That's because you're ALL PUSSIES!!!
And I mean that. Warrior these days only applies to people who have the balls to get up close and personal with enemies, or people who actually are interest in physical strength. In these modern times, it seems physical strength is only considered useful if you play sports, while all you computer-centered fellows prefer 'intelligence' and 'agility', to use some well known gaming lingo. It's disappointing to people like me, but at the same time a significant boon--for every fifty thin guys there is one single 200+ pound power lifting strongman who gets to feel significant superiority over the average scrawny guy, and well deserved too. People seem to think of muscle-bound guys (and gals) as self-oriented, steroid-injecting, gym-hogging, food-stuffing, brain-degrading, rude-to-others goofballs; and the longer that absolutely asinine display of ignorance keeps circulating around, the more and more superior guys like me are going to feel for having the strength, determination, courage, self-dedication, self-motivation, and confidence to lift weights and push our bodies beyond the norm to which they are held as standard.
So keep pointing at the warrior class, and keep saying hardly anyone likes it--because the more you say it, the more and more guys like me are going to point and laugh. Heh, and just to make your disillusionment even greater (assuming you're a: still reading this, and b: realizing that what I'm saying is true), we bodybuilding types are just as intelligent as you technology-oriented thin guys--do you realize the level of nutritional, anatomical and physiological knowledge is needed to gain a truly remarkable physique? Anyone can look good by working out on a regular basis, but if you want to push past the limit, then you need to get brains before you can get brawn.
Just to spite all you even further, who do you think would live longer in a zombie apocalypse; the scrawny kid who sits on his ass all day playing video games and feeling superior for it, or the muscular guy who can lift twice his own body-weight, know exactly what kind of rations to look for, know exactly how to maintain strength during zombie-infested famine, and have the physical capacity to fend off melee contact and break down doors?
So I go for Warrior. First time, every time. If there's one thing I can trust, it's my own physical strength. I know my limits. In a game, with magic or whatever, I wouldn't trust some arcane influence that 'makes me special'. I wouldn't trust the penetrating ability of that arrow against that rock monster. But I would trust my own strength to swing that war axe down onto that silly peasant who decided to try and rob me, or crash that war-hammer into that wolf's face, or thrust that broadsword into that ogre's neck, rather than stand cowering behind trees and foliage, running backwards and tripping over your own feet as you try to notch another arrow on the bow with the desperate hope that it somehow manages to hit the minotaur in time before he goes you--or to run around in circles gargling blue and purple liquid as you try to summon another fireball to put down that rampaging giant who is about to crush you with a tree.
Whatever--just do whatever the hell you want and leave the stuff that requires bravery and power to us big guys.
Edit: Before I get started on lunch, let me point to popular media, like anime or whatever; notice how the hero is always lean, looks kind of frail compared to his enemies who are usually bigger and stronger (and with less brains)--how the main hero always has unique powers that defy logic and physics, with a physical strength that far exceeds his physical form? It's the image representing an ideal--what someone wants to be. Whether it's the writer, or the viewer for whom it's intended, the lead will always be something for someone to aspire to, yet something that isn't out of their reach--and when you make your main character scrawny, you know it'll appeal to more kids, because most are themselves scrawny. It's shifting focus away from the strength-determined image of heroes as they were -before- modern times; in the old days, physical strength made you stand out as a powerful figure in society. These days, it's considered unnecessary, because we no longer need physical strength to perform our every day tasks.
In this technology oriented world, physical strength has become almost unnecessary--all you need is the physical capacity to get out of bed, sit down in a chair, do work on the computer, or walk around a building for a day, sit down to drive, sit down to chat, sit down to eat, sit down to play games or watch movies--sit, sit, sit, lazy, lazy, lazy, weak, weak, weak.