It's a rogue/cleric hybrid from Complete Arcane, with strong evil-
huntin' flavour.
I don't think it's really overpowered (hey, it's based on cleric,
diluting that in any way is just a step down) but it's truly the
compleat adventurer.
Divine? Obviously, as it's a cleric PrC. You lose at least three caster
levels, but that's 17 points out of 20. Not the best, but good.
Warrior? Hey, you''ve got cleric spells. Once you get access to divine
power, who cares what your BAB is? The bit of sneak attack you get from
rogue and the PrC doesn't hurt either.
Adventurer? 6 skill points/level, good skills, flat bonuses to search
and sense motive, burn cleric slots for bonuses to hide and move
silently. Interestingly, you're the best trapfinder in the game: you can
easily max search, you get a bit of a bonus on top... and then cast
detect traps on top of that!
Arcane? Well, you have to *not* have something, and arcane is it. Drown
your sorrow in your maxed UMD.
And yet, I don't remember seeing anyone complain that it's overpowered,
and really, it doesn't seem to be to me either. But a ninja inquisitor
would be a perfect character for the game I mentioned (rooting out
cultists in Karrnath)...
--
Jasin Zujovic
I'm using one as an NPC in my current campaign, and the characters
either already have or will eventually come in contact with one. I'll
let you know how it worked out for me when that happens.
> Jasin Zujovic wrote:
> > What are your thoughts about this class?
> >
> > It's a rogue/cleric hybrid from Complete Arcane, with strong evil-
> > huntin' flavour.
Why do I not see Shadowbane Stalker in Complete Arcane?
- E
Jasin obviously tripped over his own brain. The shadowbane stalker and
shadowbane inquisitor are in Complete Adventurer.
--
Christopher Adams - Sydney, Australia
-------
What can change the nature of a man?
-------
http://www.users.bigpond.net.au/mhacdebhandia/prestigeclasslist.html
http://www.users.bigpond.net.au/mhacdebhandia/templatelist.html
Djinnis moved it over to Complete Adventurer when you weren't looking.
> Eric P. wrote:
> > Some Guy wrote:
> >> Jasin Zujovic wrote:
> >
> >>> What are your thoughts about this class?
> >>>
> >>> It's a rogue/cleric hybrid from Complete Arcane, with strong evil-
> >>> huntin' flavour.
> >
> > Why do I not see Shadowbane Stalker in Complete Arcane?
>
> Jasin obviously tripped over his own brain. The shadowbane stalker and
> shadowbane inquisitor are in Complete Adventurer.
Mercy buckets *S*
- E
All them "A" words look alike to me. ;-)
Checkin' out the class now. Looks cool! I don't do much with stealthy
types, but this is something worth working toward.
What are the relative merits of starting out as a cleric and starting
out as a rogue, to work toward this PrC?
Thanks,
Eric
If you're building a high-level character, none unless you want to max
out cleric class skills. It's better to start as rogue for the extra
skill points in most cases.
In that case, I'll work up a Rog1, decide when to add cleric (and how
many levels), then take the PrC. First, I must gather the shadows of
thought and weave them together for a character concept. Already I'm
envisioning a rogue who has a cleric make a favorable impression,
indoctrinates said rogue, then reveals enough details of the
organization to which the Shadowbane Stalkers belong...yes, this could
come together quite well :)
Happy gaming,
Eric
> >>>What are your thoughts about this class?
> >>>
> >>>It's a rogue/cleric hybrid from Complete Arcane, with strong evil-
> >>>huntin' flavour.
> >
> > Why do I not see Shadowbane Stalker in Complete Arcane?
>
> Djinnis moved it over to Complete Adventurer when you weren't looking.
Right, right!
--
Jasin Zujovic
> Eric P. wrote:
> > Some Guy wrote:
> >> Jasin Zujovic wrote:
> >
> >>> What are your thoughts about this class?
> >>>
> >>> It's a rogue/cleric hybrid from Complete Arcane, with strong evil-
> >>> huntin' flavour.
> >
> > Why do I not see Shadowbane Stalker in Complete Arcane?
... Arcane? WTF?
