No, I still disagree with you. You can't add a particular level to more than one class (in the case of a single-prog like Virtuoso or Archmage) so "classes" wouldn't make any sense. The relevant word is "each" -- you're taking "each level" as a separate unit. Your way would have much more justification if it said "all levels" or "your virtuoso levels" or some other wording which implied you were taking the levels in aggregate instead of one by one.
Exactly right
Answer the question:
Best I can say is to take off the biaist goggles for a moment, you can't have them on to see this.
Spells per day/Spells Know: Beginning at 2nd level, a virtuoso gains new spells per day (and spells know, if applicable) as if he had also gained a level in an arcane spellcasting class he belonged to before adding the prestige class level. He does not, however, gain any other benefit a character of that class would have gained. If he had more than one arcane spellcasting class before becoming a virtuoso, he must decide to which class to add each level for the purpose of determining spells per day and spells known.
simple question,
Soro if it worked the way your saying why wouldn't the boilerplate say;
if he had more than one arcane spellcasting class before becoming a virtuoso, he must decide to which class to add all levels for the purpose of determining spells per day and spells known
?
Your reading is incorrect Soro; you're concatenating two different parts of the sentence:
"If he had more than one arcane spellcasting class before becoming a virtuoso, he must decide to which class to add each level for the purpose of determining spells per day and spells known"it is a logical if/then statement:
IF character has more than one arcane spellcasting class before becoming a virtouso (P) THEN character must choose which class to add each level (Q)They are two materially different things:
The
IF statement is the antecedent, if it is true, the
THEN statement is the consequent. if
P then
QAlso relevant but not discussed is
"Beginning at 2nd level, a virtuoso gains new spells per day (and spells know, if applicable) as if he had also gained a level in
an arcane spellcasting class he belonged to before adding the prestige class level."
not,
only one.
an is an indefinate article referring to "arcane spellcasting class"
by definition:
An indefinite article indicates that its noun is not a particular one (or ones)
so that sentence also provides some anecdotal evidence that the writers weren't referring to only one arcane spellcasting class. It may be reading a bit more thought into the writers than we can give them credit for, but there it is.
that said I agree with you Soro most of the time too, I just think you're a misreading it this time... not everyone can be right 100% of the time, EVEN the mighty SORO