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TABLE OF CONTENTS
CHAPTER
CHAPTER
CHAPTER
CHAPTER
CHAPTER
CHAPTER
CHAPTER
1:
2:
3:
4:
5:
6:
7:
Intro
Challenging Us
Phases of Challenge Its Mostly a Matter of Level
My Experiences
Analyzing the Arcane Warrior (Gish)
Core Is Unbalanced
Character Roles
CHAPTER 1: INTRO
What To Read
If you read nothing else, read the bolded purple text!
I highly recommend reading and meditating on this entire document. It explains the
capabilities of D&D 3.5 and Pathfinder so well.
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CHAPTER 2: CHALLENGING US
Creature Resources
All creatures have various resources. Some have spells and some have levels, but
all creatures have these resources:
-Base Attack Bonus (BAB)
-Saves
-Skill points
-Feats
-Hit Points (HP)
-Initiative modifier
To make a creature interesting, it needs more than these essential things.
Adding items or class levels doesnt inherently make for more interesting games. Using
creature abilities in clever combinations and ways (such as a Will-o-Wisp
enhancing a Shambling Mound or having Earth Elementals dive bomb enemies
from a rocky ceiling) allows encounters to be more interesting and memorable,
and sometimes more challenging.
Eye color, weight, favorite meal, and name are optional. Such factors dont affect the
game mechanically very much.
All creature resources can be noted by their frequency. In general, a resource
falls into one of these categories:
-Per Round: All creatures normally get 1 standard action, 1 move action, and 1 swift
action per round. Even abilities usable at-will are usually only usable once per round.
-Per X Rounds: Martial maneuvers (Tome of Battle) are can be recovered by spending
time in battle. Most maneuvers are a Per X Rounds or Per Encounter resource.
-Per Encounter: Martial maneuvers (Tome of Battle) are recovered at the start of an
encounter.
Also, the usefulness of some spells- especially buffs and crowd control spells- are
handiest at the start of an encounter. Using them after the threat is mostly neutralized
would be a waste.
-Per X Encounters: Minute per level and longer spells usually fall into this category.
Casting shield so it lasts 10 minutes helps as much for the first encounter its used as
the last. Recasting it during a fight means nothing, save that it will extend the time.
-Per Day: Note that for short enough days and lifespans, Per Day resources act as
Per Encounter or Per Lifetime resources.
D&D spells are famous for their Vancian spell slot system, where each shot (spell prep)
is used and removed.
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Some magic items (Pearls of Power) and class features (a Barbarians Rage) are usable
so many times per day.
-Per X Days: These resources are rare mostly because tracking them is cumbersome.
A D&D 3.5 Paladin can remove disease a certain number of times per week.
-Per Level: These resources are rare in part because levels are meant to be abstract,
but also because people want to use abilities more frequently than once per level.
Every creature gets BAB, saves, skill points, feats, or/and HP every level. While having
higher numbers in these areas is generally preferred, they are not special and I shall not
touch on them further here.
A D&D 3.5 Artificer gets a Craft Reserve, or an amount of experience points usable to
make magic items without spending his own. This is set to a new value every Artificer
level and unspent points are lost.
Also, Action Points from Eberron Campaign Setting, d20 Modern, and Unearthed Arcana
are usable a certain number of times per level. Sometimes, Action Points carry over to
the next level.
-Per X Levels: Feats come at level 1, level 3, and so many levels thereafter. In D&D
3.5, general feats come at level 6 and every 3 levels thereafter. In Pathfinder, general
feats come at level 5 and every 2 levels thereafter.
-Per Lifetime: Feats and class levels are generally considered a Per Lifetime resource,
because they are generally unchangeable.
Rare abilities exist that are only usable a certain number of times in a characters life.
Magic items with set numbers of charges and with no ability to recharge are the closest
thing in the core rules to a Per Lifetime resource.
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they dont affect all of the enemies. Chances are someone will escape from an area
crowd control spell. Even is this contained state, enemies can still hurt and even kill if
one side is unlucky or careless.
For example, if a pack of half-dragon giant slugs is entangled in a web spell, they can
still use their breath weapon despite having their movement hampered. Downing one as
quickly as possible is advised as next turn they may all break free.
Alternatively, the groups casters could all be disabled (stunned, nauseated, grappled,
and so on) while the front-liners try fight to wave after wave of unrelenting enemies.
Uncertain. In the combats current state, the victor is yet to be determined. Usually,
these are the memorable fights if for nothing besides their difficulty. Smart tactics,
reinforcements, and luck play critical roles in determining a victor.
Sometimes, uncertain level fights are hallmarks of balance. Often, they happen on
accident, such as when one side boldly fights an overwhelming force and gains some
reasonable chance of success.
Balancing Encounters
Not everything you fight will be a level-appropriate challenge. Not everything
you find should be fought.
