the Jester
Legend
First of all, [MENTION=51747]dmccoy1693[/MENTION], I have to quibble- the bard in 1e was a fighter/thief/druid.
But the druid part actually morphed into bard. There was no mage.
(As an aside about bard rules weirdness, the 1e bard broke the rules, since you had to dual- (not multi-) class into it; and only humans could dual-class, but half-elves could be bards!)
That's because, as others have pointed out, the bard is a lot like the 4e warlord in that when the party wins a fight because of the fighter, typically the fighter is the one that killed the monster, but when the party wins a fight because of the bard, typically the fighter is still the one that killed the monster.
It definitely isn't a playstyle that all players, all characters or all groups enjoy, but for those that do, the bard totally rules.

(As an aside about bard rules weirdness, the 1e bard broke the rules, since you had to dual- (not multi-) class into it; and only humans could dual-class, but half-elves could be bards!)
Bard dipping in 3E was good, but have you tried playing a straight bard? Many complained they were not capable of doing much.
That's because, as others have pointed out, the bard is a lot like the 4e warlord in that when the party wins a fight because of the fighter, typically the fighter is the one that killed the monster, but when the party wins a fight because of the bard, typically the fighter is still the one that killed the monster.
You actually hit on it. They are most useful ... to others. Their time to shine is to help others be awesome. That is the common complaint about bards.
It definitely isn't a playstyle that all players, all characters or all groups enjoy, but for those that do, the bard totally rules.
