Thread:LordRimus/@comment-27036174-20151103001934/@comment-27036174-20151115191608

Alright, finally getting back to you :). My race would be Doppelganger, with a racial level of 15. One slot for every major class in D&D, an alternate male and female form, with the last slot unfilled, in case I discover an extremely powerful person to mimic. I'd model each slot after the most powerful person in that class that I know. I wouldn't have any classes in Greater Doppelganger because the point of being a doppelganger seems more about versatility than disguise, so as long as I can use all skills and abilities, it won't matter to me if they know who I am. 15 levels in Illusionist, 10 in whatever the "Greater Illusionist" class is, and 5 in the highest level of the Illusionist class tree. I'd use the abilities from those classes for esponiage. I'd also have 15 levels in Rogue, 10 levels in Ninja, and 5 in the "Master Ninja class" or its equivalent. I'd then have 10 levels in a sort of "High Scientist" class, which I wouldn't need the prerequisite class for because I've passed its level check of 70. And with that, I'd of course have 5 levels in the "Master Scientist" class. These classes would be used to find out more about game/New World mechanics, for the purpose of finding an ultimate build with which to fill my last Doppelganger class. For my last 10 levels, I'd have 5 levels in Bard, and 5 in Cook, because it's always good to have a means to entertain yourself :). In the New World, I'd be experimenting to find a way to break the level cap (primarily with wild magic) so I could gain the class Gunner, in order to shock the residents of the New World and get them to believe me about modern technology. So in summary:

Doppelganger: 15, Illusionist: 15, "Greater Illusionist": 10, "Master Illusionist": 5, Rogue: 15, Ninja: 10, "Master Ninja": 5, "High Scientist": 10, "Master Scientist": 5, Bard: 5, Cook: 5. And hopefully in the future, Gunner: 1, so I don't shoot myself in the foot while trying to demonstrate using modern weaponry. Classes in quotations are ones not confirmed to exist.