One if my players wants to make a character that’s all about beig a master chef. I was wondering if anyone has suggestions on how to do that. He found a custom cook class online, but it’s very convoluted and not beginner (which we all are) friendly. Now we’re thinking how we could just take a normal magical class and (quite literally) flavor its abilities (having verbal components food-related maybe replace certain material components with, like, truffles and caviar or whatever).
I’d also be open to give him one or two fitting special abilities that could be useful under certain conditions, as long as it’s still balanced, or use feets or something. Does anybody have ideas and suggestions?
Do not let players use some homebrew they find online. It’s almost always overpowered garbage.
I’d recommend that you talk to the player about what exactly is the fantasy they are looking for.
The D&D classes are primarily packages of mechanics for what a character does inside of combat. One does not cook during combat. Realistically, being a cook is more about how you roleplay outside of combat. They can pick whatever class they want, as long as they support the cook fantasy with their other choices.
You could maybe work with the player to come up with a custom background and have them use the “Chef” feat from Tasha’s Cauldron of Everything as the background bonus, which is only mechanical support you will find for being a cook in 5e.
If your player wants to be Senshi from Delicious in Dungeon, they are going to have a bad time. There are simply no mechanics to support that much cooking. Nutrition isn’t modelled in D&D, there isn’t a monster harvesting system, every table I’ve ever played at forgets to even mark off rations during rests. You could homebrew a whole new mechanic for food, but this would be a big effort and may be hard to balance in a way that’s fun for everyone at the table.
Don’t be afraid to tell the player “no” if you don’t think D&D is the right game to achieve the fantasy they want. It’s better to rip that Band-Aid off quickly rather than have the game system do it over several sessions.
This is good advice. We had a Firbolg bard who loved to cook. Characters are more than combat.
There’s also cook’s utensil rules in XGE.
Assuming this is 5e you have a few different options:
- Background: Guild Artisan (PHB), taking the proficiency in cook’s utensils and using the extra rules such as Prepare Meals from XGE
- Feat: Chef (TCE), a different way to get the cook’s utensils proficiency and it comes with some nice healing bonuses, make your race variant human (PHB) or custom lineage (TCE) to get this at level 1
- Class: Artificer (Alchemist) (TCE) - the artificer is all about re-flavouring spells as different things, potions can easily become magically-prepared food and drink
All simple options from “core” books, eat your fill!
An artillerist can just be a chef making food golems.
Chef feat!! For sure.
I’d say to treat it like a profession and not a class. Like you would a Blacksmith or Barmaid.
Maybe there are some custom profession stuff available somewhere you can build off, but yeah, most of it would be flavor (pun intended).
Agreed.
If you want to do a custom class, take the stats of something that already exists and just flavor it as something new with a new name. Maybe a bard but their performances are cooking meals for people or something.
Maybe come up with a few homebrew spells for them that are cooking related (or something functionally identical to a spell, even if it isnt). Pick an existing spell that’s close to what you want and flavor it as food related and give it a new name.
Ohhh, I like food bard. They make snacks for bardic inspiration.
And every spell works like goodberry (the food is infused with the magic and anyone can consume it to complete the spell).
And all material components are food ingredients.all somatic components are cooking steps, and all verbal components are Gordon Ramsay insults.
I’ll look into that, thank you!
Embrace the flavor. And by flavor, I mean change the theme of your character without changing the mechanics.
Is that a dagger or an incredibly sharp sushi knife? Is that a longsword or a butcher’s cleaver?
I personally have made this character as an artificer but you could do it as a rogue. A highly skilled chef who knows exactly how to cut (sneak attack). As an adventurer, you seek out new flavors and styles of cooking and aren’t affraid to try some dragon steaks, with harpy eggs, with a side of black ooze gelato.
Also there is a single feat that really helps push it.
Oh, yes, I was wondering if there was a feat, but I don’t have the book at hand rn. thx
Re flavoring spells seems like the easy way to go about this:
Acid arrow: marinate & tenderize!
Any fire spell: flambe!
Viscous mockery: IT’S RAW!
Mage hand: sous chef.Or, think about it differently, like Sanji from one piece, where cooking is his thing, but he’s also a solid fighter. (That will not use knives or his hands to fight, those are for cooking)
As said by others, rather reskin existing mechanics, than use homebrew
The most suited for something akin to coocking in combat would probably be a cleric where you can use existing buff spells or effects and just change how they do it rather than what they do
Cure wounds is just an “emergency sandwich”
Bane is making “thousand year egg” so very smelly, that it distracts the enemy
I would recommend also to use new names for these abilities so that they have it easier to stay in character and ask them how they think a specific effect that their class has can be produced with food
I would also say for the purpose of a fight that most dishes are pre prepared (I.e. representing the spell slots they have) and are than just used in combat
Mhm 5e and other derivates have a Cook Background. So why not use it?
Sure it’s more leaning into the roleplaying aspect but would you really think it’s believable that someone is attacking or defending someone with perfectly fried chicken?
A martial arts cook is a force to be recon with as many Action Movies featuring Steven Segal have shown us.
Ah the culinary artificer. It all started with banging rocks and sticks together. That’s how I discovered cinnamon and my life changed.
I’d suggest this http://dnd5e.wikidot.com/artificer:alchemist
And just give them double proficiency or advantage on anything to do with food.
I’d like to stick with the PBH, since I don’t have the extensions’ books. I was think, maybe we could use the Bard. Bardic Inspiration, but with food sounds like fun. And Gordon Ramsay quotes for Vicious Mockery.
The double proficiency thing definitely sounds like a good idea, thx!
If you go Bard, instead of handing out a Bardic Inspiration die, it should be Bardic Inspiration pie.
Come up with a list of reasonable buffs (e.g., +1 ac until next rest) in exchange for spending time cooking during a long rest doing cooking instead of keeping watch.
Good news, that sort of thing is basically already a feature of cook’s utensils:
Prepare Meals. As part of a short rest, you can prepare a tasty meal that helps your companions regain their strength. You and up to five creatures of your choice regain 1 extra hit point per Hit Die spent during a short rest, provided you have access to your cook’s utensils and sufficient food.
I would drop any reflavouring in favour of making it fun to be a cook outside of combat.
What does his character want to achieve? And what are his ideals? Then try to give him objectives to work towards.
For example: his goal might be to find a fabled ingredient. You can then drop hints on where to find it. Or he might want to be the most renowned chef in the world, after which you insert a cooking competition that requires special ingredients (that just so happens to be found in the same dungeon the party was supposed to head to anyway).
As for examples on ideals: Feed anyone that is hungry (without harming them via the food). Try to cook/eat anything (causing them to want to hunt/gsther stuff. Never use your hands to fight, to keep them clean for cooking (might need some reflavouring of abilities).
These examples make, that his cooking gives his character a reason to do things, rather then just be the thing he does.
Neither of you will remember how many dice were used to slay that monster. But the memory of how his character sliced up the monster for ingredients, only for some treasure or quest item to pop out of the belly, will certainly remain.