Bring the bard support class

Whether scholar, skald, or scoundrel, a bard weaves magic through words and music to inspire allies, demoralize foes, manipulate minds, create illusions, and even heal wounds.

Learning from Experience

True bards are not common in the world. Not every minstrel singing in a tavern or jester cavorting in a royal court is a bard. Discovering the magic hidden in music requires hard study and some measure of natural talent that most troubadours and jongleurs lack. It can be hard to spot the difference between these performers and true bards, though. A bard’s life is spent wandering across the land gathering lore, telling stories, and living on the gratitude of audiences, much like any other entertainer. But a depth of knowledge, a level of musical skill, and a touch of magic set bards apart from their fellows.

Only rarely do bards settle in one place for long, and their natural desire to travel—to find new tales to tell, new skills to learn, and new discoveries beyond the horizon—makes an adventuring career a natural calling. Every adventure is an opportunity to learn, practice a variety of skills, enter long-forgotten tombs, discover lost works of magic, decipher old tomes, travel to strange places, or encounter exotic creatures. Bards love to accompany heroes to witness their deeds firsthand. A bard who can tell an awe-inspiring story from personal experience earns renown among other bards. Indeed, after telling so many stories about heroes accomplishing mighty deeds, many bards take these themes to heart and assume heroic roles themselves.

MUSIC AND MAGIC

words and music are not just vibrations of air, but vocalizations with power all their own. The bard is a master of song, speech, and the magic they contain. Bards say that the multiverse was spoken into existence, that the words of the gods gave it shape, and that echoes of these primordial Words of Creation still resound throughout the cosmos. The music of bards is an attempt to snatch and harness those echoes, subtly woven into their spells and powers.

The greatest strength of bards is their sheer versatility. Many bards prefer to stick to the sidelines in combat, using their magic to inspire their allies and hinder their foes from a distance. But bards are capable of defending themselves in melee if necessary, using their magic to bolster their swords and armor. Their spells lean toward charms and illusions rather than blatantly destructive spells. They have a wide-ranging knowledge of many subjects and a natural aptitude that lets them do almost anything well. Bards become masters of the talents they set their minds to perfecting, from musical performance to esoteric knowledge.

7 Likes

I enjoyed playing my Red Dragonborn Bard/Sorcerer/Paladin. I am Brute!

I don’t think the community actually wants the balance problem that a true support class (one that exists to buff other players) would bring, so bard as a ranged/healer would be the best way (in 2 expansions, since we are already getting a new class for DF).

3 Likes

I love playing my Bard in Final Fantasy 14, it’s a lot of fun.

And watching Bards do performances is amazing, especially in groups. So clever.

1 Like

I don’t think support classes work well in WoW anymore. Which is a shame. The hybrid specs were basically that back in vanilla and TBC but not anymore.

FFXIV has support classes (Dancer and, to a lesser extent, Bard). Guild Wars 2 has support builds that are valuable. But WoW just isn’t balanced that way anymore.

Support Classes never really worked in WoW.

Shaman, for example…existed as a support class. But it was never enough to justify their existence. Hence, they went away from that horrible design choice.

Some games support classes work. Some games they dont. WoW is one they didn’t.

3 Likes

there used to be an old game called Bard’s Tale

look it up

2 Likes

Shamans and their totems are the best you’ll get.

Still, with the pi drama and whatever other buffs are in the game… A full on support class will generate outrage over those who didn’t get 100 buffs funneled.

1 Like

they can also use frost horns and fire horns as weapons

I think there are bards in at least 3-4 other games - everquest FF nad a few others

Would love bard, but it would need to be heal/range and maybe melee dps.

1 Like

Introducing another whole Role Type at this point would be…

Nope. Nuh-uh. Not seeing it. Not a chance. Aint gonna happen.

Besides, Bards are traditionally a very social/RP concept, and WoW… outside of what players make for themselves, RP is just canned linear NPC dialog.

1 Like

this would be the next class that they can bring in - I bet a decent amount of people would make a bard

Just make Bards with a dps and healer spec and we’re golden. Make the class all about cc and utility on top of the heals and dps they bring.

1 Like

no way
its hard enough to balance now, throwing a support class in would make it much worse.
if they wanted to make a spec for like hunters that was a bard it would be cool, however it would need to be a full on dedicated healer

see it could work and they can have a variety of instruments for 1 hand and a sword or dagger for the other. Off hand - instruments

no

They’ll either be so OP every group HAS to have one, so you see 5 man groups of tank, healer, bard, 2 dps, or their damage so bad to compensate for the buffs, no one wants to bring them.

 

1 Like

what if they are good with the music and the 1 handed weapon

:banjo:

Bard as a healer spec would make sense in WoW.

The best support you can give is healing.

Depending on how you spec the bard you can go for party dps buffs or personal damage improvements. And maybe stuff like your damage spells giving people random stat buffs.

Every single class has utility.

Sound based magics could have perks like Ignoring damage mitigation or something.

Or something like diffusion where it nullifies incoming damage.