> Jasin obviously tripped over his own brain. The shadowbane stalker and
> shadowbane inquisitor are in Complete Adventurer.
... oops!
Chris is quite right, of course. :)
--
Jasin Zujovic
> What are the relative merits of starting out as a cleric and starting
> out as a rogue, to work toward this PrC?
Rogue: buckets o' skill points.
Cleric: +2 hp.
You decide. :)
--
Jasin Zujovic
That's right...and the long, long list of class skills :) I'll go
rogue...er, so to speak.
Thanks,
Eric
Of course, if your first two levels are going to be Cleric and Rogue,
the real difference is only 1 hp on average by 2nd (8 + 3.5avg vs 6 + 4.5avg).
If you're actually starting at 1st level, some other differences to
consider are:
(a) armor proficiencies
(b) weapon proficiencies
(c) saving throw progression
(d) spells vs sneak attack, of course.
You might consider taking a level of Monk or Ranger first... :)
Donald
I have a growing character concept going, so I'm gonna let it develop
further. Perhaps I'll write a few test characters up at first level.
Either they'll be involved in the same Order chapter, or they'll be
independent of each other. I'll just let inspiration take its course.
I always give max hp at first level, so if the rogue ends up with a high
CON, I won't cry over lost hp. A cleric could begin with a lower CON,
and it would all balance out. I'll let the dice fall as they may.
Starting such a character out with a different class, such as suggested
above, would mean it would take longer for the character to attain the
PrC. I prefer to avoid that, and "fast-track" the character(s).
- E
- E
> I always give max hp at first level, so if the rogue ends up with a high
> CON, I won't cry over lost hp. A cleric could begin with a lower CON,
> and it would all balance out. I'll let the dice fall as they may.
>
> Starting such a character out with a different class, such as suggested
> above, would mean it would take longer for the character to attain the
> PrC. I prefer to avoid that, and "fast-track" the character(s).
Not necessarily. What you need is a level of rogue, a level of cleric
and 5 levels in total. Mnk1/Rog1/Clr3 gets you there as fast as
Rog1/Clr4.
But Rog1/Clr4 probably is the most powerful route, long term, because of
the spellcasting.
--
Jasin Zujovic
That's the way I'll go, then, for the first test character. Just rolled
one up last night, a male Human. How's this look?
STR 14
DEX 17
CON 15
INT 14
WIS 17
CHA 16
I wasn't thrilled with CON, but I see that DEX, WIS, and CHA will give
the character advantages in the best places, which was a lucky break for
me. I rolled 4d6 for each, in order, dropping the lowest die each time.
That's the start. I'll give him feats and allocate skill points today.
To encourage the character to take cleric levels, I've envisioned that
he becomes badly hurt during an early adventure, near dying, and is
healed by a cleric, who's affiliated with a local group of Shadowbane
Stalkers and their close associates. Perhaps the cleric becomes
interested enough in this fellow that he/she begins to guide him along
the path...
And that's the way it is, Wednesday, September 20th, 2006 :)
- E
[cleric/rogue]
> STR 14
> DEX 17
> CON 15
> INT 14
> WIS 17
> CHA 16
>
> I wasn't thrilled with CON, but I see that DEX, WIS, and CHA will give
> the character advantages in the best places, which was a lucky break for
> me. I rolled 4d6 for each, in order, dropping the lowest die each time.
Was this your only try? Did you use physical dice?
The chance of rolling 14+ on 4d6 drop lowest is 460/1296=.355
The chance of doing this with all six stats is .355^6=.00200
And your character is still better, with three stats at 16+. The math
for that is complicated, but safe to say that he's one in a thousand.
--
"It's only possible to betray where loyalty is due," said Sandy.
"Well, wasn't it due to Miss Brodie?"
"Only up to a point," said Sandy.
- Muriel Spark
> In article <ericp06-6CA23D...@newsclstr02.news.prodigy.com>,
> eri...@sbcglobal.net says...
>
> [cleric/rogue]
>
> > STR 14
> > DEX 17
> > CON 15
> > INT 14
> > WIS 17
> > CHA 16
> >
> > I wasn't thrilled with CON, but I see that DEX, WIS, and CHA will give
> > the character advantages in the best places, which was a lucky break for
> > me. I rolled 4d6 for each, in order, dropping the lowest die each time.
