The rules assume that your characters have some level of optimization.Rakin said:I can imagine that happening to any system, called min/maxing, right? But the difference I see is that wotc DnD rule-sets seems to try and promote it even if not encourage it
A party of a Cleric5, Fighter5, Wizard5 and Rogue5 works as a 5th level party. A party of a Cleric3/Pal2, Sor3/Rogue2, Monk5, and Bard5 does not work as a 5th level party, because they don't have the arcane firepower, the devoted healing, the dedicated tank, or the dedicated trapfinding that an expected 5th level party has.
I've seen the example above where the second party got flattened on a regular basis; the only thing keeping them from a TPK was a Ftr5 in the group who knew the rules and watched everyone's back as they made multiclassing decisions based on "the character" while the DM threw level-appropriate challenges at them. The party regularly got their asses handed to them.
But the thing is, D&D is built as a wargame, so when you don't play a war with the war game, sure, the system is going to punish you.