Thou art thyself though, not a Montague.
What’s Montague? it is nor hand, nor foot,
Nor arm, nor face, nor any other part
Belonging to a man. O! be some other name:
What’s in a name? that which we call a rose
By any other name would smell as sweet;
So Romeo would, were he not Romeo call’d,
Retain that dear perfection which he owes
Without that title. Romeo, doff thy name;
And for that name, which is no part of thee,
Take all myself.
Rasael wrote:You havent told us why tower shield proficiency would be a good idea for THIS class.
I kinda already did, Ras. By quoting the Class's description above: "The man-at-arms's talent with heavy armor, shields, and defensive tactics grant him the ability to disrupt his foe's plans."
But let's get into it...with the caveat that I realize comparing D&D to Medieval times, is not always the most appropriate thing:
The
Man-at-Arms is considered a fully armored,
heavy Calvaryman. Their distinctness comes from their "master" of armor and weapons (but especially mounted attack with a lance, which is impossible for NWN2 atm).
"For close combat the main weapon was the spear, around 7 feet (2.1 m) in length with a leaf-bladed head, and
a heavy wooden shield with an iron spindle-type boss."
So is written on Wikipedia (I am being a tad lazy by just using this as a resource, but if you need, I can dig up more). "...the Carthaginians... may have carried the "soliferrum", the all-iron javelin unique to Iberia, in addition to a spear
and shield and a Celtic-style longsword or an Iberian falcata." These are examples of Shield Proficiency as part of the armored way of a "man-at-arms" or heavy calvaryman, as it is being historically described.
But a heavy wooden shield is not a tower shield!!! You may be about to jump to say. But hold back your armored war house Sir, for now comes the next part:
If you do some Wikipedia research on
Shields, you actually find a reference to "tower" shields: "The Mycenaean Greeks used two types of shields: the "figure-of-eight" shield
and a rectangular "tower" shield. These shields were made primarily from a wicker frame and then reinforced with leather. Covering the body from head to foot, the figure-of-eight and tower shield offered most of the warrior's body a good deal of protection in man-to-man combat."
That's interesting, but hmmm...what really is a "tower" shield, after all. Well, if you search up
Medieval Shields on Wikipedia, you find a nice list. In that list is the
Pavise shield, which is the most full-body protective shield listed there, and...if you read it's description, you find something altogether supportive of my argument: "A pavise (or pavis, pabys, or pavesen, all of them words stemming from the name of the city of Pavia, in Italy) is
a large convex shield of European origin used to protect the entire body. The pavise was also made in a smaller version for hand-to-hand combat and
for wearing on the back of men-at-arms. " The full-size Pavise was more often, in Medieval times, used by archers.
But the most tower of the tower types is the Roman Scotum...and a medieval version is a shield called a Renntartsche, that is modeled after the Roman Scotum. They are fully rectangle, but just as large as a Kite Shield, and like the Kite, provided protection against the foreleg (sounds very "tower" like, doesn't it?). The Renntartsche was used by jousters, as a way to catch the enemies lance (remember cavalryman reference?).
So, for all practical purposes on BGTSSC, Tower Shield proficiency grants +2 AC to the Class, for a -2 AB penalty. That spells balanced, does it not? This Class is, as it is described, to me, translates as the most armored "shield" for the rest of the Party/group. His taunts and challenges are to focus the enemies attention to him/her, and...then stand his ground, the best defended armored warrior on the battlefield (with the
force of personality to keep standing...

). Would a Tower Shield not give the Man-at-Arms that full aspect?