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Apr 6 at 16:28 comment added Phoenix Duck Not relevant enough to the main question to be an answer, but I would object to this class on the grounds of breaking the setting. Not only is it strange that a dropout is at least as well educated as a typical wizard, it rubs me the wrong way that an arcane spellcaster is able to wield powers normally reserved for clerics and druids. The idea of a wizard using arcane power to channel the wrath of the gods the way a paladin does breaks the idea that these abilities actually mean something in universe. Flavor is a lot of what separates different types of casters - this subclass muddies that.
Mar 22 at 22:26 vote accept User 23415
Mar 22 at 21:34 answer added Mathaddict timeline score: 8
Mar 22 at 20:36 answer added Nobody the Hobgoblin timeline score: 0
Mar 22 at 19:06 comment added User 23415 Yes, I am. This functions identically to a normal ASI.
Mar 22 at 18:08 comment added Jack Are you saying that the 14th level feature is an ASI? Per the Wizards Table, wizards get ASIs at 4th, 8th, 12th, 16, and 19th. At 14th level, they should get a subclass featute; for instance, abjuration and conjuration wizards get Spell Resistance and Durable Summons, respectively. Are you saying the Dropout gets an extra ASI at 14th, as a sublcass feature?
Mar 22 at 17:34 history asked User 23415 CC BY-SA 4.0