Wednesday 22 February 2012

Multi-class vs mixed-class characters

As I mentioned recently, after starting purely with basic Labyrinth Lord, we've had several "Advanced" style multi-classed demi-human player characters created in my campaign in the last few months. I've been thinking about the introduction of these characters and how it's changed the game.

The main influence they've had, I feel, is an unfortunate one. Their ability to do two things well has tended to overwhelm the single-classed characters, with very little downside. A thief / magic-user is equally as capable as a normal thief and a normal magic-user. As they have to split their XP between two classes, multi-classed characters gain XP in each of their classes at half the normal rate. However, while a 50% reduction sounds like a big deal on paper, due to the exponential nature of the XP progression charts this effectively means the characters are only one level behind their single-classed companions. This in my experience makes little difference (a single spell per day for MUs, or a few percentile points for thieves, for example), and is more than made up for by the fact that they are all round so much more capable. This, in combination with demi-humans' substantial racial benefits, makes multi-classed demi-humans far and away more powerful than their single-classed human brethren, at the low to mid levels of play, at least.

So I've been thinking about why players might want to create multi-classed characters. Several reasons come to mind:
  1. To try something different. In a game with only three or four classes, allowing them to be combined in pairs greatly increases the number of possibilities.
  2. To play a character of mixed class.
  3. To counteract the level limits applied to demi-humans, by effectively slowing down the race towards the end point.
Today I want to address the second of these points -- the desire for a character that's "a bit of a thief, a bit of a wizard" or something like that. I think that players with such ideas in mind (the dabbling bard or magical assassin archetypes, for example) don't expect their character to be as good a wizard as a single-classed magic-user, or as good a thief as a single-classed thief. They simply want to have a mixture of abilities -- an option which is not presented by the strictly separated classes of standard D&D. Ignoring the odd dual-classing rules of AD&D, multi-classing is traditionally the primary way to create a character with mixed abilities.

I've been contemplating an alternative. Instead of giving a mixed-class character the complete abilities of two different classes, how about giving them half of the abilities of each of those classes? I think in essence this is actually more what players are imagining when creating mixed-class characters.

Of course what exactly constitutes half of a magic-user's, fighter's or thief's abilities is open to interpretation, and would depend very much on the rules set being used.

Here's an example of the kind of thing I'm thinking of, in terms of the standard Labyrinth Lord classes.

Mixed-Class Characters
Characters can choose two classes, and gain roughly half the abilities of each.

Mix-classed characters have the following characteristics in general, modified by the chosen classes:
  • XP progression: as magic-user
  • Hit Dice: d6
  • To hit rolls: as thief
  • Saving throws: best of two classes
  • Weapons & armour: as thief

Half a Magic-User
Cannot create magic items.
Can use magic-user specific magic items from 5th level.
Labyrinth Lord's call as to whether mixed-class magic-users can cast spells while wearing armour.
Use the following spell progression:

Level    1    2    3    4    5
1    1*    -    -    -    -
2    1    -    -    -    -
3    2    -    -    -    -   
4    2    -    -    -    -
5    2    1    -    -    -
6    2    2    -    -    -
7    2    2    -    -    -
8    2    2    1    -    -
9    2    2    2    -    -
10    2    2    2    -    -
11    3    2    2    -    -
12    3    2    2    -    -
13    3    2    2    1    -
14    3    2    2    1    -
15    3    3    2    1    -
16    3    3    2    1    -
17    3    3    2    2    -
18    3    3    2    2    -
19    3    3    3    2    -
20    3    3    3    2    1

* A 1st level half magic-user must make a successful INT check on 1d20 each day to learn a spell.

Half a Thief
Choose three of the following (advancement as normal thief):
  1. Pick locks & find / remove traps
  2. Pick pockets
  3. Backstab
  4. Climb walls
  5. Move silently & hide in shadows
  6. Hear noise
Half a Fighter
Can use all weapons.
Can use fighter specific magic items from 5th level.
Choose two of the following:
  1. d8 Hit Dice
  2. Fighter attack progression
  3. Use any armour
  4. Use a shield

3 comments:

  1. Some good ideas here Gavin.

    I've always been uncomfortable with the official line and the fact that the slower xp progression seems to do little to stop multi-class characters outshining single class ones. Slowing down progression does a bad job of simulating "not as proficient".

    It makes a lot more sense then to instead introduce mechanics to prevent multi-class characters making single class characters virtually redundant, as only total dedication to a single class would allow a character to truly master and excel in their chosen profession.

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  2. B/X does already have one "multiclass" class, even without the "advanced" options, and that is the elf (a fighter/mage). (Two if you count the cleric, which is also a kind of fighter/mage based on the mechanics, with a few added tweaks.) So I think it's worth comparing any possible solutions to this problem with the elf class (and maybe the cleric), especially since they don't seem to step on the toes of the other classes as much as AD&D-style multiclass characters.

    To be honest, I'm not sure why this is. Maybe something having to do with the à la carte nature of the AD&D multiclass that makes it feel more flexible?

    ACKS has an interesting solution to this. They prebake mixed classes for you. So the assassin is a fighter/thief and the nightblade is a thief/mage. It's a pretty slick approach, though they are opening up their class engineering guidelines in the upcoming Player's Companion. I'm not sure I like that (I suspect it may lead to lots more time spent on the equivalent of character builds).

    I like your approach here too, but I wonder about some of the equivalencies: e.g., hear noise OR move silently & hide in shadows? Use shield OR use any armor?

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  3. Slowing down progression does a bad job of simulating "not as proficient".

    Yes, it's two completely different ideas isn't it. This was a bit of a revelation to me when I was thinking about this the other day!

    I like your approach here too, but I wonder about some of the equivalencies: e.g., hear noise OR move silently & hide in shadows? Use shield OR use any armor?

    You're right, some of the "ability blocks" are a bit odd! :) I guess it'd probably be better to combine "armour + shield" as one block and then have "use all weapons" as another block.

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