Level-appropriate challenges go both ways. Sometimes, enemies are there just to
take up space. They contribute mostly to the body count, and to absorb enemy actions.
On the other end, the Big Scary Creature doesnt seem so scary. Maybe he does.
Regardless, if the party is outmatched, fleeing is the wise and sane thing to do. Player
instincts may go, Wuh? when a well-prepared level 5 group encounters several
creatures meant for level 10 characters and is expected to flee.
The environment and a creatures tactics are the X factor. Ive won fights I
should have lost and lost fights I should have won because of smart play on one side.
Hit and run tactics against the group may seem unsporting, but in a matter of life and
death, honor is less important.
Most the time, however, its a game and we admit its a game. Reliably facing
things way above you makes for more lethal combat and hampers character
development, at least in terms of story. While undead characters can roleplay,
inanimate character corpses dont. Often, if you win against overwhelming odds, its a
pleasant surprise and a matter of luck.
Facing things far too weak to be interesting is a waste of the groups time. An adventure
meant for a level 1 party is probably of no interest soon thereafter.
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Failing a Reflex save may be deadly at low levels, but is mostly an inconvenience.
Failing a Fortitude save usually means youre poisoned or diseased. Failing a Will save
usually means youre someones pet for a fight or a few hours.
-Death is a serious threat. A dead ally is probably out of the game. Even if raise
dead is available, at 5000G per use. In 3.5, theres also a lost level. In Pathfinder,
theres an extra 1000G cost for restoration. Either may break the deal.
-Melee gets to feel powerful. Martial adepts make casters nervous. A round or
two from a Fighter or melee brute can bring down many foes. Martial adepts have
enough staying power to likely be the most powerful classes during levels 1-4.
-Casters need to greatly ration spells. Casters need to be creative and use their
spells in the most pressing of circumstances. Level 0 spells still arent worth much, but
ghost sound, detect magic, prestidigitation, create water, and cure minor wounds are
the stars here.
-A single cantrip or level 1 spell can radically alter the setting and environment,
if only subtly. Charm person or silent image or ghost sound or prestidigitation on an
unsuspecting king or merchant or noble or guardsman or guild leader or other authority
figure may make your life a lot easier.
Proper use of magic can break the setting from level 1.
-There are plenty of spells to mess with others minds. In core, we have these:
-charm person (Bard1, Wiz1)
-disguise self (Bard1, Wiz1)
-major image (Bard3, Wiz3)
-minor image (Bard2, Wiz2)
-silent image (Bard1, Wiz1)
-suggestion (Bard2, Wiz3)
-Casters get spells that directly alter their environment. It may not seem like
much, but there is great power in weakening a structural support with stone shape or
forcing grass to grow via plant growth for a future entangle.
In core, we have these:
-create water (Cle0, Druid0, Pal1)
-soften earth and stone (Druid2)
-stone shape (Cle3, Druid3, Wiz4)
-plant growth (Druid3, Ranger3)
-Money is tight and so many items look appealing. The game expect you to get
lots of money quickly. Stuff is expensive, and you may have 3 or 4 minor magical items
by the time you leave this phase.
-If the group is self-sufficient, it is only in minor aspects. The party Cleric may be
able to treat disease and poison, but only if he prepares for it.
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-Magical recon is handy, but mostly forgettable. Speak with dead may obviate a
murder mystery, and some areas like castles and vaults have high security. Where you
go and what you do is usually quite obvious.
-Transportation is mostly overland and within a small region. Theres rarely a
need to go to the far ends of the earth from the starting area. Most likely, the action
takes place in a country or three.
-Characters usually get around in traditional medieval style. Characters walk
most places, and may ride mounts or ships to reach their destination. Rarely are flying
or aquatic mounts used. Teleportation and plane changing rarely happen.
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Creatures with meager CON scores (less than 16 after items) are usually asking to die if
try to melee. They may die regardless from area effects.
-Resistances and immunities are becoming fairly common. You come to expect
that creatures will resist something, even if its a half-hearted Fire Resist 5 against your
677 points of fire damage.
Spell resistance comes on the scene, but is still fairly rare. Casters worth their spells
dont rely on beating SR to do their thing.
-Rocket tag will probably enter the scene. Initiative suddenly escalates in
importance. Theres a great possibility that if you go first, you can totally incapacitate
the enemy forces, or at least gimp them greatly. You may even be able to kill an
important unit before he can do the same to you.
Likewise, if your enemies go first, theres a great chance theyll shut down your side.
Expect to die or be KOed. A lot.
-Failing a Reflex save usually isnt deadly, but failing a Fortitude or Will save
has permanent or long-term penalties. Failing a Fortitude save usually means death
or permanent incapacitation. Failing a Will save usually means youre slowed or youre
someones pet for a good, long time, even for a day or longer!
