Ruin Explorer
Legend
Poorly-explained... I mean, I think the reasoning is fairly obvious. Hobgoblins work very well together and employ teamwork. I dunno, I don't really need an explanation for that one.
I sure do! It's way, way beyond "work very well together and employ teamwork", which is something adventurers could certainly do. +2d6 damage? Every single time? No conditions beyond adjacency? No extra actions used? It's more than a Thief will do on a backstab until what, 4 or 5? That's huge!
That's got to be ultra-specialized training, at the very least.
I'll grant you that the first time a group encounters hobgoblins, this ability may be a bit of a surprise, but I don't find this problematic, either. When the pcs first encounter any monster, they should be wary of surprises. I'd expect most initial encounters with any monster to be harder than the pcs expect until they realize what works and what doesn't.
This is a counter-intuitive and difficult-to-rationalize ability that is quite likely to drop PCs very quickly, quite possibly without them understanding how it works.
Well, I totally disagree with you here.
Sure, if they know about it and understand it, that stuff works to a limited extent (Thunderwave is unlikely to help in the way you think), but you've entirely missed my point - I feel that's unlikely that they will know about it at the levels where Hobgoblins are a big threat.
What do you want to bet on the default push maneuver, btw? Because I'm betting not. It wouldn't help, either, in most situations, due to the way moves, OAs and so on work in 5E. They just need to move to the right place then attack.
It's less about expectations and more about laziness. If the player hasn't read his list of class abilities and potential feats and needs me to answer a question he can find out by looking up his options himself, he deserves to bleed from the nose.![]()
No, he doesn't, and that's the sort of thing you wouldn't even dare say to his face, let alone do. No-one deserves violence for not knowing a game backwards. That's messed-up. Seriously.
He couldn't even HAVE a Feat at these levels, either, Agamon. What do you think we're playing, 3E?