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Nili! What a wonderful thing to see you at the lodge for once and not called out to venture on a mission together. It’s a great thing to be able to relax in the safety of Absalom for once—but what our fellow pathfinders are saying bothers me as well. Our pathfinder society sends us on hard missions, expecting us to do the impossible and break through despite the difficulty involved. If not for their newest recruitment regime I may very well be still making small coins by pointing out flaws in the work of others. I dare say I actually enjoy the thrill of working the dangerous assessments I am now participating in.
Others here are arguing those agents not trained specifically for one task are inadequate to accomplish it, but I beg to differ. My trainer in the lodge could have easily let me focus on honing my spirit to raise my spellcasting power, but instead he let me take on multiple roles but allowing me to also train as an archer. I may not be the best of both worlds, but I hope it’s wrong for me to question that as a Bard and not a Fighter or Ranger or trying to use a bow I have been less useful to my companions.
Though it bias because we have been at the same tables, i can't think back to a time where the scenario has done anything but reasonably challenge everyone. Either it was a flurry of bad luck that put you in that situation or a GM who decided to combine encounters ignorant of the PCs power level.