>
> Was this your only try? Did you use physical dice?
Yes, I only ever roll once through, with 3-dimensional dice that I roll
by hand *L* They are blue, with whitish marble swirls, and gold numbers
instead of dots (not that I NEED them to be numbers...). No rerolls for
any stat.
This set of ability scores is only slightly above the majority of
characters I roll up in recent years. As I recall, many characters I
rolled up in the earlier years of gaming were almost obscene, with 16
being the average score for any given ability.
I'd call this one "toned down," but for the pair of 17s. I'd say this
qualifies him as remarkable, but by no means godlike.
> The chance of rolling 14+ on 4d6 drop lowest is 460/1296=.355
> The chance of doing this with all six stats is .355^6=.00200
>
> And your character is still better, with three stats at 16+. The math
> for that is complicated, but safe to say that he's one in a thousand.
Dunno what to say. Good rolling surface, perhaps :)
Got feats and skill points all sorted this morning. Now to gear up and
play the character some.
- E
> > > I always give max hp at first level, so if the rogue ends up with a high
> > > CON, I won't cry over lost hp. A cleric could begin with a lower CON,
> > > and it would all balance out. I'll let the dice fall as they may.
> > >
> > > Starting such a character out with a different class, such as suggested
> > > above, would mean it would take longer for the character to attain the
> > > PrC. I prefer to avoid that, and "fast-track" the character(s).
> >
> > Not necessarily. What you need is a level of rogue, a level of cleric
> > and 5 levels in total. Mnk1/Rog1/Clr3 gets you there as fast as
> > Rog1/Clr4.
> >
> > But Rog1/Clr4 probably is the most powerful route, long term, because of
> > the spellcasting.
>
> That's the way I'll go, then, for the first test character. Just rolled
> one up last night, a male Human. How's this look?
>
> STR 14
> DEX 17
> CON 15
> INT 14
> WIS 17
> CHA 16
... it looks like a set of stats worthy of the best class in the
universe. You do know you're supposed to roll 4d6 *and drop lowest*,
don't you? :)
--
Jasin Zujovic
> Got feats and skill points all sorted this morning. Now to gear up and
> play the character some.
Out of curiosity, how can you just think up a character and start
playing him? Are games wanting player so plentiful in your parts? Or are
you retiring some other character? Or did this thread just happen to
come in the right time when you were getting read for a new game?
What feats did you take? I'm thinking a shadowbane stalker could make a
pretty terrifying TWF-er and at higher levels... But if I play mine,
I'll probably just go for Spring Attack.
--
Jasin Zujovic
> In article <ericp06-8425C3...@newsclstr02.news.prodigy.com>,
> eri...@sbcglobal.net says...
>
> > Got feats and skill points all sorted this morning. Now to gear up and
> > play the character some.
>
> Out of curiosity, how can you just think up a character and start
> playing him? Are games wanting player so plentiful in your parts? Or are
> you retiring some other character? Or did this thread just happen to
> come in the right time when you were getting read for a new game?
Well, as this is a test, I'll be flying solo...er, so to speak. I know
of only two other people nearby who play (and there are probably more,
but my time wouldn't allow for proper commitment to a regular play
schedule, unlike in the "old days"), and I rarely even talk with them
lately. As for retiring, I do that only when a character dies, and then
only when I really don't want to play the character anymore.
Ideally, there would be a game starting up where I could insert this
character, and that would be easy to do if I was living in the south SF
Bay area, where I knew plenty of gamers, but I'm fairly isolated these
days, living in a strange place and attending school.
> What feats did you take? I'm thinking a shadowbane stalker could make a
> pretty terrifying TWF-er and at higher levels... But if I play mine,
> I'll probably just go for Spring Attack.
You may not be impressed by my choice of feats, but you might object to
how many the character has. I use the _Iron Heroes_ and _Arcana
Unearthed_ approaches, where you give a beginning character two traits,
one ceremonial feat, one talent or regular feat, and one feat for being
a Human. Here's what I arrived at:
Trait: City Rat (Face in the Crowd) - gives you +2 on Survival checks in
the city, even if you don't have that skill; use a standard action to
blend into a crowd on a Disguise check. Crowd must not be hostile, and
must be of same race and ethnicity.
