I'm making a 2024 Artificer Subclass for a player that focusses on plants and crafting things out of wood, meant to better fit into a high fantasy environment with less developed Technology than you typically see Artificers associated with. This is the Gardener Artificer, a Subclass focused on group support and summoning.
I've tried to make the features strong enough to be exciting and versatile, whilst also limiting the average power level. I've also made sure to implement the features to work with a D&D Beyond Character Sheet, though some of the spells could not be added to a shared Subclass.
I need more people to test the Subclass out and provide feedback. I'm not looking to make massive changes, but if there's glaring problems or things that feel weak in prolonged play I'd like to know before I implement the Subclass in our home game. Please provide constructive feedback. Thank you.
I'm making a 2024 Artificer Subclass for a player that focusses on plants and crafting things out of wood, meant to better fit into a high fantasy environment with less developed Technology than you typically see Artificers associated with. This is the Gardener Artificer, a Subclass focused on group support and summoning.
https://www.dndbeyond.com/subclasses/2726226-gardener
I've tried to make the features strong enough to be exciting and versatile, whilst also limiting the average power level. I've also made sure to implement the features to work with a D&D Beyond Character Sheet, though some of the spells could not be added to a shared Subclass.
I need more people to test the Subclass out and provide feedback. I'm not looking to make massive changes, but if there's glaring problems or things that feel weak in prolonged play I'd like to know before I implement the Subclass in our home game. Please provide constructive feedback. Thank you.
Two things: One, the description should say: "A Gardener is an herbalist. . . "
Two: The healing application of seedlings is overtuned. It should be spend two to increase healing by around 1d6.
I believe this varies by region. UK pronounces the "h" making "a herbalist" correct. The US does not pronounce the "h", making "an herbalist" correct.
How to add Tooltips.
My houserulings.