[RPG] Is the Homebrew Necrolyte Race Balanced

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I want to know whether this is balanced compared to the other race options. If not, what can be changed?

Necrolyte

A race of Humans transformed into semi-undead beings long ago by their own profane rituals. They combine Spells with Armor to great effect.

Ability Score Increase: Your Constitution increases by 2, and another stat of your choice increases by 1.

Age: Necrolytes reach maturity as 20, but can live as long as 1000 years of age.

Alignment: Necrolyte society holds pragmatism over law or chaos, with no sympathy or mercy shown towards Non-Necrolytes. As such, they are typically Neutral Evil.

Size: Necrolytes are slightly shorter than humans in height, and weigh a bit less than them as well. Your size is medium.

Speed: Your speed is 30ft.

Darkvision: You can see in dim light within 60 feet of you as if it were bright light, and in darkness as if it were dim light. You can’t discern color in darkness, only shades of gray.

Necrolyte Magic: You know the Inflict Wounds spell, and can cast it once per short or long rest. When you reach 3rd level you learn the Blindness/Deafness spell, and can cast it once per short or long rest. When you reach 5th level, you learn the Animate Dead Spell, and can cast it once per short or long rest without material components. You cast these spells at the same spell level as your highest level spell slot or at their lowest level if you lack slots of the spell’s level. Constitution is your spellcasting modifier for these spells.

Necrolyte Training: You gain Proficiencies in Light and Medium Armors.

Necrotic Skills: You gain Proficiency in two of the following skills: Arcana, Religion, Perception and Deception.

Fetid Attack: Your unarmed attacks are wretched. You deal 1d4 Bludgeoning Damage with your unarmed attacks, and critical hits with them inflict the Poisoned Status for a minute.

Radiant Weakness: You have Disadvantage on all saving throws against Radiant Damage, and Attacks that Deal Radiant Damage have Advantage when aimed at you.

Languages: You can speak Common, Abyssal and Deep Speech.

Best Answer

Verdict:

This race is too strong, and includes one ability that, even on its own, is too much to grant to a race.

Explanation:

I'm making a breakdown using this guide for balancing new 5e races. It suggests that on average, a race is about 6 points worth of options. Most of the suggested abilities for your race are listed there, and counting them up, you end up with around 9 points. That means they're on the "very strong side" of races (beating out the Mountain Dwarf, which is currently the most powerful race), and could do with some fewer options. Especially considering I am not counting extra points for flexibility with the skills and +1 ability point.

However, that's ignoring one thing in your race which is incredibly powerful, way beyond anything another race gets (and pretty much forces the race down a single path) and that's the ability to cast the innate spells at your highest spell slot level.

This means that your race is able to cast 3 extra spells at their highest level spell slot every short rest, which is incredibly powerful. No other race has a leveled spell that's available every short rest. No class besides the Warlock even has that, and the Warlock only reaches 3 spell slots per short rest when they hit level 11.

Additionally, as they grow in level, they will ultimately be able to cast 4 9th spells per day, while any other character in the game only gets 1. (And the same applies at lower levels). Since all 3 spells you picked for them to get benefit from being cast at higher level, this is incredibly powerful; way beyond anything what other races grant. It also pretty much forces you down a spell-casting path, as you'll be missing out arguably the most powerful racial trait in the game.

Also, I'm not counting any point deduction for the vulnerability to Radiant damage. The number of creatures in the book that deal Radiant damage is next to none, so that trait isn't to come up very often.

Full breakdown of points

  • Ability scores: 3 points (not increasing it for flexibility)
  • Darkvision: 0.5 points
  • Necrolyte magic: 1.5 points (ignoring the part about the spell slots scaling)
  • Necrolyte training: 1 point
  • Necrotic skills: 1 point (ignoring the flexibility, again)
  • Fetid Attack: 1 point
  • Radiant Weakness: I'm ignoring this because it comes up almost never and races usually don't have Weaknesses
  • Languages: 1 point for 2 extra languages
  • Everything else: 0 points; those are baseline

Suggestions

Definitely drop the scaling spell slots on the spell-casting. I don't think you'll be able to balance that. You should cut down on the superfluous features a bit; I'd suggest dropping the bonus skills, the unarmed attack and maybe one of the languages and/or the Darkvision. Dropping all of those would bring you to 6 points, which is balanced with other races.

Maybe even replace the two languages with "one language of choice". That still gives them a bit of that human flexibility (along with the +1 ability) that comes being based on them, while not making them too strong compared to other races.

I'd also drop the Radiant vulnerability. Not even most genuine Undead have that; it's unlikely to come up, and the one time during a campaign it comes up, it might well end up killing your character (or just being forgotten because it's never come up before.)

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