jmartkdr2
Hero
The inverse of this is: because they have such a great feel for it, study doesn't add much. Some people just "naturally" have a great ear for pitch, rhythm and harmony, and can play the heck out of a guitar, but after a couple years of trying just gave up on trying to read sheet music. They just can't make the connection. Study is wasting time that could be used for practice.Yes, but there is a snag here. I've got a bit of a talent for writing and I'm pretty good at math, but many times when I was acting as a tutor or as a teacher... I couldn't explain what I was doing to other people. Think of sorcerers like people with Synesthesia, a sorcerer might be an excellent chef with a great plating aesthetic, but even if they study they can't really explain to people why the blue plate sings a C sharp and that means it pairs really well with the steak that smells like the number 54392. Those things don't make sense to other people. So even when sorcerers do study magic, their experience of magic is so vastly different from what a Wizard experiences, that it doesn't translate. A Wizard will never understand that you have to make the magic angry and shift it to the shade of goldenrod to make it work, they don't interact with magic in that way.
On the other hand, there's probably a fair number of multiclass sorcerer/wizards in the world. The game just doesn't really reward the combination compared to picking one lane and sticking to it, though non--adventuring casters would probably benefit more from having a lot of lower-level options.