about an innovative idea getting shut down because it didn’t poll well.
I do think it points to a direction the could take in a possible 5.5e / 6eUltimately, 5e classes were built completely independently and their subclasses were designed for different purposes for each class.
So cross class subclasses would be doomed for failure without making them more complex than WOTC is worth going to. They'd need charts and tables and that level of bravery and daring is not in the 5e team's core heart.
I do think it points to a direction the could take in a possible 5.5e / 6e
That seems very doable to me.Possibly. They would have to give subclasses at the same level, same tier, same pillar, and same purposes for each class.
Personally I think this should be SOP.Then (the secnd reason why it was rejected), subclasses would not be tied to specific settings.