doctorbadwolf
Heretic of The Seventh Circle
Lore wise the Paladin isn’t getting their magic from Genies, they’re getting power from Faith and oath and investment. This subclass is odd though.Mechanically you have a point. Lore wise it matters.
Lore wise the Paladin isn’t getting their magic from Genies, they’re getting power from Faith and oath and investment. This subclass is odd though.Mechanically you have a point. Lore wise it matters.
The Oath of the Ancients has been pointed out by some as being the where the Warden Class of 4e (the Primal Defender) partially went to.Genies are elemental beings. Druidic magic comes at least partially from the elemental planes. These paladins are far more druidic/primal than arcane, and no more lore breaking than an oath of the ancients.
I mean, even if 5e had a coherent cosmology of "power sources" (it doesn't), 5e seems to lean pretty strongly towards class being more methodology and not a 1-to-1 linkage between class and power source.The Oath of the Ancients has been pointed out by some as being the where the Warden Class of 4e (the Primal Defender) partially went to.
Yeah, I think the source of a magic user’s powers is meaningful from a story perspective, but there isn’t a clean arcane vs. divine split anymore. If anything, it’s class-by-class.It absolutely does matter, but Lore wise, Paladins in 5e get their powers from their Oath, not from gods. At least as the default Lore written in the books - every DM can obviously alter the lore as they see fit for their table