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{{topquote|Yo momma's so classless, she could be a Marxist Utopia|playground joke}}
A '''class''' is, in the broadest sense a division or category of similar things.  A class of ships all have similar designs and roles, a class of students may share an age, achievement level, or graduation date, and so on.  In the context of [[role-playing game]]s, there are two definitions of class that are most relevant: ''[[character]] class'', which is a career or set of skills, and ''social class'', which is a character's place in the social hierarchy.
A '''class''' is, in the broadest sense a division or category of similar things.  A class of ships all have similar designs and roles, a class of students may share an age, achievement level, or graduation date, and so on.  In the context of [[role-playing game]]s, there are two definitions of class that are most relevant: ''[[character]] class'', which is a career or set of skills, and ''social class'', which is a character's place in the social hierarchy.


== Character Class ==
== Character Class ==


A [[character]]'s class (e.g. [[ranger]], [[paladin]], [[rogue]]) encodes and/or influences her career (in fact, some role-playing games use ''career'' as the term for the class mechanic), skills, specializations, and role in the [[party]].  A character's class may provide bonuses to certain [[stat]]s and grant access to certain skills (or make certain skills cheaper to purchase) as a character gains levels in that class.  Some games permit multi-classing, where a character can pick up levels in different classes at the same time (leading to character classes like "Paladin 6/Wizard 1" and the like).
A [[character]]'s class (e.g. [[ranger]], [[paladin]], [[rogue]]) encodes and/or influences her career (in fact, some role-playing games use ''career'' as the term for the class mechanic), skills, specializations, and role in the [[party]].  A character's class may provide bonuses to certain [[stat]]s and grant access to certain skills (or make certain skills cheaper to purchase) as a character gains levels in that class.  Some games permit [[multiclassing]], where a character can pick up levels in different classes at the same time (leading to character classes like "Paladin 6/Wizard 1/Lawful stupid 10" and the like).


In [[Munchkin (Card Game)|Munchkin]], you have no class (heh) until you play a class card.
In [[Munchkin (Card Game)|Munchkin]], you have no class (heh) until you play a class card.


== Social Class ==
== Social Class ==
As most fantasy games (and some sci-fi games, like [[Warhammer 40,000]]) are set in a [[Medieval Stasis|quasi-feudal time period]], their societies tend to be fairly stratified. Feudalism and class systems from history could get quite complicated, but most game writers (and most players, for that matter) abstract things:


As most fantasy games (and some sci-fi games, like [[Warhammer 40,000]]) are set in a quasi-feudal time period, their societies tend to be fairly stratified.  Feudalism and class systems from history could get quite complicated, but most game writers (and most players, for that matter) abstract things:
* [[Monarchy|Royalty]] is usually at the top of the chain. There might be some layering if the kingdom is a vassal state of an empire.
 