Trait: Lithe Acrobat - +2 to Tumble checks, use Tumble to move at full
rate without penalty.
Talent: Ambidexterity - ignore the standard -4 penalty to use an
off-hand weapon, as you have no "off" hand.
Human: Nimble Fingers - as per core rules.
Off to a good start, I'd say, and just enough starting cash to deck
himself out with a few weapons, a shield, some studded leather (I know,
no imagination there), and maybe a bit of useful gear.
- E
So no DM? You're running through a 1-player module, and you're the DM and
player? Is that how you're doing it?
Tim
It looks like a 56 point character. That is twice what
you use for a Living Greyhawk character.
Exactly - and freak rolls like this is exactly the reason I never use
rolling for stats (in games I am GM for; and I strongly suggest
point-buy if I'm a player, too), or hit points. There's enough rolling
in-game without having to start uneven, thank-you-very-much.
And Eric was 'not thrilled' about Con? Sheesh, play a Dwarf (Cha 14 is
still great) or Gnome (ok, so Str 12 is not optimal for a Cleric, but
workable) then...
> Madkaugh wrote:
>> Eric P. wrote:
>> > STR 14
>> > DEX 17
>> > CON 15
>> > INT 14
>> > WIS 17
>> > CHA 16
>>
>> It looks like a 56 point character. That is twice what
>> you use for a Living Greyhawk character.
>
> Exactly - and freak rolls like this is exactly the reason I never use
> rolling for stats (in games I am GM for; and I strongly suggest
> point-buy if I'm a player, too), or hit points. There's enough rolling
> in-game without having to start uneven, thank-you-very-much.
The DM in the campaign I am starting in a couple of weeks has us using the
Elite Array set of stats. That works out to 25 in the point buy system
IIRC.
--
Marcel
http://mudbunny.blogspot.com/
Yep, it does. 8 = 0, 10 = 2, 12 = 4, 13 = 5, 14 = 6, 15 = 8; and 0 + 2
+ 4 + 5 + 6 + 8 = 25.
I generally start my players with 28 points (same as Living Greyhawk
IIRC) or sometimes 32, if I want 'high powered'. With 28 points, you
can easily start with your primary stat at 15 or 16 (8 or 10 points),
Con at 14 (6 points) for the hit points, Int at 14 (another 6 points)
for the skill points, and still have a few points to play around with.
You will probably leave a stat at 8; so what? And with 32 points, you
don't even need to do that.
I don't use point systems for building characters. Was never happy with
the results.
This one's definitely a keeper, as long as he's successful :)
- E
> Tim
Yeah. Have to separate my mind between player and DM for this...
Not my method of choice, but right now it's the only way I can test a
new character, so I'll set up some encounters, as though I was DMing a
play group...which reminds me, I'll have to hook up at least one NPC to
make a party.
I'm still kinda fuzzy on how to balance encounters against parties of 3
or 2, or against a single PC.
- E
for 3 run against encounters for a party 1 level lower.
for 2 run against encounters for a party 2 levels lower.
and for a soloist, run against encounters for a party 4 levels lower.
Soloing is extremely dangerous in 3.x D&D though, even against
encounters for 4 levels lower. I ran some solo games (the way you are
planning) with 1st lv characters and found cleric and sorcerer didn't
make it to 2nd, barbarian didn't make it past 2nd. I had a
rogue/ranger that made it to 4th before I got bored with it. The
stealth aspect allowed him to avoid encounters that looked to be too
tough for him.
- Justisaur
I'd never saddle players with an Elite Array. 25 point buy is worse
than 4d6 drop lowest for average abilities, but it does give you more
choice, so it's possibly a reasonable trade off (not one I'd be happy
with though). However with Elite Array you get no choice, so it's
worse than any method in the DMG. You are basically playing an NPC at
that point.
I do prefer an array however to the unbalanced results 4d6 drop lowest
always seem to give, and the constraints and difficulty of a point buy
system. So that's what I'm using in my current game, although higher
than Elite. I'm using what I'm calling the 'Heroic Array' (and you can
see alternatives I made if you google this group for that) which is 17,
16, 14, 13, 11, 10. It's working out great so far.
