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  1. #21
    Community Member Noctus's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Lonnbeimnech View Post
    Your average human is level 0, and has 1d8 hit dice. Most people have 4 or 5 hp, with 8 being a tough guy, and 1 being an invalid. A level 20 sorc would have 20d4, 50 on average <-- that is amazingly tough.

    As far as them spending less time studying compared to a wizard and thus having more time for other skills; in pnp sorcs get proficiency in a few weapons that wizards do not get, such as spear, mace and javelin.




    If you want to think of them as hospitallers that's a fine comparison as well. Dispite being healers, this is how they dressed.
    They were a military order, just as much as the templars were.



    But in difference to the templars, they are still around, although they have become a bit more peaceful over the centuries:





    And nowadays they focus their work on healing and 1st aid:

    Erzskalde (Warchanter) / Erzassassin (just passing through - ignore me) / Erzsoldat (waiting for TR-time) / Erzschmied (ranged Artificer)

  2. #22
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    Quote Originally Posted by Uska View Post
    You might be happier on NWO they follow closer to what you want generic classes. Sorcerers I can't really speak on since they weren't a part of original dnd but wizards were based mainly on those from the stories of Jack Vance it's why original dnd's magic system is called Vancian the referral to clerics as knights Templar comes from AD&D and the minds of the original creators they stated it several times.

    If you can't take the word of people who have probably been playing dnd longer than you have been alive then I am done with you as I think you might be baiting people.

    Yeah, Shame on you for asking a lore question on a forum and not immediately being silenced when someone on the internet says they are right.

    He indicated he wasn't trying to institute a change, he said he didn't think lorewise it made sense. And hes been mostly non-argumentative, simply unconvinced.



    Now, to the question. Adventuring doesn't imply toughness necessarily. He won't be weak by any means but given that his offensive power comes from within I suspect his ever-growing reserves of power come from the "exercise" of adventuring in some degree. I mean they explain it as innate power but it also makes sense to say that because he's running around using his skills constantly that his capacity to use them would improve.

    As for being tough, given that casters in traditional play don't tend to stand and take punishment if they can help it, theres no reason to believe they would in the wild either. A sorcerer will still be a nuke and run sort of individual and thus will not have the same tolerance for violence as fighters and clerics that emphasize melee in some respects.

    Further the Wizard spends his time studying and practicing, which means he takes enough hits of his own(from failed casts or the effects of new spells) to keep pace with a sorcerer.

    Just 2 cents on why it might work.

  3. #23
    Community Member Hazelnut's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by TheDr0wRanger View Post
    Yeah, Shame on you for asking a lore question on a forum and not immediately being silenced when someone on the internet says they are right.

    He indicated he wasn't trying to institute a change, he said he didn't think lorewise it made sense. And hes been mostly non-argumentative, simply unconvinced.



    Now, to the question. Adventuring doesn't imply toughness necessarily. He won't be weak by any means but given that his offensive power comes from within I suspect his ever-growing reserves of power come from the "exercise" of adventuring in some degree. I mean they explain it as innate power but it also makes sense to say that because he's running around using his skills constantly that his capacity to use them would improve.

    As for being tough, given that casters in traditional play don't tend to stand and take punishment if they can help it, theres no reason to believe they would in the wild either. A sorcerer will still be a nuke and run sort of individual and thus will not have the same tolerance for violence as fighters and clerics that emphasize melee in some respects.

    Further the Wizard spends his time studying and practicing, which means he takes enough hits of his own(from failed casts or the effects of new spells) to keep pace with a sorcerer.

    Just 2 cents on why it might work.
    Thanks for a well thought out answer.
    Zyinniah Hazelnut and Curissa Hazelnut on most servers.

  4. #24
    Community Member fmalfeas's Avatar
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    I saw the question about why 'the healers' are running around in heavy armor, and had to chime in. In D&D, cleric does not mean healer. That's mainly a thing from video games, especially MMOs. D&D clerics are militant traveling clergy. They fight for the interests of the church and their god and their people. Sure, they can cure, they can heal, they can even raise the dead eventually. But they also call down smouldering wrath from the sky, rend the ground asunder with divine displeasure, call forth their deity's vassals to fight at their side (or for evil clerics, to serve them). They train to use their armor well, and how to wield their weapons competently, but their religious studies interfere in them getting the kind of mastery more martial classes have.

    Paladins...paladins are the chosen champions of a faith. In the books, they don't choose to become paladins, they /are chosen/. Their powers come from divine favor, and can be taken away like nothing should they displease their deity. They train extensively in combat (granting them full BAB, martial weapon prof, and d10 hp) but not to the level of mastery of a fighter. Instead, they learn to channel their blessings into their battles, bearing divine wrath in their blade (smite evil), infusing it with holy power (bless weapon and holy sword), shattering the magics of wizards and clerics of rival faiths thought their god's power (break enchantment and dispel magic).

    Both classes possess healing power, but it's because of their divine link. The reason those heals are Conjuration is because they are effectively drawing out a portion of their god's life force. Giving how much there is, and the rate of regeneration, it's pretty much unnoticable to the god, but they're quite capable of revoking it at a moment's notice, and stripping the divine caster of all their magic. A wizard is capable of healing wounds too, but the school is Necromancy, and the life force has to come from somewhere...either the wizard themselves (The name of that spell is Blood Bridge, where the wizard transfers wounds from the target to themselves) or a 'donor'. It's also possible to use a Transmutation effect to stabilize someone, altering their flesh and bones to prevent futher blood loss, but it's no comparison to divine healing.

    Druidic magic is special in that regard, as it draws upon the ambient power of nature, and magnifies the body's own healing ability to levels that would make a troll feel silly and lame. It's the only form of magical healing where the energy doesn't come from some entity.

    And yes, in theory, a wizard could make a deal with some powerful outsider to conjure away their life force as healing spells. But it'd be expensive to convince them, and the outsiders that are powerful enough for that...it's much better to just conjure the whole outsider, so they can use their SLA heals at no cost...unless, of course, you're masquerading as a cleric for some reason.

  5. #25
    Community Member mezzorco's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Hazelnut View Post
    Well written post
    You make fair arguments. WotC thinks pretty much like you, indeed in D&D 5 something has changed.

    For example, cleric now gets only light and medium armor proficiency, not heavy. On the other hand, sorcerers and wizards now have d6, while cleric still has d8.

    Furthermore, sorcerers and wizards can use simple weapons properly, as you would expect. No more half bab compared to martial classes.

    In d&d 5 many things are how they should be. You can easily think about a toon and then build it accordingly.

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