* Below them are the [[noble]]s. Often, there's too much land for a single royal family to control personally, so they parcel it out to families loyal to theirs, who might in turn divide their chunk into smaller pieces for lesser noble families to manage, and so on. Nobility is broken up into various stratified subclasses from those who rule provinces bigger than most kingdoms to podunk knights who are in charge of a square kilometer of marginal rocky farmland and a dozen dirt farmers.
* Royalty is usually at the top of the chain. There might be some layering if the kingdom is a vassal state of an empire.
** Knights, the bottom level of the nobility are important, because in the early days of a social order like feudalism they provide the principle muscle behind the system.  They were typically raised knowing how to fight and how to lead other men in a fight. 
* Below them are the [[noble]]s. Often, there's too much land for a single royal family to control personally, so they parcel it out to families loyal to theirs, who might in turn divide their chunk into smaller pieces for lesser noble families to manage, and so on.Nobility is broken up into various stratified subclasses.
* Some powerful organizations, like a state church or a society of [[wizard]]s, may sit parallel to the nobility -- they aren't families and don't have inherited titles, but they have holdings of comparable size and some kind of royal recognition.  
* Some powerful organizations, like a state church or a society of [[wizard]]s, may sit parallel to the nobility -- they aren't families and don't have inherited titles, but they have holdings of comparable size and some kind of royal recognition.  
* Artisans, [[guild]]s, and similar organizations occupy the next layer down. Their members are skilled and respected, but they're not born into noble families, so they don't get to have castles or armies. Most [[player character]]s are (or at least start out) in this layer.
* Artisans, [[guild]]s, and similar organizations occupy the next layer down. Their members are skilled and respected, but they're not born into noble families, so they don't get to have castles or armies. As roads improve, ship designs get better and cities grow these classes get more powerful. Most [[player character]]s are (or at least start out) in this layer.  
* At the bottom are the [[peasant]]s (or "commoners" for a more polite term) who grow the food that everyone eats. Not all of them are happy in this situation (cf: the [[Wikipedia:French Revolution|French Revolution]]).
** Mercenaries and men-at-arms fall around this level too.  A common peasant could easily improve their station a bit by being willing to pick up a weapon.  While sellswords were generally frowned at by the pious and the industrious alike, there was never any shortage of customers looking to hire a fighting man.
** Merchants generally exist in this area, though there is a lot of variation. At the top you have a few merchant princes with long range high value trade deals, are the patrons of local businesses and are wealthier than at least the lower strata of the nobility and have considerable pull even without formal title. On the bottom you have peddlers traveling from town to town with an old hand-cart trading odds and ends and selling them to the poor, earning just enough at the end of the day to avoid starvation. More likely they would be between the two extremes (if closer to the latter than the former). Merchants operate more independently than artisans but to get ahead and stay afloat, you need connections and reputation.
* The largest group are [[peasant]]s (or "commoners" for a more polite term) who grow the food that everyone eats. Not all of them are happy in this situation (cf: the [[Wikipedia:French Revolution|French Revolution]]).
* The lowest class is the underclass. Pretty small in the grand scheme of things these guys do the really shitty jobs such as being nightsoil men and scavengers who looked through garbage middens for anything they might be able to sell, use or eat. If you're in this class '''''everyone''''' looks down on you.
*(Special mention should go here to the "classes" of [[Slavery|slaves and serfs]]. They don't really merit a formal entry as such on this list; Any society that practices the institution will almost never consider the slave population to be "human," or whatever the predominant species is, much less worthy of classification as anything other than chattel.)


Usually, the only way to move up a layer is to marry someone from a higher layer (good luck to those peasants in love with princes and princesses), get elevated by members of that layer (you ''might'' get a [[knight]]hood, but your kids won't inherit it), or force your way in by revolution (in which case, watch your back for people looking to do the same to you).
Usually, the only way to move up a layer is to marry someone from a higher layer (good luck to those peasants in love with princes and princesses), get elevated by members of that layer (you ''might'' get a [[knight]]hood, but your kids won't inherit it), or force your way in by revolution (in which case, watch your back for people looking to do the same to you).
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If one has an interest in East Asian societies and wants to use that as a template, the social hierarchy is structure a bit different due to Confucianism. It's laid out roughly as such...
If one has an interest in East Asian societies and wants to use that as a template, the social hierarchy is structure a bit different due to Confucianism. It's laid out roughly as such...