- Justisaur
Why do I hear doomy music in the back of my mind? ;)
Makes me feel like rounding up a gaming group of my own, or finding one
that will welcome this new character *sigh*
...so it goes...
- E
39 points. Ron used that, IIRC.
MadKaugh
I can understand you are not happy with point systems if you get rolls
like that; this is double what you get in already slightly higher
28-point buy.
With stats like that:
STR 14
DEX 17
CON 15
INT 14
WIS 17
CHA 16
I'd be happy too. And then a Str 12 Dex 15 Con 12 Int 14 Wis 8 Cha 14
(28-point buy) just doesn't seem to cut it...
But will it be fun for the other players if they got more average
results, resulting in 'only' 30-point buy equivalent stats; which means
from the Str 12 Dex 15 Con 12 Int 14 Wis 8 Cha 14 they could e.g. up
the Dex to 16 or the Wis to 10). I certainly would feel a little 'set
back' if I think I have a couple of good rolls and then get completely
blasted out of the water with that array of yours.
You have higher Dex than most starting Rogues, a Wis that a starting
Cleric, Druid or Monk would die for, as well as a Cha that a starting
Bard or Cha would be very happy with. While your Str is decidedly
sub-par for a starting Barbarian or Fighter, you'd do OK-ish,
especially since your AC and hit points don't exactly suck with that
Dex and Con.
Why do you even need the rest of the party? Wouldn't they only cramp
your style? Sure, you rolled your stats fair and square, but would you
keep them if you rolled fair and square Str 9 Dex 11 Con 18 Int 12 Wis
4 Cha 13? Hey, at least your Con is high enough. And your net total
bonus is +2. And, if it weren't for that Wis 4, this is 29-point buy,
so even higher than Greyhawk.
Companions = strength and safety in numbers, and will increase
survivability. Of course, this character's (still no name yet) first
encounter will be solo, but he'll quickly catch the eye of a cleric
who's scouting/recruiting for the Shadowbane folks, so the cleric will
become his adventuring companion. Another character will join in, and
I'll probably keep the trio as a party for a while.
I would not have kept an ability score of less than 10, as I never do.
The more I think of it, the more I can see that the scores I got for
this character would probably make a decent character of just about any
class.
- E
What does that mean, you reroll scores less than ten?
You reroll the whole character? Either way, it explains
a lot.
> The more I think of it, the more I can see that the scores I got for
> this character would probably make a decent character of just about any
> class.
>
> - E
You think?
>>> I don't use point systems for building characters.
>>> Was never happy with the results.
Point buy or fixed array systems provide a way for
every player to have a fair character. Rolling produces
an uneven party (like yours will be, if the other players
roll a kosher 4d6 drop 1), ensuring the sessions are
less that fun for some of the players. It should be
pretty lame for you as well, because there should be
little challenge.
You mentioned running this character solo. How does
that work? Do you ever play D&D with other people?
MadKaugh
> Eric P. wrote:
> > In article <1158911848....@e3g2000cwe.googlegroups.com>,
> > "Arandor" <ara...@gmail.com> wrote:
> >
> > > Eric P. wrote:
>
> > I would not have kept an ability score of less than 10, as I never do.
>
> What does that mean, you reroll scores less than ten?
> You reroll the whole character? Either way, it explains
> a lot.
For this particular character, I rolled only six times, once for each
ability score. That's the way I normally do it, but I do reroll any
score that would result in a negative modifier, instead of a bonus of 0
or better. I don't do single digits for ability scores.
> > The more I think of it, the more I can see that the scores I got for
> > this character would probably make a decent character of just about any
> > class.
> >
> > - E
>
> You think?
>
>
> >>> I don't use point systems for building characters.
> >>> Was never happy with the results.
>
> Point buy or fixed array systems provide a way for
> every player to have a fair character. Rolling produces
> an uneven party (like yours will be, if the other players
> roll a kosher 4d6 drop 1), ensuring the sessions are
> less that fun for some of the players. It should be
> pretty lame for you as well, because there should be
> little challenge.