-Death is less of a threat. With level 5 spells, a Cleric can raise dead. This material
expense (5000G per use) makes it inconvenient, but more easily absorbed at higher
levels. Losing a level in 3.5 is harsh, but manageable. Losing 1000G in Pathfinder for
restoration to remove the negative level makes death more expensive cash-wise but
more fun. At least you get to keep your abilities!
-Melee brutes and casters are on more even footing. Melee brutes do lots of
damage, but casters disable foes and bolster allies. Melees can often do enough
damage to one-shot or one-round minions. Still, beware the tentacles!
-Casters have more resources. Casters still need to ration their best spells, but can
be a bit looser on the level 1 and 2 slots. A Conjurer7 has 15 general slots per day and
4 specialty slots, all of level 1 or higher. This is a lot when you realize that a well-placed
spell of any level can win a fight, and most fights can be won with 2 spells, tops.
Some spells can produce permanent effects, or effects lasting a day or longer. Planar
binding lets a Wizard bring forth a real creature with all its normal abilities if the GM lets
him. That even means chain binding Efreeti (Genies) for wish farms if the GM says so.
-There are more spells to mess with others minds. In core, we have these:
-charm monster (Bard3, Wiz4)
-confusion (Bard3, Wiz4)
-control winds (Druid5)
-dominate person (Bard4, Wiz5)
-glibness (Bard3)
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can probably dimension door through a wall into unknown territory to bypass a deadly
trap or an annoying riddle. Unless youre certain doing this is wise, youre asking for a
lot of trouble.
Send a summonling or hireling through the danger zone instead and if he survives, you
have recon! At least be nice and turn him invisible first.
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contact other plane and get scooped on what spells to prepare for that time period,
clone himself a backup self, and enslave cities with charm/dominate all in the same day.
Really, a Wizard can access every spell if only indirectly. A Solar in 3.5 casts spells as a
Cleric20. An Efreeti can emulate L6 Druid spells, and there's probably some extraplanar
Archivist, Psion, Erudite, Artificer, or <class name> who'd be willing to help you for a
large enough bribe or a strong enough charm/dominate monster. Gate one in- if only by
a magic item- and have a ball, or better yet, a prismatic sphere!
-Money is almost no object. Time still matters. Spells can create wealth, directly
or indirectly. True creation can make a bunch of valuable material. Plane shift can lead
my golems on a mining expedition on the Elemental Plane of Earth. Dominate person
can make my favorite merchants mine.
One thing characters normally cant do yet is manipulate time. They may be able to
hang out on a plane where time goes very quickly compared to their home plane and
use this to research spells and make items seemingly instantly.
-Many casters are self-sufficient. Almost all non-casters arent. As in phase II,
but more so. Wizards can planar bind outsiders to cast Cleric and Druid spells to remove
ailments, make wealth, and so on.
Non-casters still rely on casters for pretty toys and the ability to do more than hit stuff.
Everyone, non-casters especially, should expect to have a continual fly and freedom of
movement handy just so they wont get snatched by a giant flying creature, like, oh, a
dragon. While theyre at it, everyone also need continual mind blank and death ward
just so they wont be auto-killed by Some Guy with Level-Appropriate Abilities.
-Magical recon encourages an arms race. It isnt enough to casually use greater
scrying and contact other plane to spy on ones associates, ally or enemy. Now, youre
expected to keep tabs on everyone. Some would say, You never know X. With enough
Divinations, you do.
-Characters need to move about in fantastic ways. By now, there are plenty of
counters to teleport. An antimagic field or a dimensional lock keeps most interplanar
pests out, but encourages people to head in and do things the old fashioned way.
Teleport and plane shift are expected for overland travel. Youre expected to fly (or fly)
on almost all occasions, preferably without magic.
Non-fliers are one reverse gravity away from a no-save, no-SR uselessness. Maybe an
enemy caster used a Quickened reverse gravity with a gate that leads to a nasty plane.
-Planar travel is probably important in this phase. Clerics and Wizards can plane
shift. Id probably want powerful allies among the planes, since the mortal planes tend
to have a bunch of ordinary, weak inhabitants with the occasional extraplanar invader.
Besides, if Ive been borrowing Elementals and Outsiders via planar binding, I can
hopefully make deals with their home plane masters.
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-The multiverse is your adventure site. You dont know which arrogant Wizard child
will want to thwart your deal with some genies to make the Elemental Plane of Snakes.
(Actually, if youre smart, you do. See the emphasis on Divinations, above.) Maybe you
need to be prepared for a salamander uprising, or a tea party with Asmodeus.
Regardless, theres less distinction between on duty and off duty. You may be able to
hide on another plane to rest for an hour or few to replenish spells, make items, and say
Hi to all your minions. After that, its off to the Abyss!
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might find you useless due to your lack of self-sufficiency. Even if magic is unreliable,
having it is better than lacking it.
-If there is a save, failing it means disaster. If there is no save, prepare to die.