*Scholars: Scholars are rich people (generally landowners) who have money to dedicate their lives to study of moral philosophy, history, arts and similar. This is a big deal because you get government jobs by passing exams about these things. Their wisdom and learning is to be valued above all. Fortunately for people who are not born into this class you to can become a scholar if you can pass the exams. Though you are going up against people who have been training for them from childhood and about 1 in 500 or so gets a passing grade. In Japan, you substitute [[Samurai]] for Scholars.
*'''S'''cholars: Scholars are rich people (generally landowners) who have money to dedicate their lives to study of moral philosophy, history, arts and similar. This is a big deal because you get government jobs by passing exams about these things. Their wisdom and learning is to be valued above all. Fortunately for people who are not born into this class you to can become a scholar if you can pass the exams. Though you are going up against people who have been training for them from childhood and about 1 in 500 or so gets a passing grade. But there is paper evidence of it happening so it's a better chance then you might think of a peasant getting into the top of society.  In Japan, Samurai took the place of scholars (more below).
*Peasants: Peasants are technically ranked pretty high because they keep everybody fed and clothed. Without them, everyone would starve to death. The cynic would argue that this "high rank" is just a ploy to keep peasants happy and avoid rebellion.
*'''P'''easants: Peasants are technically ranked pretty high because they keep everybody fed and clothed. Without them, everyone would starve to death. The cynic would argue that this "high rank" is just a ploy to keep peasants happy and avoid rebellion.
*Artisans: Artisans are seen as less critical than peasants, but still valued for their skills and abilities in taking what the peasants produce in terms of ore, clay, wood and food and making nice things out of them thanks to their skills.
*'''A'''rtisans: Artisans are seen as less critical than peasants (if you don't have shoemakers you have to make your own shoes or go barefoot where as if you don't have peasants you starve to death) but still valued for their skills and abilities in taking what the peasants produce in terms of ore, clay, wood and food and making nice and important things out of them.
*Merchants: Merchants are at the bottom of this hierarchy. The peddlers are USEFUL, but they don't create anything. All they do is buy stuff from one person, move it, and sell it to someone else. In practice the merchants gain prominence and influence above their station by virtue of their wealth, much to the annoyance of the Scholar class.
*'''M'''erchants: Merchants are at the bottom of this hierarchy. The peddlers are USEFUL, but they don't create anything. All they do is buy stuff from one person, move it, and sell it to someone else. In practice the merchants gain prominence and influence above their station by virtue of their wealth, much to the annoyance of the Scholar class and generally in spite of their best efforts to keep them down.
 
You may have noted the absence of any equivalent to the western knight in this system.  That's significant.  The Confucians had sort of a dim view of fighting men, so there was never really a martial caste in their system. The rank and file in Imperial China were regular folks who were either conscripted into the army or volunteered.  Most Chinese generals of antiquity were lauded as scholars, but revering martial prowess was uncouth, at least on the Asian mainland where Confucianism held sway.  The best fighters of Chinese antiquity, such as Lu Bu, were remembered as bloodthirty monsters who'd go full Qin Shi Huang if they could.  Japan had no such pretentions; the Samurai were scholars, and they were fighters, and they saw the two as linked; Samurai functioned much more like knights did in the west, giving their allegiance to support their favored nobles and leading their local peasants in battle.


==See Also==
==See Also==
* [[Prestige classes]], which are character classes that provide extra specialization at later [[level]]s.
* [[Prestige classes]], which are character classes that provide extra specialization at later [[level]]s.
* [[Combat roles]], for a partial taxonomy of character classes in terms of combat role.


{{D&D3-Classes}}
{{D&D3-Classes}}
{{D&D4-Classes}}
{{D&D4-Classes}}
{{D&D5-Classes}}
{{Pathfinder-Classes}}

Latest revision as of 10:12, 20 June 2023

"Yo momma's so classless, she could be a Marxist Utopia"

– playground joke

A class is, in the broadest sense a division or category of similar things. A class of ships all have similar designs and roles, a class of students may share an age, achievement level, or graduation date, and so on. In the context of role-playing games, there are two definitions of class that are most relevant: character class, which is a career or set of skills, and social class, which is a character's place in the social hierarchy.

Character Class[edit]

A character's class (e.g. ranger, paladin, rogue) encodes and/or influences her career (in fact, some role-playing games use career as the term for the class mechanic), skills, specializations, and role in the party. A character's class may provide bonuses to certain stats and grant access to certain skills (or make certain skills cheaper to purchase) as a character gains levels in that class. Some games permit multiclassing, where a character can pick up levels in different classes at the same time (leading to character classes like "Paladin 6/Wizard 1/Lawful stupid 10" and the like).

In Munchkin, you have no class (heh) until you play a class card.

