Once again I am delighted that I get to write about Dungeons and Dragons and, in turn, my favorite class: The Barbarian. I have written on many occasions about the glory of the Barbarian and why I consider him so much more awesome than the fighter, but it dawned on me this morning that the awesomeness of the Barbarian can only be realized IF we choose to make USE of his awesomeness. And that statement may SEEM obvious, but I’ve run into enough people that are unable to appreciate this reality that it seems necessary for me to write on this point. The primary boon of the Barbarian is his ability to enter into a berserker style rage, wherein, upon entering this state, he gains a bonus to strength and constitution (his ability to withstand damage), an extra attack per round, and an immunity to a variety of magical effects aimed at targeting his mind. He gains extra hit points and can fight BEYOND the point where most folks would be incapacitated: he is simply fueled by pure rage and adrenaline. But, of course, nothing comes for free: AFTER the rage, the Barbarian enters a state of fatigue: heavily exhausted by the effort of being so enraged, they suffer a PENALTY to their strength and constitution and are, quite simply, knackered. Knowing this though, the decision to USE the Barbarian’s rage in combat is still an obvious decision, for if one were to NOT do so, they no longer HAVE a Barbarian: they simply have a mediocre fighter.
The world's strongest man acting as the world's okayest fighter
Barbarians
and fighters both occupy the “warrior” sphere of DnD: guys who are good at
swinging swords and taking damage, not so good at casting spells or picking
locks. Where the two differ is that the
fighter knows a lot of cool little tricks when it comes to fighting (parrying,
kicking sand into an opponent’s eye, hitting 2 enemies with one blow, etc),
while the Barbarian is a rage-monster that smashes stuff. The Barbarian is The Hulk, the Fighter is
Black Panther (yeah yeah, he’d be a monk: just stick with me here). Knowing that, we have to appreciate the
specific unique quality the Barbarian brings to the table to justify his
existence within the game. If the
Barbarian did NOT rage, he would simply NOT be a Barbarian: he would be merely
a fighter with no tricks! And a fighter
with no tricks is not useful at all: they are mediocre at best. So why would one CHOOSE to be a mediocre
fighter?
Out of fear
of the consequences inherent in using the rage: the exhaustion. Those players that are too concerned about
EVER being in a less than ideal state will refuse to rage for they fear the
after-effects of being fatigued and weakened.
They will, under no circumstances, ever allow themselves this
opportunity of vulnerability in the game, because it means a moment of
weakness…but, in turn, it ALSO means that they will NEVER experience a moment
of greatness. They’ll never actually get to experience the fun inherent in
PLAYING the barbarian class, because they’re too concerned about negatives to
be able to appreciate positives.
Instead, these players resign themselves to a very lukewarm experience:
they play a mediocre fighter in the form of a rageless barbarian.
For when bland rice cakes aren't bland enough
Where are
you, you rageless barbarians? You are
the ones that refuse to engage in a decades, if not CENTURIES long tradition of
bulking and cutting. And yes, I dislike
those terms because they tend to suggest that eating dictates training vs the
other way around, but it gives us at least a common understanding for dialogue
here. You rageless barbarians REFUSE to
put on any fat in the pursuit of gaining muscle, and you refuse to experience
any hunger in the pursuit of getting lean, and, in turn, engage in the rageless
barbarism of “maingaining”, or “leanbulking”, or “gaintaining”, or “long slow
bulks” or whatever buzzphrase is trending on social media these days, because
it immediately appeals TO you rageless barbarians that want to believe you have
secretly found the way to min/max physical transformation. Because you REFUSE to experience any
negatives in your pursuit of transformation, you will also not experience any
POSITIVES. Think of all of those that
have achieved physical greatness before you: they ALL engaged in these
rages. They all had dedicated periods of
gaining, of “softening up”, of bulking, of dedicating themselves 100% to the
pursuit of gaining mass at the expense of other qualities, AND, when the time
came, they went full tilt in the other direction, shedding the fluff and
revealing the greatness achieved. From
Bruce Randall to J M Blakely to Ronnie Coleman to Arnold to Dave Drapper to
John McCallum: the history and heritage is all there. What do we call those that spend years eating
the same, weighing the same, and looking the same? They are wheel spinners: they are merely a
mediocre fighter, NOT a barbarian.
