12 hours ago, HappyDaze said:You don't need to be formally trained by a Jedi or even possess access to genuine Jedi materials to emulate the path of a Jedi. Career names are just fluff, and the Jedi career and specializations could just as easily represent a Sith or a self-trained savant.
13 hours ago, Daeglan said:Or trained by an instructor from the temple. Case in point Yoda training Luke.
Yes and no, IMO. Part of the design choice of the system, until the era books arrived, was that it was to build the type of character you'd find in the Rebellion Era so it covers so it covers how a new Jedi would learn without any, or very limited and long ago, direct Jedi Temple experience. We cannot underestimate the value of having all the resources of the Jedi Temple on a PC's development. This means that PCs in this era are necessarily going to develop differently because they don't have access to the many different masters, classes and data available at the temple, if they even have access to a master at all. The system works pretty well by forcing the PC learn from several talent trees to cobble together their mostly un-directed development. The universal Jedi Master tree condenses some of this to represent more standardized training that's just not available any more. Keep in mind that even if the PC has access to a Jedi Master for training that Jedi is going to have their own strengths and weaknesses and can't send their student to another master to fill their gaps in skill or knowledge.
Anyway I think if you are going to play in a pre-Rebellion Era when the Jedi Temple was still functioning then it makes sense to use the specific trees and specializations in those era books but if you aren't you probably shouldn't. At least that's how I see it.
PS. People generally don't play 60 year old Jedi masters but I'd agree if a Player was playing an older Obi wan then the universal tree would be appropriate.