The main difference from phase III is there are more options, many of which are area
effects or effects that selectively target their prey.
The threat of a heavily metamagicked no save spell is still around, and with higher level
spell slots, becomes more practical!
-Death and permanent shut down are of varied lethality. Not much difference
here from phase III, folks!
-Unreliable magic is the great equalizer on both sides of the table. Antimagic
field is possibly your GMs favorite counter, but now you have disjunction to undo those
pesky AMFs. You may even have additional resources to remove them.
See the guide Anti-Antimagic: How to Cast in an Area Where Magic Wont Normally
Function!
-One level 9 spell can radically alter the world. Imagine a low-magic world where a
caster sneakily infiltrates and uses gate to bring in a Solar, a real, live, genuine being of
angelic authority. There went a lot of religious ambiguity.
Alternatively, think of what happens if mortals could live forever with astral projection.
What about gathering world leaders in a room and using dominate person/dominate
monster to subtly turn them under your control?
Some of these things are possible at lower levels, but since youre so powerful, why not
do them?
-Money is almost no object. Time may still matter. Money-wise, the phase III
situation stands.
Time stop is your first expected feeling of manipulating time. Haste made things go
faster from level 5, but I never felt like I ordered the universe to accelerate my party
that much.
Genesis, the Wizard spell, lets you make planes. Finally, you can determine how quickly
you want time to pass on your home base compared to the rest of the multiverse. Mind
you, this is an expensive way to do things, but at this level, youve earned it.
-Many casters are living it up in enough magic to take down a nation or few.
Non-casters hope to leech this magic and wear it as items. Yknow those effects
that negate certain things, like how freedom of movement makes you grapple-proof,
true seeing negates most illusions, and 3.5 mind blank makes you immune to mindaffecting effects?
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Yknow how these are normally expensive to put on items but casters can dedicate a slot
or few to make these things run continuously?
Ysee where Im going?
-Magical recon isnt all its cracked up to be. You may know Asmodeus has X
minions of type Y in his lair at all times, but are you sure its his real lair? Even if it is,
how can you swoop in there, survive his defenses, win rocket tag, and escape alive?
Doing this via simulacrum or astral projection helps, but expect retaliation even if you
succeed!
For lower life forms, keeping tabs is usually easy. For everything else, you must be
Crazy Prepared.
-Characters still need fantastic mobility if they wish to remain mobile. Because
of genesis and great numbers of defenses, you may not even need to leave your lair. If
you do, ensure youre fully buffed and fully informed.
Otherwise, things are as in phase III.
-Planar travel is essential in this phase. How else will you reliably reach your
extraplanar fortress? Besides, when partaking in planar politics, you look less credible if
you hitch a ride with some Outsider or other caster.
-The multiverse and maybe even time is your adventure site. Mostly, this is as in
phase III, but with the potential for time travel. If players must be careful not to act in
a way that undoes their progress, youve found a challenge. Whether this is worth
playing is another matter.
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CHAPTER 4: MY EXPERIENCES
Intro
I DMed a 3.5 campaign set in Xeen that spanned levels 1 to 21. This was the party
setup.
Binzero: Human Cleric5/Combat Medic1/Radiant Servant of Pelor10/Combat
Medic+4/Hierophant1
Binzero was Kintariis cohort and a dedicated healer, buffer, and support character. Since
people kept getting hurt, he was in continual demand. Most often, however, he would
stand in a corner and avoid seeming threatening and Cleric-like.
Boddyknock: Strongheart Halfling Transmuter4/Master
Specialist1/Incantatrix10/Halruaan Elder1/Archmage2
(I know its only 18 levels. He was my character and there were plot reasons for his
disappearance.)
Boddyknock specialized in save or die spells flesh to stone, maze, imprisonment, etc.
Because of this, I learned to be more party-friendly with spells to give the other players
a chance to act.
Buffing was a secondary role for Boddyknock.
Daiden: Winged Wood Elf Rogue1/Swordsage20
Daiden snuck so well that no one else could see him. Sometimes, he couldnt even see
himself!
Daiden specialized in stealth, traps & locks, and Desert Wind maneuvers. If fire is cool,
more fire is more cool, right?
Overall, Daiden was a spectacular martial Rogue. He leaned heavily on the martial side
at the end, and his nonmagical prowess let him remain competent, sometimes even
spectacular, in areas that magic was not reliable.
Side note: Having seen Swordsages, Warblades, and Crusaders in action, all are viable
and powerful, but still at the whims of casters. Warblades and Crusaders are probably
stronger than Swordsages because Swordsages need a full-round action to recover one
maneuver. The feat Adaptive Style lets them refresh all their maneuvers as a full-round
action.
In contrast, Warblades can full-attack to recover maneuvers and Crusaders get their
maneuvers randomly without requiring an action.
