Urban Druid

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An Urban Druid is a character class that more or less to the Druid what the Blackguard is to the Paladin. Only not quite. It's complicated.

See, druids are typically depicted as opposed to civilization, which on a cursory glance makes sense - you gotta wreck a lot of woodlands and shit to put up a town, and then comes domesticated livestock, agriculture, irrigation... it reshapes the world pretty heavily. And yet, at its core, a lot of the basic concepts of civilization are things that the natural world has been doing for millions of years! Gathering into communities? Same thing as any social animal does - hyenas actually form literal clans that can consist of up to 80-100 hyenas, all sharing an overlapping territory. Using tools? Birds smash stuff with rocks or skewer prey on thorns to help them rip off meat, they are even species that sow and weave to put there nests together. Purposefully altering the environment to your advantage? Spiders spin webs, beavers build dams, rabbits dig burrows, and there's even bats and spiders that fold leaves to make hidey-holes for themselves. And that's not even getting into the shit that eusocial insects do...

So, the idea of a druid who decides that civilization is a part of nature too and embraces it? Not really that crazy. It's never been very mainstream, but it has caught on.

There are technically two possible interpretations of an Urban Druid. The first is basically a druid (or a shaman), but in an urban environment; somebody who looks after the health of the urban ecosystem, communing with the spirits of streets, buildings and monuments whilst tending to the animals of the city - feral cats and dogs, pigeons, crows, roaches, spiders and rats. The second is somebody who applies a druid-like mentality to the "human animals" around them, manipulating society for its own benefit. The former is the most popular interpretation, perhaps because it's more intuitive to grasp.

In D&D[edit | edit source]

An Urban Druid appeared as a Variant Class in an issue of Dragon Magazine for Dungeons & Dragons 3rd Edition. It was later promoted to a Base Class in Dragon Compendium.

A Pathfinder version appears Advanced Player's Guide. Sadly it's one of many otherwise fine Druid archetypes that nerfs Wildshape for no real reason and nothing in return.

The splatbook "Realms Under Shadow" for World of Farland contains the Circle of Civilization, an urban druid subclass for Dungeons & Dragons 5th Edition.

Dungeons & Dragons 3rd Edition Variant Classes
Adept Urban Adept
Artificer Psionic Artificer
Barbarian HorselordImplacableTotem BarbarianVariant Barbarian
Bard Bardic SageDivine BardHarbingerSavage BardVariant Bard
Cleric Ancestral SpeakerArcane DiscipleAspirantBenevolentCloistered ClericCrusaderEvangelistLost OneRage ClericSacred EnforcerVariant Cleric
Druid Druidic AvengerMetal MasterSidhe ScholarStorm DruidTotem DruidUrban DruidVariant DruidWild ReaperWind WalkerWinter Warden
Fighter BodyguardCommanderCorsairExoticistFencerHorsemanJanissaryKensaiKnightPugilistShield BearerSurvivalistTargetteerThaneThugVariant Fighter
Monk Buddhist MonkChaos MonkClockwork DiscipleFranciscan FriarHoly MonkHunter MonkIlluminated MonkKnight HospitallerMartial MonkRaging MonkShinto MonkSidewinder MonkSteadfast MonkVariant MonkVigilant MonkWild Monk
Ninja Variant Ninja
Paladin AnarchAnti-PaladinAvengerCorrupterDespotEnforcerIncarnatePaladin of FreedomPaladin of LightPaladin of SlaughterPaladin of TyrannySentinelSolstice KnightVariant PaladinWyrmslayer
Psion Erudite
Ranger Moon-Warded RangerMystic RangerPlanar RangerUrban RangerVariant RangerWild Defender
Rogue Lunar RogueWilderness RogueVariant Rogue
Sorcerer Battle SorcererVariant Sorcerer
Wizard AbjurerAnagakokCombat WizardConjurerDeathwalkerDivinerDomain WizardEnchanterEvokerFilidhFleshcrafterIllusionistNecromancerSpecialist WizardSoul ReaperTransmuterVariant Wizard