Stormonu
NeoGrognard
And if you think Ranger/Fighter doesn't make any sense, I have a one word answer to it: Drizzit.
Huhn, I'd always thought they had statted Dritz as 100% ranger, but I'd only ever casually glanced at his stats.
And if you think Ranger/Fighter doesn't make any sense, I have a one word answer to it: Drizzit.
It was to start with every class that has ever been a base class in the first player's book of any edition of D&D, not every base class, period (which would have included dozens of classes from 3.5 and 4e). Which was unfortunate in my book, because the swordmage / duskblade / arcane warrior type deserves a core rules base class at least as much as the paladin / divine warrior type and never has gotten one (and is harder to do recreate with multiclassing than the divine warrior type).Just to echo what some others here are saying - any debate here about only having 4 or fewer "base" classes is completely academic at this point, because that's not going to happen in Next. The original plan was to start with every class that has ever been a D&D base class, and carve it down from there where necessary.
Webster's New World College Dictionary defines a monk as a member of male religious order living in monastery or hermitage observing a common rule under vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience. IMHO that definition say that a monk would be cloistered cleric from Unearthed Arcana (3.5 IIRC) which is that i think when I think of the Eurocentric view of a monk. I think of the Monk class as being a martial artist with mystic abilities. Some of the Monk abilities would harnessed thruough use of Chi (basically a person's life energy).About the "What class does the Monk most resemble?" debate...
If you forget about D&D for 1 second, what's... (definitions drawn from Wikipedia):
1) A fighter? It's a person that's skilled in combat, whether through professional training (like a soldier) or not. That's it.
2) A cleric? It's a person that is a member of a religion clergy, whether a priest, pastor, etc.
3) A monk? It's a person who practices religious asceticism (a lifestyle characterized by abstinence from worldly pleasures and/or pursuit of spiritual goals).
I don't know about you, but such a definition for the monk sounds a little more like a Cleric than either a fighter or a rogue/thief... Personally, when I read that Monk definition, the class that I think about most is... the PALADIN! Especially when you apply a little Shaolin sauce to the monk concept; and since it's by far the most popular interpretation of the class...
Really, IMHO, if I were trying to group the monk with one of the 4 base classes (and I'm not saying that I would), I'd group it with the Paladin. In my mind, they are the two (western and eastern) sides of the same coin.