The Emulator is, in essence, a blue mage transformed from the mechanics of Final Fantasy to D&D. Its main gimmick is that it's able to steal the abilities of monsters and use exact or modified versions of them. It is a spell casting class focused almost entirely on combat and has only a handful of party support options. It is not designed to perform any utility or espionage work outside of learning and pursuing the spells the class can learn. The class has a high potential for role-play integration with the play-style of a character: The entire purpose of a party's journey could be to appease the desire for power that their emulator leader has. It has numerous subclass options that allow it to act as other classes or bring abilities to the party unique to it. It could be described as a combination of a Fighter, a Ranger, and a Wizard, however these alone do not describe its depth. It is a class designed to reward players for working to obtain their abilities and those who like customization. But mainly, it is about providing an easy method for creating a character's background and developing their history in the sessions you play them in. That doesn't mean playing this class is easy, though, as you must work for all but a handful of the spells you can learn.
A full, detailed explanation of the class and all of its abilities, including new spells, can be found here:
So, people are going to be very hesitant to look at your homebrew if it requires they click on an external link. Not just because of the risk associated with clicking a link, but because google especially doesn't guarantee anonymity depending on the setting of the document and the account that is viewing it the only way to find out about those setting is to click the link. If you want people to look at it id be best if you post it on the forums formatted the way that the official classes are so people can look at it. You can insert spoilers to make it compressed a bit better for the different sections or for things like spell lists.
The Emulator is, in essence, a blue mage transformed from the mechanics of Final Fantasy to D&D. Its main gimmick is that it's able to steal the abilities of monsters and use exact or modified versions of them. It is a spell casting class focused almost entirely on combat and has only a handful of party support options. It is not designed to perform any utility or espionage work outside of learning and pursuing the spells the class can learn. The class has a high potential for role-play integration with the play-style of a character: The entire purpose of a party's journey could be to appease the desire for power that their emulator leader has. It has numerous subclass options that allow it to act as other classes or bring abilities to the party unique to it. It could be described as a combination of a Fighter, a Ranger, and a Wizard, however these alone do not describe its depth. It is a class designed to reward players for working to obtain their abilities and those who like customization. But mainly, it is about providing an easy method for creating a character's background and developing their history in the sessions you play them in. That doesn't mean playing this class is easy, though, as you must work for all but a handful of the spells you can learn.
A full, detailed explanation of the class and all of its abilities, including new spells, can be found here:
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1d9p_ynEtrueBY-eK_Lpi2cYuLrZfVzn8/edit?usp=sharing&ouid=101007432602382886287&rtpof=true&sd=true
So, people are going to be very hesitant to look at your homebrew if it requires they click on an external link. Not just because of the risk associated with clicking a link, but because google especially doesn't guarantee anonymity depending on the setting of the document and the account that is viewing it the only way to find out about those setting is to click the link. If you want people to look at it id be best if you post it on the forums formatted the way that the official classes are so people can look at it. You can insert spoilers to make it compressed a bit better for the different sections or for things like spell lists.
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