The Highway Man
First Post
Hussar said:The problem is, whenever D&D tried to do any of those things - allowing players to rule nations, forex - it failed miserably.
Do you consider Birthright a failure?
Hussar said:The problem is, whenever D&D tried to do any of those things - allowing players to rule nations, forex - it failed miserably.
Deverash said:The warlock, as I found out, was made mostly obsolete by the introduction of Reserve Feats. Now wizards can do nearly everything a warlock can do, and do it better to boot.
MadMaligor said:You could wear it but you couldnt cast in it.Taking armor on and off was also a no no in combat even back then.
Jack99 said:Or maybe it is you that lack roleplaying skills, since you obviously associate the mechanics of your character with roleplaying.
I guess you haven't played anything but 3.x, because let me tell you, in the good old days ....
Reynard said:T
Anyway, here's the thing: whether or not a game is "balanced" depends entirely upon the point of the game, the playspace. 4E's balance, or more accurately its focus on PC parity, is built around a combat centric model. N
ladydeath said:Can you play a character who started out surviving on the streets of a city (2 levels of rogue) who suddenly finds out he's got a great aptitude for wizardry? (I know there is a multiclass feat which gets you Arcana, a wizard ability and the ability to use wizard implements)
I'd like to think I'm playing a smart character, yeah. You don't get to be a high-level character by playing an Elven fighter with a CON of 8 or a Wizard/Sorcerer multiclass.ladydeath said:What I was trying to get at is that there are alot of things that are locked into your character concept based on the smart thing to do once you have a character class and you cannot change your character's direction once you have picked a class.
Assuming this rogue/wizard character is a 3e character, I'd have to ask -- why in the world would you do that? Just play a Beguiler or Spellthief. You keep the flavor and lose the terrible character.ladydeath said:Can you play a character who started out surviving on the streets of a city (2 levels of rogue) who suddenly finds out he's got a great aptitude for wizardry? (I know there is a multiclass feat which gets you Arcana, a wizard ability and the ability to use wizard implements)
The Highway Man said:Do you consider Birthright a failure?
Hussar said:Y'know, some time ago, I posted a thread on the General Forum talking about how, despite the mechanical changes in editions, D&D hadn't actually changed all that much. At least at the table. Strangely enough, despite some criticisms that I was trolling for another edition war (I wasn't), most people tended to agree. Sure, there are differences in play, but, stepping back a bit and taking a somewhat wider view, in all editions of D&D, when you sit down a play, everyone instantly knows that you are playing D&D and not some other system.
I truly, truly think, in a year or so, we'll be saying the same thing of 4e.