Necross
Swashbuckler
- Joined
- 25 Aug 2005
- Messages
- 1,869
Det här tycker jag verkar väldigt modigt av WotC:
"In D&D Next, we very intentionally allow any character to take any skill and tool proficiencies. If your fighter was once a street thief, you can take a background that reflects that, selecting proficiencies that allow you to pick locks, tell lies, and sneak around. The old model of limiting skills by class—saying a rogue can train in Stealth but a fighter can't—appears to provide a kind of game balance, but it's an empty balance. In the end, the usefulness of skills is driven by the adventure or situation, and the more skills you have, the more likely you are to gain a bonus and to have a chance to affect the game. By keeping tool and skill choices wide open, D&D Next makes proficiencies easy for a DM to adjudicate and gives players enough choice to make their 1st-level characters feel unique." (från http://www.wizards.com/DnD/Article.aspx?x=dnd/4ll/20140113)
Eftersom det där skrevs så sent som i januari i år så antar jag att det är kvar i reglerna.
Vad tycks? Är det för radikalt?
"In D&D Next, we very intentionally allow any character to take any skill and tool proficiencies. If your fighter was once a street thief, you can take a background that reflects that, selecting proficiencies that allow you to pick locks, tell lies, and sneak around. The old model of limiting skills by class—saying a rogue can train in Stealth but a fighter can't—appears to provide a kind of game balance, but it's an empty balance. In the end, the usefulness of skills is driven by the adventure or situation, and the more skills you have, the more likely you are to gain a bonus and to have a chance to affect the game. By keeping tool and skill choices wide open, D&D Next makes proficiencies easy for a DM to adjudicate and gives players enough choice to make their 1st-level characters feel unique." (från http://www.wizards.com/DnD/Article.aspx?x=dnd/4ll/20140113)
Eftersom det där skrevs så sent som i januari i år så antar jag att det är kvar i reglerna.
Vad tycks? Är det för radikalt?