Sejs said:
You mean like Dark Sun's 7 foot tall desert nomad elves, for example?
Sure, why not?
The stance you seem to be taking is that class restrictions were/are part of a race's physical makeup. Hard concept to swallow.
Why is that?
Your physical parameters are established when you're conceived, your height, weight, age, etc.
I think environment has something to do with it, too, but I don't want to start the classic nature-nurture debate here.
Class is something you learn. Are you born with limits on what you can learn by means of genetics?
Sure, why not? Some people are much better at math than others and this difference can't all be because of environment.
Half orcs can't learn to juggle, elves can never drive stick, and halflings will never be able to grasp long division.
But a certain character class is much more than just one skill -- it is an entire bundle of skills, and if even one of them is missing, then the PC just doesn't have that character class.
Besides, why is it so weird to believe that in a world
in which wizards actually exist that dwarves, gnomes, and halflings, and half-orcs can't be wizards? Maybe if dwarves, gnomes, halflings, and half-orcs
actually existed in our world, they wouldn't be able to be accountants or computer programmers.
Sorry Dcas, but your argument is a tad fallacious.
You might not find it convincing, but it does not follow that it is fallacious. In fact one might argue that you have engaged in fallacious reasoning by suggesting that genetics do not play a part in what a person is able to learn.
Seriously though, such a limitation was never stated anywhere that I remember seeing. Limits were limits, they wern't just for PCs.
It's quite clear in the first edition AD&D PHB that dwarven, elven, and gnomish clerics, and halfling druids are NPCs and only NPCs. I'm merely extrapolating.