Kintarii: Human Paladin8/Sorcerer1/Gold Dragon Disciple10/Shining Blade of
Hieroneous5
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(I know thats 24 levels. He drew well from the Deck of Many Things.)
Kintarii considered himself the groups tank and backup healer. He specced himself to
be potent without items, and he saved the group in an antimagic field at least once.
Kintarii loved dragons so much he even had a pseudodragon familiar and a silver dragon
mount.
Nahsilik: Human Paragon1/Barbarian1/Necromancer1/Human
Paragon+2/Ruathar2/Dragonslayer1/Spellsword1/Abjurant
Champion5/Sacred Exorcist7
Nahsilik was the groups arcane warrior (gish) and a bit of everything. When he joined
the game, there was no healer. I had recently made a Positivist specialization for
Necromancers to let Wizards cast cure and heal spells.
Nahsilik emphasized the melee aspect of a gish and rarely felt like a caster. While he
could have been far more powerful if he emphasized the caster aspect, he was plenty
potent.
Sarakuse: Human Sorcerer5/Mage of the Arcane
Order9/Archmage5/Fatespinner2
Sarakuse specialized in summoning and the wall of force spell. He was mostly
ineffective since the 3.5 options to greatly boost summoning werent available during
this campaign. At the time, these options werent yet released or I didnt know of them.
(Malconvoker was in Complete Scoundrel. Paragnostic Apostle was in Complete
Champion.)
Strax: Human Sorcerer6/Boomer10/Archmage5
(The Boomer PrC is homebrew.)
Strax specialized in counterspelling and direct damage. He did plenty of both, though
his player didnt realize the wealth of options besides these.
Strax was still effective when things died to HP damage, though he sometimes resorted
to limited wish to make the desired effect.
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-I expected characters to gain a level every 3-4 weeks. Using D&D 3.5s
experience system, this was closer to 3 weeks per level on average, but players liked it,
and we adapted to the levels.
-I relied on large numbers of short missions. Most my missions were meant to
finish in one night. More epic missions would take maybe a month to complete.
-Fight-wise, I rarely plucked things straight out of a book. I made stat sheets for
pertinent foes- usually humanoidals with class levels- and optimized everything. My
desire to be true to the rules led me to assign stat points, skill points, feats, and abilities
based on hit dice, as a real character would have. For most foes starting at level 10, I
gave them a base 18 in every stat. It barely mattered, but it was fun and easy.
Casters were common, and I usually stayed a spell level ahead of the party. I knew the
power of level 9 spells, and only used them once the group had them. This pace made
sense because Sheltem/Alamar was training the group to become his champions without
it seeming like he was so directly involved.
-I focused on making interesting fights and events and let the group handle
them. Players are more competent than you may realize. By making something that I
thought was awesome and including a variety of successful paths, the group would feel
empowered.
My marker: If I thought I would love playing this, it would usually translate
into players thinking the same.
There are limits. Putting characters in a seemingly hopeless situation and expecting
them to do things to snatch victory from defeat is rarely going to happen.
-Part of the thrill of adventuring is introducing something awesome. Usually,
the rules had something in them to describe this. Failing that, I made my own.
For example, one of the characters wanted to join the Arcanorium in Sandcaster.
Because the player didnt understand how best to use her spells, I made a separate
exam per school.
The Evocation Exam was perhaps most memorable as an action minigame. This exam
played a lot more like Diablo than D&D, but everything had a cost. Every spell cast,
item purchased, and round taken subtracted from the eventual score. Killing foes and
accepting penalties gained points.
Also, the final area- Darkstone Tower- had a variety of activities. Among the highlights
were a 3D crossword puzzle, a meeting with an old mentor who betrayed the party to try
to save them, an aerial battle in sky golems against an invading alien fleet, and the final
battle in a perpetual time stop. (Everyone could act because they had the epic feat Spell
Stowaway: time stop.)
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-NPCs accounted for many of the non-dungeon crawling roles. The group aided
a powerful Wizard early on and gained his trust. He provided the magical recon and
direction for the group.
Later, the group was initiated into a larger organization that provided an airship that
served as a base. This ship, the Light of Darkness, had teleport stations, merchants,
and important NPCs the group had helped. The players loved that they were part of
something larger.
In doing this, there was less incentive for the group to bind outsiders, use complicated
algorithms to get the information they needed from Divinations, and try to conquer
nations. I never forbid them from using planar binding or such style-altering spells, but
the group wasnt that interested in using them either.
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Spell (Complete Arcane) or a prerequisite for a PrC that you want will have to wait.
Also, you WILL take Practiced Spellcaster and Improved Practiced Spellcaster
(homebrew) if allowed. Caster levels are that important.
-Level crunch. Full casters can get PrCs with minimal BAB and do just fine. Your levels
need to advance casting and provide enough BAB and HP to justify your duality. Certain
buffs (especially 3.5s polymorph) make up for this.
