Geron Raveneye
Explorer
Hmmm...
..let´s see.
If you make either a prestige class, it usually carries a level "limit", and amount of levels you can take as a character until the prestige class has taught you anything it can and you can move on. In contrast to that, both Orders usually are the one career choice, if you take them. The Wizards of High Sorcery are the only institution you can learn magic in (if you don´t count Renegades) as a regular wizard.
With the Knights, it´s because it would make it easier to swap Orders while you progress in levels. You simply keep the class you start out with, go up in levels, and simply add the template class that describes your place in the Knights. If you pass the test for the next Order or not, you still have one class (mostly fighters, I assume), but still gain the respective abilities of the Knight you are. The one example I had in mind for that was Sir Pirvan the Wayward, from the "Knights of the Crown/Sword/Rose" books. Apparently he was a rogue/sorcerer who later on became a Knight...it felt like he slipped into the Knighthood more like into a coat than learning something completely new.
Does that make sense somehow?
..let´s see.
If you make either a prestige class, it usually carries a level "limit", and amount of levels you can take as a character until the prestige class has taught you anything it can and you can move on. In contrast to that, both Orders usually are the one career choice, if you take them. The Wizards of High Sorcery are the only institution you can learn magic in (if you don´t count Renegades) as a regular wizard.
With the Knights, it´s because it would make it easier to swap Orders while you progress in levels. You simply keep the class you start out with, go up in levels, and simply add the template class that describes your place in the Knights. If you pass the test for the next Order or not, you still have one class (mostly fighters, I assume), but still gain the respective abilities of the Knight you are. The one example I had in mind for that was Sir Pirvan the Wayward, from the "Knights of the Crown/Sword/Rose" books. Apparently he was a rogue/sorcerer who later on became a Knight...it felt like he slipped into the Knighthood more like into a coat than learning something completely new.
Does that make sense somehow?