Reframe it right there: you aren’t bulking and cutting: you’re raging
and fatiguing!
We see you
rageless barbarians in the training arena!
Those of you that REFUSE to ever see your max numbers take a slight dip
in the pursuit of achieving other physical goals. Those of you that REFUSE to ever engage in a
short conditioning/GPP block, where your lifts suffer in the short term but
your ability to train harder for longer improves. Those of you that REFUSE to cycle out your favorite
pet lifts to try to bring up weak points.
Those of you that REFUSE to accept that training is phasic: that there
is a time for hypertrophy, max strength, and conditioning/GPP. Those of you that give a program 2 weeks to
“work” before jumping back to what wasn’t working in the first place! You refuse to use your rage ability for fear
of the short term consequences, but in doing so you never get to actually
achieve the very thing you were designed to do!
You’re the only one at the table NOT having any fun, because you aren’t
actually playing your character: you’re playing a weaker version of someone
ELSE’s character.
Everyone at the table WISHES you'd just come back and play right
Learn the
lessons from the Barbarian’s cycle of rage: the fatigue and exhaustion is not a
penalty but a NECESSITY. It’s exhausting
for us to be BEYOND our best, and that’s exactly what a barbarian is when he
rages. He taps into that hidden, dark,
lurking potential, in the “in case of emergency, break glass” portion of his
being and unleashes his full glory upon the battlefield. And after he’s done with that, he takes a
breather and gets himself right before he does it again. That’s all this is. When we are gaining, we are training and
eating SO hard so that we can grow into something BEYOND ourselves…and that IS
exhausting. So we take a breather,
recompose ourselves, and resume. It’s
WHY achieving greatness is a phasic pursuit, rather than a linear one. It’s why Dan John has “park bench-bus
bench”. It’s not a penalty: its balance! The gamemasters HAD to come up with some way
to make a barbarian “fair” compared to the others, and they did so by giving
him a cooldown. Life has done the same
to you: it would be unfair for you to simply achieve awesomeness in a straight
line. Chase after it, cool down a bit,
and get after it again. Because a
rageless barbarian is simply a mediocre fighter, but a barbarian that rages is
ALWAYS a better choice than the fighter.
But, if
nothing else, I think we can all agree that wizards are nerds.
For me, this is one of the best articles you've written! Really resonated with it. I have the ability to push beyond -- time to make use of it!
ReplyDeleteThe analogy hit a bit harder because I recently joined my first DnD campaign as a Paladin. But damn this is inspiring me to go Barbarian on the next one! Haha.
That means a ton dude! Thanks for writing it. It was a blast to write this.
DeleteAnd the Barbarian is always the right choice, haha. Remember: no one likes a Paladin
https://mythicalstrength.blogspot.com/2018/08/no-one-likes-palading-roll-new-character.html
You know it's funny, whenever I tell people my first character is a Paladin, their first reaction is to groan and cringe, haha. Maybe you guys are all onto something...
DeleteI hadn't realised you had other DnD articles, time to dive in!
Hell yeah brother! I've got SO much DnD stuff on the blog, haha.
DeleteAfter months of research, writing and defending my thesis, I finally can start to catch up with your writings. That's a banger right here :) I also have more time to do my training and currently I am doing a mix of stuff I haven't done in forever (that I like) and stuff that need to do (that I don't like). My strength has dropped anyhow (even though I managed to hold on to it rather well with minimum weekly effort).
ReplyDeleteI am building on a lot of potential, as I have been lifting heavier the last couple of years, focusing on strength and putting hypertrophy on the backburner. Now I use this strength to build what I can and work on my cardio.
That barbarian doesn't get build by accident.
Great to have you back, and so exciting to hear about all you've been up to! I REALLY like that final line you put there: I may in fact steal that idea for a future post.
Delete