Kin wrote:
Adapting is one thing, but in order for a deep elf to adapt to holy damage, they have to have their suit enchanted all to hell and back. They have to have a good dexterity and reflex save for BoG (I think that's the right save.) nimbus, then on top of that, either massive mr or mp on top of shield and spell ward to negate enough damage to survive past 2-3 BoG's. Of course, the moment 1 holy word is shot off, chances are bye by shield / spell ward and any other buffs you have.
Adapting shouldn't be forcing a character to massively enchant their gear every time they die, which in any Deep Elf's case is a lot. And even then if you do enchant greater MR on all your gear, iron / cold iron weapons will totally destroy you unless you have iron guard, which is not available at all times (Atleast not that I'm aware of.) It can also be said it's th same way with Elves. Even if you enchant your gear to resist negative energy spells, iron will still destroy you. And for what? Max intelligence? Good dexterity? Come on, that really isn't that big of a boon to warrant the INSANE weaknesses of some of them.
Seriously, your average player can barely even play a Deep elf, and there aren't many people willing to sit for hours on end enchanting your things. A person shouldn't have to do that JUST to survive.
Or you can just make a human necromancer, mercenary, sorcerer or whatever other class you were going to create as a deep-elf and not have to worry about or deal with so many drawbacks.
I get the distinct impression Dulrik designed the vulnerabilities specifically to deter players from choosing non-human races. If Pyrathia is supposed to be a predominantly human world, the player base should reflect that. The vulnerabilities seem to be the design mechanic to encourage most players into picking humans.
You can still kick arse as a deep-elf, elf or half-elf, it just requires more work to do so. If it didn't, why pick a human? I could be wrong. Maybe Dulrik wants all the races played equally and these vulnerabilities are just an oversight. I'll let him answer that question, though.