The Shadow
Hero
Mortellan said:Also, mythological bard-types are cool inspirations to use but are probably solo epic scale figures that were not part of a 'hero group' as we know them in D&D.
I dunno - Orpheus was an Argonaut.
And while I agree that 'solo epic scale figures' don't make good party members as such, that doesn't mean they can't be toned down to be.
I think the main problem is that the D&D bard tries to do too much at once. Gygax made the fatal mistake of adding thieving abilities to the Celtic archetype. (As someone pointed out in the Dragon years ago, this probably derives from a slur against the Welsh.)
What is needed IMO is for the different 'bard' archetypes to be disentangled and implemented separately. If you want a song-based sorcerer like Vainamoinen, that should be quite doable. If you want a skald, take a fighter or 'warlord' and give him Perform ranks. If you want a trickster troubadour, do the same to a rogue. If you want to mix things up a bit, multiclass. But trying to do all three at once is asking too much of a single class.