Heavy multiclassing means meeting perhaps many sets of prerequisites. Feats will be
lost in the making of your gish.
-Item crunch. Gishes need items that boost their physical stats and their casting stat.
Other items not normally viable for a full caster or full warrior suddenly become viable,
like a Pearl of Power.
-Stat crunch. Warrior-heavy gishes have only as much in their casting stat as they
need to get their spells and put the rest into physical stats. Caster-heavy gishes do the
opposite.
-Spell crunch. Gishes tend to focus their spells on buffing themselves so they can do
the things a normal warrior could do, with some additional tricks. This means less room
for crowd controlling, social interaction, and other non-combat spells.
If the gish is a Wizard, theres a specialization crunch. Most gishes are Transmuters for
the extra buffs. Most crowd controller Wizards are Conjurers.
-Skill crunch. Caster skills and martial skills greatly differ, meaning your skill points
are sunk into prerequisites. Gish PrCs may not have the class skills you want.
-Heavy magic reliance. Normal warriors arent so feeble in an antimagic field or if
their buffs are dispelled.
Also, needing to spend a round to throw up an important buff is one round not stopping
the enemies.
There are ways to lessen the pain, such as contingency, spell trigger, or the feat Linked
Power (Complete Psionic). Still, if you buff mid-fight, thats one less action directly
contributing to ending the fight.
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But is it Broken?
It probably isnt broken. Broken in this context means the GM either cant run
the game or world as intended, and there is no reasonable way to fix the
situation short of radically altering or banning the ability.
Infinite and nearly-infinite loops fall into this. Open-ended abilities like planar binding
and illusions are versatile and powerful, but rarely broken.
Reread the ability and consider what it does. How potent is it? What aspects of the
game or world does it affect? What setup does it require, and once set up, how many
times can this setup be used? How frequently can it be a credible threat? Are players
expected to have it, and if so, how soon?
For example, planar binding requires magic circle and dimensional anchor to prevent
pesky creatures from escaping. Having a specific room in your Bag of Holding or a rope
trick where you remotely interact with the called being through elaborate series of
illusions and traps isnt something you should expect to do every day. Even if you do,
how many resources do you have to adventure or otherwise ward yourself?
Opponents
Balancing fights is more fun by saying, You need to use your best abilities,
instead of saying, No, you cant do your trick. When you compare opposition to
the party, consider what the party can do! Its usually more than you expect.
If one person is pulling the partys weight or seeming overpowered, dont just say, No!
to his ability if it is not broken. Instead, consider overwhelming him with needing to rely
on his favorite tactic.
For example, if a someone is doing a lot of damage via sneak attack, making fights with
overwhelming numbers of foes that need sneak attacking to die now is often far more
interesting than saying, No. You cant sneak attack because I say so.
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For another example, if a caster enjoys pre-buffing the party into uberness, dispel magic
is probably appropriate (to undo his progress, in the cases it's called for) or facing even
more uber foes which account for party buffs. Mind you, actions spent dispelling (and
buffing) are actions not spent directly killing the opposition.
The CR system demands a summary. This is my interpretation of the CR system: A
lone CR2 against a level 2 character is meant to be a toss-up, mostly decided by
initiative.
The CR system is most accurate against casters, who, by their spell lists, define levelappropriate abilities. A Wizard20 is a CR20 threat. A Fighter20 might be a CR8 threat.
Rarely are fights 1 big creature versus a party. The action economy dictates that
one side is almost always greatly outmatched, and the odds are probably favoring the
PCs. Instead, foes tend to come in packs so the entire party can do something and feel
useful.
Often, a fight can radically change in difficulty on a failed save. Maybe the party
Fighter dies from a cone of cold. Maybe an enemy Wizard falls victim to color spray.
Usually a failed save means someones out of the fight, meaning a pack of 20 imps is a
lot less threatening when half of them are blind and slowed.
Skills
Skills vary widely with their expected usefulness. More people want to be able to
hear and see better, especially when Spot, Listen, and Perception checks can notice a
sneaky opponent when magic will not. Few people care about treating injuries with the
Heal skill when cure spells are around.
Skills in general decline in usefulness as magic levels increase. Climbing,
jumping, and swimming are fine modern day sports, but if you could replace the need
for such things with a polymorph spell, would you?
Feats
Feats vary widely with their expected usefulness. Dodge grants +1 AC some of
the time. Improved Initiative grants +4 initiative all of the time.
Leadership is core, and it grants an extra party character in exchange for a feat. Mind
you, hes two levels lower, but if built well, he will still contribute.
Spells
Pathfinder Core contains the highest concentration of most powerful spells in
the game. Some were changed since 3.5, but the essence is the same.
Banning these spells and abilities, or attaching significant drawbacks, is NOT
NECESSARILY THE ANSWER!
There are more uses to planar binding than enslaving genies for wish farms.
