Gez
First Post
Threads like this one and that one, and comments like this one, below, made me think about it.
No, wrong. But still, there's an underlying assumption that's rather interesting.
There are no clerics in LotR. There are warriors and wizards (even if you can argue that these wizards are rather like D&D's solars than like a character class). There are, arguably, thieves.
Same thing in Vance's or Leibner's books. No clerics -- although you have cultists, they're usually evil mooks that get killed by the heroes, not heroes themselves. Just like there's a lack of non-Kung Fu monk archetype, there's a lack of divine magician archetypes.
Do you know of any (outside of TSR literature, of course) ? The only examples I can find are either non-spellcasters, or "non-devout" (like Gandalf who isn't constantly singing the praise of Eru and brandishing a holy symbol).
lyle.spade said:Greyhawk seems to be the default fantasy world we've all got in our heads after being raised on Tolkein, right?
No, wrong. But still, there's an underlying assumption that's rather interesting.
There are no clerics in LotR. There are warriors and wizards (even if you can argue that these wizards are rather like D&D's solars than like a character class). There are, arguably, thieves.
Same thing in Vance's or Leibner's books. No clerics -- although you have cultists, they're usually evil mooks that get killed by the heroes, not heroes themselves. Just like there's a lack of non-Kung Fu monk archetype, there's a lack of divine magician archetypes.
Do you know of any (outside of TSR literature, of course) ? The only examples I can find are either non-spellcasters, or "non-devout" (like Gandalf who isn't constantly singing the praise of Eru and brandishing a holy symbol).