Ahnehnois
First Post
Does the term "class" imply an exclusive niche? Vote away.
"Exclusive" means something that is only accessible by taking the pertinent class (or a class within the pertinent group). For example, a bonus to base attack bonus/THAC0 is not exclusive, because all characters receive some level of improvement to this commodity. Conversely, sneak attack/backstab is exclusive because it requires membership in a particular class to make any use of this ability at all.
A "group" of classes would represent something like the four categories that 2e used to divide classes (warrior, rogue, priest, mage; IIRC) or would correspond roughly to 4e power sources. That is to say, classes within the group might share their niche abilities freely, but classes outside the group would not have access to them.
For cases where some classes should have exclusive abilities but others should not, the obvious example would be magic being the exclusive thing and the nonmagical classes not having anything exclusive. Not the only example, necessarily.
"Exclusive" means something that is only accessible by taking the pertinent class (or a class within the pertinent group). For example, a bonus to base attack bonus/THAC0 is not exclusive, because all characters receive some level of improvement to this commodity. Conversely, sneak attack/backstab is exclusive because it requires membership in a particular class to make any use of this ability at all.
A "group" of classes would represent something like the four categories that 2e used to divide classes (warrior, rogue, priest, mage; IIRC) or would correspond roughly to 4e power sources. That is to say, classes within the group might share their niche abilities freely, but classes outside the group would not have access to them.
For cases where some classes should have exclusive abilities but others should not, the obvious example would be magic being the exclusive thing and the nonmagical classes not having anything exclusive. Not the only example, necessarily.
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