Rainbow Servant - 1d4chan

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 3

Rainbow Servant

From 1d4chan

The Rainbow Servant is a prestige class from Dungeons and Dragons Third edition, appearing in the Complete
Divine splatbook. It is notable mostly for being abused with Warmage, Beguiler, and Dread Necromancer;
otherwise, it's shit.

The Fluff
Couatls, in D&D, are magical, rainbow-colored, flying, lawful good snake-things that spend most of their time
hiding in temples in a jungle somewhere, keeping tabs on what the forces of evil are up to but doing very little
to stop it. The job of actually stopping the forces of evil gets delegated to their servants: arcane casters who
decide they want to learn a little bit of divine magic too, which the couatls are more than happy to teach them.
Why do the couatls only accept arcane casters if they only teach divine magic? Why don't they also enhance
dedicated divine casters like Clerics and Favored Souls? Fuck you, that's why.

The Crunch
The basic idea behind Rainbow Servant, mechanically, is that it continues the spells known, spells per day, and
caster level of the underlying arcane caster class, while periodically adding cleric domains and some random
garbage like rainbow-colored wings. At the tenth and final level, it opens up the entire Cleric spell list for the
character to learn and cast. In most cases, it does not retroactively teach these spells; the character will need to
resume taking levels in wizard or whatever in order to actually learn Cleric spells.

Specifically...

Prerequisites

▪ Alignment: Any nonevil and nonchaotic.


▪ Skill: Knowledge (arcana) 4 ranks.
▪ Spells: Able to cast 3rd-level arcane spells.
▪ Special: Must find the hidden jungle temples of the couatls.

Hit die: d4

Skill Points at Each Level: 2 + Int modifier.

BAB: 1/2 of character level, same as wizard and other dedicated casters

Saving throws: Fort and Reflex are poor, but Will is good.

Features:

▪ At level 1, the character gains the Good cleric domain and the ability to use Detect evil at-will.
▪ At level 4, the character gains the Air cleric domain and sprouts gay rainbow wings that allow a limited
form of flight.
▪ At level 7, the character gains the Law cleric domain and the ability to use Detect chaos at-will.
▪ At level 10, the character gains access to the entire motherfucking cleric spell list and the ability to use
Detect thoughts at-will.
▪ At all other levels, you can add +1 to the level of your underlying arcane caster class for the purpose of
determining your spells per day, spells known (if applicable), and caster level.

Editorial
All right, let's get this out of the way: this class, as it is intended to work, is unmitigated shit. If you build it on
top of a Bard, Sorcerer, or Wizard, then the junk you get from levels 1-9 is nowhere near good enough to make
up for the delay in your spell progression. Furthermore, while the Cleric Domains are instantly added to your
character's abilities, the Cleric spell list isn't; what you're really gaining is access to the Cleric spell list,
meaning that in order to actually learn those spells, you usually need to go back and take more levels in your
underlying arcane caster class. Since you need a minimum of 5 levels of Wizard, 6 of Sorcerer, or 7 of Bard in
order to even qualify for this class in the first place, you'll be able to learn fuck-all from the Cleric list before
hitting level 20 and presumably the end of your campaign. Seriously, when played as intended, the most
noteworthy thing about this class is that it lets you get gay rainbow wings at a character level of 9, which is a lot
better than the 17 levels that Favored Soul would make you slog through but still not the absolute fastest way to
get wings.

HOWEVER, there is an itty bitty tiny little loophole that David Noonan did not consider when writing this
class. You see, there are some spontaneous arcane casters (Warmage, Beguiler, and Dread Necromancer) who
don't bother with "learning" their spells. Instead, they just automatically know every spell on their class spell
list. When you stack ten levels of Rainbow Servant on top of one of those classes, "list" becomes "lists", and - at
least according to some players - the entire goddamn Cleric spell list gets dumped straight into that character's
brain. This allows them to spontaneously cast any Cleric spell they want, at any time, like a Favored Soul
hopped up on methamphetamine and Viagra. This godlike increase in flexibility comes at the cost of delayed
access to your highest-level spells, however, so some people argue that it's better to just take 20 straight levels
of a dedicated caster class. Additionally, some DMs might rule that stacking Rainbow Servant on top of one of
these classes works the same way as stacking it on any other caster class: you need to keep taking levels in your
original caster class to get Cleric spells, and when you do, you're only learning the high-level ones.

There is some skub about whether the class offers six or ten levels of casting progression. The English text says
every level, but the chart only has progression at levels 2, 3, 5, 6, 8, and 9. The game's general rules state that
whenever tables contradict class description, "text trumps tables". However, the "Sage Advice" column, when
asked specifically about the Rainbow Servant, said that in this particular case, the table was correct and the class
description was wrong. Additionally, every non-English printing changed the text to match the table.

Of the three classes that the Rainbow Servant works best with, the Dread Necromancer and the Beguiler lean
most heavily on their class features to get better at their main shtick (minion master and magic rogue
respectively). Investing in Rainbow Servant delays your access to these features by ten levels. The Warmage
relies primarily on spell progression to get better, so a Warmage that invests in Rainbow Servant won't be
missing out on much except a few bonus feats. On the other hand, the Warmage, which can't spend much on
dexterity because it's already MADding Charisma and Intelligence for spellcasting, does rely on armor to not
die, and the Rainbow Servant's level 4 wings can't be deployed if the character is wearing any armor.

Since the prerequisites include the ability to cast arcane spells, rather than just having an arcane caster level,
Warlocks and Dragonfire Adepts do not qualify for this prestige class. It would not do them much good if they
did.
Retrieved from "https://1d4chan.org/index.php?title=Rainbow_Servant&oldid=790272"

You might also like