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Divinations spoil plots that demand hiding information, but their use can still provide a
challenge if the secrets they obtain are part of a greater challenge.
You may learn the secret path in the dragons lair, but its filled with lots of danger you
cant just walk or teleport past.
The game assumes that if you can access a spell (like a level 9 Wizard being
able to teleport) then you can use it reliably! Certainly, there are counters. Rarely
are there surprises so bad as to deter an eligible caster from casting teleport again.
Similarly, planar binding spells call real creatures to serve your for a certain
time span. Rather than a game master saying, Im banning planar binding,
or Just try to bind a creature! <evil look>, the players and game masters
need to talk about safe limits of this and every troublesome spell. This
knowledge applies in and out of character.
Assumedly, a character knows how his abilities work before he uses them, just
because he has them. A Wizard who casts web on marshy ground expects the web to
hold and creatures to be stuck because the spell says so. Real life physics are not
expected to apply unless the rules were stated so beforehand.
If rules of the game world change on the fly, the players should be able to act on this
knowledge and redo their action.
In regards to abilities that have a random outcome, assume the character understands
the randomness of this ability. For example, fireball does random damage within a
certain range, enervation inflicts a certain number of negative levels, and mirror image
produces a certain number of illusory doubles.
Troublesome Spells
Some spells change the world. Having reliable access to these spells changes the course
of the challenge and almost always the verisimilitude of the world.
Antimagic field is usually considered a universal counter. Casting a counterspell works,
but is rarely used because of the dependence on having a specific spell handy.
Casters and ranged units can walk out of the 10 radius spell (ooh, tiny!) and do their
job. Melee units need to be in close range to hurt their victims, meaning they lose their
magic items.
Counters to antimagic field: There are plenty of instantaneous Conjuration (Creation)
effects that work when brought into the field. Alternatively, alter the environment (like
cause a cave-in) or hurl boulders or painful objects via telekinesis. For more info, see
the guide Anti-Antimagic: How to Cast in an Area Where Magic Wont Normally Function!
Dispel magic series (including disjunction) will also take out most of these lingering
effects.
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Pathfinder keeps freedom of movement and true seeing as-is. Death ward provides a
bonus against [Death] effects but otherwise keeps its immunity to negative energy.
Mind blank got gutted, and provides only +3 more against divinations and mindaffecting abilities than the +5 Cloak of Resistance youre expected to have at level 15.
Counters: Dispel magic. Counterspelling. Situations where the immunity isnt worth it.
Resurrection. Spells that raise the dead are more a problem for world consistency.
(Why assassinate someone you believe has the resources to be raised?) Adventuring
parties depend on these to keep going.
Counters: Lack of material components. The soul is not free or is not willing to return.
Stopping someone without killing him like with flesh to stone. Long-dead creatures cant
be revived with such magic.
Simulacrum. This is a level 7 spell and meant to be powerful. Im not sure how this
was intended to be used, but as written, it can make whatever creature you need but at
half its HD. In many cases, you can make a creature thats stronger than you with
enough ruby dust and in 3.5, experience points.
Needing a body part is normally a deterrent, except body parts have no listed gold cost,
and every caster worth his spells at least one of these:
Spell Component Pouch: A spellcaster with a spell component pouch is assumed to have all the material
components and focuses needed for spellcasting, except for those components that have a specific cost, divine
focuses, and focuses that wouldn't fit in a pouch. Players Handbook 3.5 page 130 and Pathfinder Core page
161
Counters: Lack of material components. Interrupted casting time. Desired creature
doesnt exist in this campaign setting or is beyond your Knowledge check. Creatures
become a greater liability than asset.
Teleportation. Teleport is a staple Wizard spell. Who doesnt want to zip around the
universe in 6 seconds or less?
One problem is nullifying the thrill of hard-won discovery. Also, being able to pop into a
location for which the GM is unprepared often is asking for trouble.
Societys stability depends on people needing proper access codes. Bank vault security
is useless against someone who can jump in, take what he wants, and leave with barely
a trace.
Long-range teleportation can also mean popping out when in trouble, resting a day, and
popping back in as if nothing bad happened. Many games already do something similar
but with parties resting in the dungeon.
Blind teleporting is asking for trouble, but if you can scry on a target, prepare to ambush
him, teleport to him, and take him out without him realizing what went on, why wouldnt
you?
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Classes
Classes work differently in play than in theory. Even an optimized caster- one
who can seemingly do everything- may not dominate the game in a party of
weaker classes. Tactics and optimization levels are major parts on how each
class and character turns out.
Stamina is a major factor in how well classes perform. A combat caster is only
as powerful as his ability to cast spells that affect his enemies. If he loses
initiative, or a creature makes its save, he may soon need someone to save
him.
D&D and Pathfinder are meant as team games. Even if a caster can try to do
everything himself, he risks alienating his teammates regardless of whether he
succeeds.