I'm good at rolling fumbles, though *L*
> You mentioned running this character solo. How does
> that work? Do you ever play D&D with other people?
>
> MadKaugh
Most of the time, I've played with other people. In cases like this,
though, when I want to test something and there's no other way to do it,
I have to be player and DM in one.
- E
I let my players roll stats, but it's interesting to see the disparity
in results, particularly for those who roll in front of me verus those
who show up with a character they've rolled.
> And Eric was 'not thrilled' about Con? Sheesh, play a Dwarf (Cha 14 is
> still great) or Gnome (ok, so Str 12 is not optimal for a Cleric, but
> workable) then...
>
I guess if he's upset that his lowest score is 14, he's got rather high
expectations.
I like dice rolling, so what I do for NPCs instead of assigning the
elite array is to make a huge set, say 100 or so, of 6 x 4d6 rolls and
then cross out the invalid characters using the PC standards. In the
five years I've been DMing 3E I've only every had a character as good as
Eric's show up randomly, so I don't blame him for wanting to keep it.
It's pretty rare.
> Arandor wrote:
> > Madkaugh wrote:
> >
> >>Eric P. wrote:
> >>
> >>>STR 14
> >>>DEX 17
> >>>CON 15
> >>>INT 14
> >>>WIS 17
> >>>CHA 16
> >>
> >>It looks like a 56 point character. That is twice what
> >>you use for a Living Greyhawk character.
> >
> >
> > Exactly - and freak rolls like this is exactly the reason I never use
> > rolling for stats (in games I am GM for; and I strongly suggest
> > point-buy if I'm a player, too), or hit points. There's enough rolling
> > in-game without having to start uneven, thank-you-very-much.
>
> I let my players roll stats, but it's interesting to see the disparity
> in results, particularly for those who roll in front of me verus those
> who show up with a character they've rolled.
>
> > And Eric was 'not thrilled' about Con? Sheesh, play a Dwarf (Cha 14 is
> > still great) or Gnome (ok, so Str 12 is not optimal for a Cleric, but
> > workable) then...
I wasn't unimpressed because of the number itself, but I always hope for
a CON of at least 16.
In an earlier incarnation of the rules, when there was an alternate rule
for "demi-humans" to use larger numbers of d6 for each ability score,
most of my characters came out with two scores of 18 on the average.
Every roll I've ever made has been legit, though. Some characters that
I've inherited from others have had some lower scores than I'd have
liked, but I accepted that and dealt with it. Now, I think I need to
shake my reservations about lower scores, since we can increase any
score we like by virtue of levels and feats.
> I guess if he's upset that his lowest score is 14, he's got rather high
> expectations.
Guilty as charged, M'lord ;) It's an old habit. I need to just not worry
about it.
> I like dice rolling, so what I do for NPCs instead of assigning the
> elite array is to make a huge set, say 100 or so, of 6 x 4d6 rolls and
> then cross out the invalid characters using the PC standards. In the
> five years I've been DMing 3E I've only every had a character as good as
> Eric's show up randomly, so I don't blame him for wanting to keep it.
> It's pretty rare.
I used to roll up lists of ability scores and just keep 'em handy for
whenever I needed to write up a new character, but a little voice nagged
me away from such practices, so now I roll no sooner than necessary.
Not all my rolls come out so well, though. I've seen characters with all
14s and 15s. OTOH, I've had characters starting with as many as three
18s, on rare occasions before applying any ability modifiers! There's
one character of whom I'm fond, a female Moon Elf Warpriest of Tempus,
CN. Her rolls initially came out to three 16s and three 17s. I was
amazed, and so was the DM, but it was all legit, and it took several
levels before she became a force with which to be reckoned. Her
enthusiasm for warfare has always far outweighed her combat ability.
- E
The average attribute when you roll 3d6 is 10.5
The average attribute when you roll 4d6 drop 1 is 12.24
If you also reroll all results of 9 or less, the average is 13.18
MadKaugh
I have put a lot of thought into this prestige class, which I just
posted about at great length on my blog:
But let me give you the executive summary. My personal opinion is that
the DMG Prestige Classes (PrCs) are the golden rule by which to judge
all others. By that rule, the Shadowbane Stalker (SbS) is overpowered
and not suitable for play.
