FormerlyHemlock
Hero
I mean, yes, if you set your standard as "the stuff a Druid or Tome-Warlock can do," then the differences between the Fighter and...well, pretty much *anyone* else, even *Rogues,* are small. But that's like Einstein or Marilyn vos Savant as your intelligence standard and wondering why you can't really distinguish between someone with a mild learning disability and someone with exactly median intelligence. Don't get me wrong, I think *everyone* should have as much flavorful, interesting, flexible utility potential as the Druid or Tome-Warlock does. Instead of defining the Tome-Warlock as 1, and therefore needing to describe the Fighter as (say) 0.001, isn't it easier to say the Fighter has 1 (smallest whole-number amount) and the Warlock has 1000? The Paladin might still only be 15 or 20, but it certainly seems like a lot more to compare 1 to 20 as opposed to comparing 0.020 to 0.001.
To me it looks more like the difference between 10 and 20 than 1 and 20. Of course, unlike you I see Eldritch Knights as a perfectly legitimate fighter archtype which ought not to be excluded from discussion. They have all the important features of a fighter: weapons-reliance, action surge, 4 attacks per round capstone, Indomitable, extra feats... Eldritch Knights are the best kind of fighters. I see them as basically Pandion Knights.