Sadrik
First Post
I think one of the big problems D&D over the years is with its definition of WIS. It has always lacked. What is WIS? Think about it, where most people will agree on what all the other stats mean, WIS is sort of a shifting target (runner up is CHA). No other stat is as convoluted as WIS.
My feeling is that WIS should be the flip side of CON and make it mental defense and very little else. This is how it was in 1e, it gave you a mental save bonus and immunities to certain mental spells. Making it not that far away from the 1e reality (other than the hiccup that Clerics use WIS- should have been CHA like the paladin imho). CON does not do much other than provide defense for the body, WIS imho should not do much except defend the mind.
So what is WIS:
Willpower
Divine magic
Perception
Sense Motive/Insight/Hunch/Detecting Lies
Knowledge (certain types, 3e and even more expanded in 4e)
Psionics (1e along with INT and CHA, as I recall WIS was most important, 2e went to all stats, 3e went to INT, I don't where 4e is)
I really like the idea that being really smart sees through illusions like in 1e/2e. That is basically perception and the ability to notice flaws in the illusion. Way back when I played 1e, we used INT checks for perception checks. In 2e that went more towards WIS checks (especially Ravenloft) and 3e it was firmly planted as WIS based. However, I never liked perception being WIS based.
I think attention to detail is more INT based than WIS based anyway. Sherlock Holmes is smart not wise. Clerics should not be innately perceptive, wizards maybe, in any case I'd buy it for wizards over clerics.
The stat has become more convoluted in each subsequent edition. In any future iterations I would hope that it would be cut back some.
So for discussion purposes let us assume that INT means Knowledge and CHA means Diplomacy/Social stuff.
What does WIS mean to you?
My feeling is that WIS should be the flip side of CON and make it mental defense and very little else. This is how it was in 1e, it gave you a mental save bonus and immunities to certain mental spells. Making it not that far away from the 1e reality (other than the hiccup that Clerics use WIS- should have been CHA like the paladin imho). CON does not do much other than provide defense for the body, WIS imho should not do much except defend the mind.
So what is WIS:
Willpower
Divine magic
Perception
Sense Motive/Insight/Hunch/Detecting Lies
Knowledge (certain types, 3e and even more expanded in 4e)
Psionics (1e along with INT and CHA, as I recall WIS was most important, 2e went to all stats, 3e went to INT, I don't where 4e is)
I really like the idea that being really smart sees through illusions like in 1e/2e. That is basically perception and the ability to notice flaws in the illusion. Way back when I played 1e, we used INT checks for perception checks. In 2e that went more towards WIS checks (especially Ravenloft) and 3e it was firmly planted as WIS based. However, I never liked perception being WIS based.
I think attention to detail is more INT based than WIS based anyway. Sherlock Holmes is smart not wise. Clerics should not be innately perceptive, wizards maybe, in any case I'd buy it for wizards over clerics.
The stat has become more convoluted in each subsequent edition. In any future iterations I would hope that it would be cut back some.
So for discussion purposes let us assume that INT means Knowledge and CHA means Diplomacy/Social stuff.
What does WIS mean to you?