Saturday, March 9, 2019

Tidying the Paladin

As I'm working mostly on the wiki these days, crossposting here just follows ~ particularly when I am reworking very old files on the wiki that most are not likely to ever see.  The wiki just gets 65-100 page views a day, so I know people are not perusing every page.

On the side, I've been reformatting pages associated with Player Characters, perhaps because of my readings of 5th Edition.  I suppose I'm guilty of making boxes for character fluff in the way I've accused others of doing; I've tried to keep the prescriptiveness of what the classes mean to a minimum.  The bigger goal has been to make the content friendly, easy to use and more attractive.

I've worked up a front-page for the paladin at last, which has been a placeholder for several years, since I was still on the old wikispaces format.  I'm afraid some of the links are bound to disappoint; and there are back pages that need to be created: paladin's warhorse, holy weapons, that sort of thing.  But this is the endless battle where it comes to keeping up with all the content D&D demands.


PALADIN (class)

Known throughout the world as great warriors, whose exploits of valour in defence of god and duty have been the substance of many tales. Songs of their deeds have been written as epic poems, told by bards most any evening: Songs of William and Roland, Gormond and Isembart form the substance of many a young fighter’s dreams, as they hope to perform well at their lessons to be recognized for their skill at arms and their faithfulness.

Such peers are prepared with more difficult training to become paladins, pious warriors who bear a moral obligation as holy warriors for their religion. Whether acting on their own volition or as duly authorized combatants for the kingdom’s welfare, paladins are often idolized by honest citizens and deeply despised by chaotic elements.

Contrary to myth, paladins need not be honourable to generally held principles of goodness or law. Many defend the religious ideals of evil cults or religious beliefs whose indifference to concepts of justice and truth makes a paladin in their cause a truly feared villain. Characters must make up their own minds what sort of paladin they are; there are no set guidelines in the rules that insist what a paladin believes.

To Become a Paladin

The primary attribute of the paladin is strength.

To become a paladin, a character must have these minimums:

  • 12 strength
  • 9 intelligence
  • 13 wisdom
  • 9 constitution
  • 7 dexterity
  • 17 charisma


Multi-classed paladins must have a minimum strength of 16. To gain a +10% experience bonus, the paladin must have both a minimum strength and wisdom of 16. The table shown describes the necessary experience to claim each level of the paladin, gaining hit dice and further abilities. Each level above 12th requires 350,000 additional experience. Paladins gain 3 h.p. per level above 9th, but as this is not an increase in hit dice, further constitution bonuses are not accrued. Paladins cannot progress beyond 26th level. [experience table]

Paladins receive several benefits that no other class enjoys: ability to detect malevolence on a continuous basis; benefit of +2 adjustment when making saving throws; immunity from disease, and to cure disease in others, once a week to start (1st to 5th level), then twice a week (6th to 10th level), progressing at that rate until their maximum level.

Paladins also have the power to lay on hands, on others or upon their own person, granting 2 h.p. per level of experience, but one time per day. A continuous eminence of protection from malevolence surrounds the paladin, extending outwards for two combat hexes, that any ally of the paladin can enjoy if within that radius.

At 3rd level, paladins gain the ability to turn undead, though they lack knowledge in dweomercraft. At 4th level, the paladin may call for a paladin’s warhorse, which will behave like a loyal henchman towards the paladin.

Paladins begin to receive clerical spells at 9th level. They also possess unique combat abilities and sage abilities. Players wishing to become a paladin should familiarize themselves with these characteristics.

See Also,
Holy Weapons
Player Characters

2 comments:

  1. This content is pretty standard, but I like these posts anyways. The wiki filling out is always a good thing.

    The Paladin is a neat class. The constant Protection aura is such an absurdly powerful ability, granting what amounts to a constant -2 AC! -4 against pretty much anything non-human!

    What would you say differentiates the Paladin from the Cleric, in terms of function in the game world and training? Would you say a Paladin can Read/Write or would they be more rooted in the physical aspects of piety?

    ReplyDelete
  2. The content itself is more or less standard AD&D rules, cleaned up and linked to rules that more carefully control the absurd imprecision of the original text. I posted it just to show that the work is being done and that I'm dressing it to look pretty.

    The distinction between paladin and cleric is, in my game, spectacularly clear from the sage abilities for each. The paladin has no access to knowledge of the gods and outer planes, no knowledge of ritual or the social structure the cleric can access, no specific understanding of artifacts or medicine. The paladin is a holy fighter ~ but would be as out of place at court as a latrine in Carnegie Hall. He stands near the king and protects him, but that's about it ... while the king listens to what the cleric advises.

    ReplyDelete

If you wish to leave a comment on this blog, contact alexiss1@telus.net with a direct message. Comments, agreed upon by reader and author, are published every Saturday.

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.