Its hit die is too large, skill ranks too generous, and bonuses granted
by class abilities too big. If you are going to give only 8 spell
casting levels, you should make the levels that do NOT add to caster
level be levels 1 and 6 to prevent dipping. It uses a nonstandard
mechanic (giving up prepped spells to gain special ability uses)
instead of a standard number of uses per day.
All that said, there are ways to nerf the PrC back into playability.
Check out my blog for ideas.
Is it "the best class in the universe?" IMNSHO, only if you think that
unbalanced = best!
>
> It's a rogue/cleric hybrid from Complete Arcane, with strong evil-
> huntin' flavour.
>
> I don't think it's really overpowered (hey, it's based on cleric,
> diluting that in any way is just a step down) but it's truly the
> compleat adventurer.
>
> Divine? Obviously, as it's a cleric PrC. You lose at least three caster
> levels, but that's 17 points out of 20. Not the best, but good.
>
> Warrior? Hey, you''ve got cleric spells. Once you get access to divine
> power, who cares what your BAB is? The bit of sneak attack you get from
> rogue and the PrC doesn't hurt either.
>
> Adventurer? 6 skill points/level, good skills, flat bonuses to search
> and sense motive, burn cleric slots for bonuses to hide and move
> silently. Interestingly, you're the best trapfinder in the game: you can
> easily max search, you get a bit of a bonus on top... and then cast
> detect traps on top of that!
>
> Arcane? Well, you have to *not* have something, and arcane is it. Drown
> your sorrow in your maxed UMD.
>
> And yet, I don't remember seeing anyone complain that it's overpowered,
> and really, it doesn't seem to be to me either. But a ninja inquisitor
> would be a perfect character for the game I mentioned (rooting out
> cultists in Karrnath)...
>
>
> --
> Jasin Zujovic
I've been aware of average die rolls for many, many years. That doesn't
stop my dice from rolling loads of 14s and 15s. I don't think they
understand averages ;) And no, they're not weighted, nor do I attempt to
influence the die roll results in any way.
- E
> > What are your thoughts about this class?
>
> I have put a lot of thought into this prestige class, which I just
> posted about at great length on my blog:
>
> http://www.cayzle.com
>
> But let me give you the executive summary. My personal opinion is that
> the DMG Prestige Classes (PrCs) are the golden rule by which to judge
> all others. By that rule, the Shadowbane Stalker (SbS) is overpowered
> and not suitable for play.
Is it more powerful than a barbarian?
Is it more powerful than a wizard?
Is it more powerful than a cleric?
> If you are going to give only 8 spell
> casting levels, you should make the levels that do NOT add to caster
> level be levels 1 and 6 to prevent dipping.
Dipping is prevented by the requirements. Someone who just wants to be a
cleric and is looking to grab a couple of freebies is better off as a
straight cleric, instead of taking the Rog level you need. Someone who
wants to be a rogue/cleric is better off taking shadowbane stalker all
the way than dipping.
> It uses a nonstandard
> mechanic (giving up prepped spells to gain special ability uses)
> instead of a standard number of uses per day.
I don't see that as a bad thing at all. Nonstandard mechanics (if
they're good) mean the class has something unique to offer, instead of
being just a pile of standard building blocks like evasion, uncanny
dodge, and spell-like abilities usable X/day.
--
Jasin Zujovic
> > The average attribute when you roll 3d6 is 10.5
> >
> > The average attribute when you roll 4d6 drop 1 is 12.24
> >
> > If you also reroll all results of 9 or less, the average is 13.18
>
> I've been aware of average die rolls for many, many years. That doesn't
> stop my dice from rolling loads of 14s and 15s. I don't think they
> understand averages ;) And no, they're not weighted, nor do I attempt to
> influence the die roll results in any way.
Well, if they consistently roll above average, they're *somehow* screwy
pretty much by definition, no?
--
Jasin Zujovic
You had calculated that average?
Kudos, it's not a trivial calculation.
I modified a spreadsheet I wrote for 4d6
to handle dropped rolls.