Finally, class balance changes for the amount of combat versus non-combat
time. Ultimately, being useful is having the right toolset for the job.
Spells per day are the main limiting factor on any caster. Given ample time and
money, a Wizard can acquire whatever spell he desires and can cast it in some form,
too! (All classes can buy items that cast X spell Y times per day.)
Other full casters are similar. Often, magic will replace a great majority of nonmagical
means, including some things non-casters can do. Whether its a problem is up to your
group.
Why shouldnt everyone play a full caster? Sometimes, players dont want magic.
Sometimes, magic is unreliable (antimagic fields or wild magic zones). Sometimes, the
campaign would benefit from fewer casters in the group.
Ultimately, D&D is a team game. Casters who try to do it all themselves (especially
when they cant) make things less interesting for their fellows. Casters who can do it
all probably havent been challenged enough. Only omnipotent creatures are invincible,
but a paranoid caster of sufficient level comes close.
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The best place for a very powerful caster to be in a group of weak noncasters is as support. As a Wizard, you could cast flesh to stone on the Big Baddie
and hope he fails his save. If he fails, hes gone but the party didnt get to do anything
significant. If he passes, there went a spell and an action.
What about a group of full casters? Some would say this is interparty balance taken
to an extreme. Regardless, the group is self-sufficient or will soon be. From a players
perspective, this means everyone can contribute meaningfully to non-redundant roles.
From a game masters perspective, challenging the group may be more difficult. If the
group has the right spell prepared, a solution is usually a standard action away.
Suddenly making magic unreliable (antimagic field or wild magic zones) will probably
turn the party useless. I advise reading the rules and learning what spells counter your
groups favorite tactics. If your Wizard likes Evards black tentacles, include foes with
high grapple bonuses, tremendous size, greased clothing, or/and freedom of movement.
Almost anything can be countered. Not necessarily counterspelled, but enemies can
adapt to tactics, make saves, or use abilities that specifically counter the partys moves,
like freedom of movement versus grappling, above.
Players enjoy the game more when the game master plays by the established
rules. Common antimagic field use by the GM is generally considered unsporting and
unfun, if legal.
Be careful on nullifying what characters are meant to do! Players may be
thoroughly annoyed that the game master has rendered them useless in the name of
balance.
Even casters have finite resources and are somewhere between passable and useless
without their magic.
Non-casters are usually less able to adapt. They rely on feats, skills, and items, or
resources that are not easily changed every day. Casters with fixed amounts of spells
known- Sorcerers, Bards, and so on- are in a similar position.
As an aside, there are enough martial archetypes to seemingly justify a
plethora of warrior base classes.
-Holy warrior: Cleric, Paladin
-Living off the land natural guy: Druid, Ranger
-Savage, angry man: Barbarian
-Sneaky, skilled dude: Rogue
-Unarmed assailant: Monk
I believe theres too much specialization for martial classes. Clerics and Druids are the
full casters on that list and mostly replace their more martial counterparts, Paladins and
Rangers respectively.
In contrast, all of these are viable Wizard archetypes:
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-Skill monkey is a valid role. Sometimes, a lock isnt worth a spell to open, and
bashing through it is unwise Stealth can be deadly if done well, especially since true
seeing doesnt detect creatures hidden by nonmagical means. Maybe you need to talk
your way out of trouble and your party Rogue conveniently put ranks in Sense Motive
and Diplomacy. Creative players can use skills in unanticipated yet fruitful ways!
-One rounding any officially published creature through damage is a valid
role. Non-casters have more likelihood to specialize in dealing damage since they can
hit and hit and hit and hit. Besides, if you cant alter reality to suit yourself, your
damage output is a valid gauge of your contribution.
-Forcing everything I see to save or become useless this fight, during which
time they may be slaughtered is a valid role. Offensive arcane casters do this role
especially well.
From level 1, a Wizard has grease to turn a battlefield into a comedy of errors.
He can use color spray or sleep to render opponents useless. He can prepare all of
these spells and deal them out as he sees fit.
Level 2 spells grant glitterdust and web. Want to blind your foe and nix his
invisibility? Want to keep your foes immobile while you take pot shots at them?
Level 3 spells grant slow and stinking cloud. Slowed is a major drawback to frontliners who depend on moving more than 5 per round and acting. Nauseated is a nasty
condition, preventing victims from doing anything useful, but its a Fortitude save.
Level 4 spells grant Evards black tentacles, solid fog, and fear. Squeeze your
foes into itty bitty wittle pieces with long, ropey tentacles that deal damage. Use solid
fog to reduce enemy mobility (down to 5 per action in 3.5) and stick them fulla
tentacles! Use fear to make your foes panic in terror if they fail their save, or render
them shaken even if they save!
Ive only mentioned a small number of core Wizard spells. Druids and Clerics get
their own crowd control, and all full casting classes can get higher-level magic. Spells
only get more powerful from here!