Jack Daniel
Legend
Quick question. (Well, quick to ask, but who knows how lengthy it'll be to resolve.)
If you were going to rename the bard class, what would you call it?
When I run bards and druids, I like to keep them tied to Celtic culture. But the modern fantasy bard archetype — the happy-go-lucky, charming rake who uses both actual magic and sleight-of-hand to pick unwary pockets, and uses music to bolster allies, sooth savage beasts in the vein of Orpheus, and seduce anything with a pulse (or not, if you count undead and constructs) — doesn't quite fit a more historically grounded bard (or skald or scop).
So: if you had to pick a new name for the fantasy archetype that we today call bard, what would be the best fit? Minstrel? Jester? Jongleur? Troubadour? Busker? Gleeman? Mountebank? Suggestions I haven't thought of? What even is this musical trickster-mage factotum in a world where D&D never came along to invent it?
If you were going to rename the bard class, what would you call it?
When I run bards and druids, I like to keep them tied to Celtic culture. But the modern fantasy bard archetype — the happy-go-lucky, charming rake who uses both actual magic and sleight-of-hand to pick unwary pockets, and uses music to bolster allies, sooth savage beasts in the vein of Orpheus, and seduce anything with a pulse (or not, if you count undead and constructs) — doesn't quite fit a more historically grounded bard (or skald or scop).
So: if you had to pick a new name for the fantasy archetype that we today call bard, what would be the best fit? Minstrel? Jester? Jongleur? Troubadour? Busker? Gleeman? Mountebank? Suggestions I haven't thought of? What even is this musical trickster-mage factotum in a world where D&D never came along to invent it?
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