> That doesn't stop my dice from rolling
> loads of 14s and 15s. I don't think they
> understand averages ;)
A long run of high or low values
is not unusual; it has to happen
sometimes. If it never ends, the
chances are good that there is
another factor.
> And no, they're not weighted,
That's not necessarily true, they could
have been weighted as a flaw in the
manufacturing process, perhaps an
air bubble in the plastic. Are they
transparent?
Are they are marked as normal dice,
1 through 6? Some places sell cheaters,
and the die could have been misplaced
in the wrong bin.
> nor do I attempt to influence the die roll
> results in any way.
>
> - E
I didn't say you were. I was curious how
much dropping bad rolls influenced the
outcome. It is a significant bias, but less
than I thought it would be.
MadKaugh
No, it is only very likely, not certain.
At some confidence threshold, you
decide, 'I'm certain enough.'
Madkaugh
Apples and oranges. Very hard to make a comparison.
> Is it more powerful than a wizard?
Wizard: poor BAB, only 1 good save, poor skill ranks, d4 hit dice, +10
spellcast levels over 10 class levels, extra ability every five levels,
familiar gets better.
SbS: medium BAB (more powerful), 2 good saves (more powerful), great
skill ranks (more powerful), d8 hit dice (more powerful), +8 spellcast
levels over 10 class levels (less powerful), extra ability EVERY level
(much more powerful), no familiar progression (less powerful).
As a wizard, would I give up two levels of spellcasting and familiar
improvement for saves, BAB, specials, etc etc? Hell yeah! LOL! Of
course, there's an inherent "cleric spells are not as good as wizard
spells" argument to be made, but I still think 10 levels or SbS are
more potent than 10 levels of wizard.
> Is it more powerful than a cleric?
Cleric: medium BAB, 2 good saves, poor skill ranks, d8 hit dice, +10
spellcast levels over 10 class levels, undead turning gets better.
SbS: medium BAB (same), 2 good saves (same), great skill ranks (more
powerful), d8 hit dice (same), +8 spellcast levels over 10 class levels
(less powerful), extra ability EVERY level (much more powerful), no
undead turning improvement (less powerful).
Are the extra 4 ranks per level and gaining a feat-equivalent ability
every level worth giving up 2 caster levels? IMNSHO, hell yes!
BUT of course these kinds of conversations tend to boil down to "I
think it is unbalanced" vs "I think it is fine." Of course, if you like
it and it works for you as is, then more power to you, Jason. I only
posted here because you asked for an opinion.
> > It uses a nonstandard
> > mechanic (giving up prepped spells to gain special ability uses)
> > instead of a standard number of uses per day.
>
> I don't see that as a bad thing at all. Nonstandard mechanics (if
> they're good) mean the class has something unique to offer, instead of
> being just a pile of standard building blocks like evasion, uncanny
> dodge, and spell-like abilities usable X/day.
This is an important point, so please let me be clear. I have NO
problem with adding new abilities. The idea of adding an AC bonus by
activating an ability is fine! The idea of picking someone's pocket
from 30 feet away (the Arcane Trickster's Ranged Legerdemain) is fine.
The idea of Dimension Dooring every 1d4 rounds (the Horizon Walker's
ability) is fine.
What I object to is the new *mechanic*.
In olde tyme D&D, you rolled a d6 to find secret doors. You rolled
percentiile dice to find a trap. Those are two mechanics both used for
searching. Lame. It was a real positive movement to just use one
mechanic -- the d20 roll -- to resolve both.
Similarly, the game is much better without a percentile resurrection
roll; a save vs rod, staff, and wand; a roll to open a door and another
one to bend bars; etc. Simplifying the game made it much better.
Similarly, there is already a way to use special powers a few times a
day: assign a certain number of uses per day to each ability. Adding a
brand new mechanic -- giving a prepped spell to use a special ability
-- is unnecessary, clumsy, inefficient, and wasteful. If you want
something unusual, go with using Turn Checks to activate special
abilities.
That's what Rich Burlew does in his Divine Trickster ...
http://www.giantitp.com/articles/5M5QGsJ5mpbLfAHduZG.html
... which, by the way, is a better rogue/cleric PrC than the SbS, I
think, though still a little overpowered.