nswanson27
First Post
It's not a fix. It's RAW.
I just translated it into conversational English.![]()
I believe RAW you need to have both, not one or the other.
It's not a fix. It's RAW.
I just translated it into conversational English.![]()
I believe RAW you need to have both, not one or the other.
You made me go look. It's even worse than I thought.
Thief gets Sneak Attack when they have advantage.
They get advantage in all the standard ways, whatever those are.
Barring complications, they get advantage when an ally is adjacent to their target
At 17th level, they can outright kill a target with this ability (Death Strike) if the target fails a Con save.
Not quite. They get Sneak Attack when they have advantage. Barring complications, they also get Sneak Attack when an ally is adjacent to their target, even if they don't otherwise have advantage. Having the ally there doesn't generally grant advantage.Thief gets Sneak Attack when they have advantage.
They get advantage in all the standard ways, whatever those are.
Barring complications, they get advantage when an ally is adjacent to their target
Not much to change about the Rogue, it's one of the most well designed classes in 5e all around.
The one thing I would definitely change, however, is allowing Sneak Attack with all light weapons (in addition to finesse and ranged). That would allow Sneak Attacks with clubs, light hammers and handaxes. Going up behind someone and zonking them in the head with a club unawares, in particular, is a very iconic Sneak Attack. And it'd allow for STR-based thuggish Rogues right out of the box, which wouldn't be any more effective mechanics-wise than existing Rogue builds, anyway, but at least it'd actually give us a working mechanical expression of that common Rogue concept.
The problem is that it doesn't make sense. You can't swing with strength in order to hit between armor plates; you must finesse it in order for that ability to be what it is.I think such a rogue (strength based) would be fun and I'm somewhat surprised we haven't seen one in a UA article yet.
The problem is that it doesn't make sense. You can't swing with strength in order to hit between armor plates; you must finesse it in order for that ability to be what it is.
If you want to play a strength-based rogue-type character, make a fighter with the criminal background.
If that was the case, then it would make sense that you could use a bludgeon. Since you can't, then that must not be the case.But that isn't how Sneak Attack works in 5e. In 5e, it's about hitting a distracted character. Cold-cocking someone totally fits that description.