CapnZapp
Legend
Sorry, not going to play along.
I have clearly put down the facts. The rogue can't come close to its optimum unless you play without feats, and without friends. The lack of building blocks for those of us who wants a martial character with defense traded for offense makes the rogue a poor option.
Which is a real downer. All classes of D&D are built so they can participate in the (by far) main event of the game: combat.
Having the Rogue have such gaping holes in its design is a major flaw. That it does work for some is no excuse for not providing the building blocks for the rest of us.
So again I'm telling I can only offer meaningful advice if more DPR than the PHB standard is allowed, since more DPR is exactly what the Rogue class is missing.
But you turned the thread from a fun exercise in character design to an interrogation of my assumptions. Allow me to uninvite myself from your thread.
Next time, don't invite people when your aim is only to antagonize them.
I have clearly put down the facts. The rogue can't come close to its optimum unless you play without feats, and without friends. The lack of building blocks for those of us who wants a martial character with defense traded for offense makes the rogue a poor option.
Which is a real downer. All classes of D&D are built so they can participate in the (by far) main event of the game: combat.
Having the Rogue have such gaping holes in its design is a major flaw. That it does work for some is no excuse for not providing the building blocks for the rest of us.
So again I'm telling I can only offer meaningful advice if more DPR than the PHB standard is allowed, since more DPR is exactly what the Rogue class is missing.
But you turned the thread from a fun exercise in character design to an interrogation of my assumptions. Allow me to uninvite myself from your thread.
Next time, don't invite people when your aim is only to antagonize them.