As the Kickstarter closes on the first week, I've been working on the play test for Path of Iron. Recently I've been getting the saboteur finished up, and there's been some big changes to the class since it was announced a few weeks ago.
If you read the initial post, you know that the saboteur had both trap creation and spell casting of level 1-4 spells. When I posted that, the feedback was mostly positive, but there were some that voiced a disdain for having normal spellcasting on top of traps. After working on the class more, I started agreeing with the sentiment, but didn't want to just outright get rid of spells. Without that, the saboteur had only 40 or so trap types (at the time), which meant removing spells was a significant blow to the class's overall power. Traps used to add to spellcasting, but without it there wasn't enough variety in tools available to the saboteur. So a solution was needed.
Now, the saboteur's spells are the traps.
Rather than having a separate mechanic for traps while also having levels 1-4 spellcasting, the saboteur's traps now function as spells of level 1-6. Instead of placing a generic "1d6/2 levels bludgeoning damage" trap, you can now place a burning hands trap, confusion trap, chain lightning trap and more. Think of it similar to an alchemist's extracts: where the alchemist only has self-use spells to drink as an extract, the saboteur only has area-based and offensive spells to create as traps.
Of course, this does leave the issue that low-level blasting spells become less useful in comparison to high-level blasting spells; most casters start using their lower-level slots for utility-based effects as they grow in skill. To aid this, the saboteur has a new ability called Combined Arms where she can give up multiple lower-level trap slots to create a stronger trap. For example, she can give up four levels worth of trap slots to create a 3rd level trap; this can be four 1st level trap slots, two 2nd level trap slots, and so on. This helps keep her lower-level slots still useful into the higher levels, if indirectly.
Also, to make up for the loss of 1-4 utility spells, the saboteur's tricks have been expanded to cover some of the key abilities lost. In her original design she received eight total tricks; now she gets eleven, and they cover more magical talent than they originally did.
I'll continue posting updates as the Kickstarter progresses; if all goes well, the play test should be out ahead of schedule, which should be fun for all of us! In the mean time, here's a couple of the tricks the saboteur will have access to. Stay tuned!