Originally posted by Machiavelli
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For starters, a search yielded something to the contrary
Regardless, both why and how one would enforce this confuse me.
For such a rule to exist, you would have to have some definition of "powerbuild." It would probably be defined as making your character as strong as you can during character creation. Which would be something I make sure to do with my characters. It wouldn't be any fun if Jack had a pansy swing behind his sword arm. The problem is that "powerbuilding" is often also defined as losing RP and the like.
If you ban making the most effective build possible, on the grounds that it's powerbuilding, which is also defined as munchkining, roll-playing, etc. you have rule based of what's called an Equivocation. Which is one of those logical nonos.
This is effectively what's known as the Stormwind Fallacy on the WizO's forums.
Lastly, if you note what the discussion in which the quote was made, you might notice the result is a monk who can cast spells, but not effectively, although enough to have some level on influence. This sounds about exactly how a monk who dabbles in the arcane should be.
Sorry if that was awful ranty, but I felt it necessary to say as it's a commonly occurring logical fallacy in role-playing communities.
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