Social Class[edit]

As most fantasy games (and some sci-fi games, like Warhammer 40,000) are set in a quasi-feudal time period, their societies tend to be fairly stratified. Feudalism and class systems from history could get quite complicated, but most game writers (and most players, for that matter) abstract things:

  • Royalty is usually at the top of the chain. There might be some layering if the kingdom is a vassal state of an empire.
  • Below them are the nobles. Often, there's too much land for a single royal family to control personally, so they parcel it out to families loyal to theirs, who might in turn divide their chunk into smaller pieces for lesser noble families to manage, and so on. Nobility is broken up into various stratified subclasses from those who rule provinces bigger than most kingdoms to podunk knights who are in charge of a square kilometer of marginal rocky farmland and a dozen dirt farmers.
    • Knights, the bottom level of the nobility are important, because in the early days of a social order like feudalism they provide the principle muscle behind the system. They were typically raised knowing how to fight and how to lead other men in a fight.
  • Some powerful organizations, like a state church or a society of wizards, may sit parallel to the nobility -- they aren't families and don't have inherited titles, but they have holdings of comparable size and some kind of royal recognition.
  • Artisans, guilds, and similar organizations occupy the next layer down. Their members are skilled and respected, but they're not born into noble families, so they don't get to have castles or armies. As roads improve, ship designs get better and cities grow these classes get more powerful. Most player characters are (or at least start out) in this layer.
    • Mercenaries and men-at-arms fall around this level too. A common peasant could easily improve their station a bit by being willing to pick up a weapon. While sellswords were generally frowned at by the pious and the industrious alike, there was never any shortage of customers looking to hire a fighting man.
    • Merchants generally exist in this area, though there is a lot of variation. At the top you have a few merchant princes with long range high value trade deals, are the patrons of local businesses and are wealthier than at least the lower strata of the nobility and have considerable pull even without formal title. On the bottom you have peddlers traveling from town to town with an old hand-cart trading odds and ends and selling them to the poor, earning just enough at the end of the day to avoid starvation. More likely they would be between the two extremes (if closer to the latter than the former). Merchants operate more independently than artisans but to get ahead and stay afloat, you need connections and reputation.
  • The largest group are peasants (or "commoners" for a more polite term) who grow the food that everyone eats. Not all of them are happy in this situation (cf: the French Revolution).
  • The lowest class is the underclass. Pretty small in the grand scheme of things these guys do the really shitty jobs such as being nightsoil men and scavengers who looked through garbage middens for anything they might be able to sell, use or eat. If you're in this class everyone looks down on you.
  • (Special mention should go here to the "classes" of slaves and serfs. They don't really merit a formal entry as such on this list; Any society that practices the institution will almost never consider the slave population to be "human," or whatever the predominant species is, much less worthy of classification as anything other than chattel.)

Usually, the only way to move up a layer is to marry someone from a higher layer (good luck to those peasants in love with princes and princesses), get elevated by members of that layer (you might get a knighthood, but your kids won't inherit it), or force your way in by revolution (in which case, watch your back for people looking to do the same to you).

If one has an interest in East Asian societies and wants to use that as a template, the social hierarchy is structure a bit different due to Confucianism. It's laid out roughly as such...

  • Scholars: Scholars are rich people (generally landowners) who have money to dedicate their lives to study of moral philosophy, history, arts and similar. This is a big deal because you get government jobs by passing exams about these things. Their wisdom and learning is to be valued above all. Fortunately for people who are not born into this class you to can become a scholar if you can pass the exams. Though you are going up against people who have been training for them from childhood and about 1 in 500 or so gets a passing grade. But there is paper evidence of it happening so it's a better chance then you might think of a peasant getting into the top of society. In Japan, Samurai took the place of scholars (more below).
  • Peasants: Peasants are technically ranked pretty high because they keep everybody fed and clothed. Without them, everyone would starve to death. The cynic would argue that this "high rank" is just a ploy to keep peasants happy and avoid rebellion.
  • Artisans: Artisans are seen as less critical than peasants (if you don't have shoemakers you have to make your own shoes or go barefoot where as if you don't have peasants you starve to death) but still valued for their skills and abilities in taking what the peasants produce in terms of ore, clay, wood and food and making nice and important things out of them.
  • Merchants: Merchants are at the bottom of this hierarchy. The peddlers are USEFUL, but they don't create anything. All they do is buy stuff from one person, move it, and sell it to someone else. In practice the merchants gain prominence and influence above their station by virtue of their wealth, much to the annoyance of the Scholar class and generally in spite of their best efforts to keep them down.

You may have noted the absence of any equivalent to the western knight in this system. That's significant. The Confucians had sort of a dim view of fighting men, so there was never really a martial caste in their system. The rank and file in Imperial China were regular folks who were either conscripted into the army or volunteered. Most Chinese generals of antiquity were lauded as scholars, but revering martial prowess was uncouth, at least on the Asian mainland where Confucianism held sway. The best fighters of Chinese antiquity, such as Lu Bu, were remembered as bloodthirty monsters who'd go full Qin Shi Huang if they could. Japan had no such pretentions; the Samurai were scholars, and they were fighters, and they saw the two as linked; Samurai functioned much more like knights did in the west, giving their allegiance to support their favored nobles and leading their local peasants in battle.

See Also[edit]

  • Prestige classes, which are character classes that provide extra specialization at later levels.
  • Combat roles, for a partial taxonomy of character classes in terms of combat role.
Dungeons & Dragons 3rd Edition classes
Player's Handbook BarbarianBardClericDruidFighterMonkPaladinRangerRogueSorcererWizard
Player's Handbook II BeguilerDragon ShamanDuskbladeKnight
Complete Adventurer ExemplarNinjaScoutSpellthief
Complete Arcane WarlockWarmageWu jen
Complete Divine Favored SoulShugenjaSpirit Shaman
Complete Psionic ArdentDivine MindEruditeLurk
Complete Warrior HexbladeSamuraiSwashbuckler
Dragon Compendium Battle DancerDeath MasterJesterMountebankSavantSha'irUrban Druid
Dragon Magazine Sha'ir
Dragon Magic Dragonfire Adept
Dungeonscape Factotum
Eberron Campaign Setting Artificer
Heroes of Horror ArchivistDread Necromancer
Magic of Incarnum IncarnateSoulbornTotemist
Miniatures Handbook Favored SoulHealerMarshalWarmage
Ghostwalk Eidolon (Eidoloncer)
Oriental Adventures SamuraiShamanShugenjaSoheiWu Jen
Psionics Handbook PsionPsychic WarriorSoulknifeWilder
Tome of Battle CrusaderSwordsageWarblade
Tome of Magic BinderShadowcasterTruenamer
War of the Lance Master
Wizards's Website Psychic Rogue
NPC Classes AdeptAristocratCommonerExpertMagewrightWarrior
Second Party MarinerMysticNobleProphet
Class-related things Epic LevelsFavored ClassGestalt characterMulticlassingPrestige ClassRacial Paragon ClassTier SystemVariant Class
Dungeons & Dragons 4th Edition Classes
Player's Handbook 1 ClericFighterPaladinRangerRogueWarlockWarlordWizard
Player's Handbook 2 AvengerBarbarianBardDruidInvokerShamanSorcererWarden
Player's Handbook 3 ArdentBattlemindMonkPsionRunepriestSeeker
Heroes of X Blackguard* • Binder* • Cavalier* • Elementalist* • Hexblade* • Hunter* • Mage* • Knight* • Protector* • Scout* • Sentinel* • Skald* • Slayer* • Sha'ir* • Thief* • Vampire* • Warpriest* • Witch*
Settings Book ArtificerBladesinger* • Swordmage
Dragon Magazine Assassin
Others Paragon PathEpic Destiny
*·: Non-AEDU variant classes
Dungeons & Dragons 5th Edition Classes
Player's Handbook BarbarianBardClericDruidFighterMonk
PaladinRangerRogueSorcererWarlockWizard
Tasha's Cauldron of Everything ArtificerExpertSpellcasterWarrior
Van Richten's Guide to Ravenloft ApprenticeDiscipleSneakSquire
Unearthed Arcana Mystic
The Classes of Pathfinder 1st Edition
Core Classes: Barbarian - Bard - Cleric - Druid - Fighter - Monk
Paladin - Ranger - Rogue - Sorcerer - Wizard
Advanced
Player's Guide:
Alchemist - Antipaladin - Cavalier
Inquisitor - Oracle - Summoner - Witch
Advanced
Class Guide:
Arcanist - Bloodrager - Brawler - Hunter - Investigator
Shaman - Skald - Slayer - Swashbuckler - Warpriest
Occult
Adventures:
Kineticist - Medium - Mesmerist
Occultist - Psychic - Spiritualist
Ultimate X: Gunslinger - Magus - Ninja - Samurai - Shifter - Vigilante