LordEntrails
Hero
Not universal. Never had it come up at any table of mine except the very first one where we actually switch from 3.5 to 5E.I dislike this one but I think it is common if not universal.
Not universal. Never had it come up at any table of mine except the very first one where we actually switch from 3.5 to 5E.I dislike this one but I think it is common if not universal.
I think the point was @Stalker0 often sees the house rule that allows them to cast with sword and shield in handNot according to the rules on spellcasting for spells with somatic components.
"...the caster must have free use of at least one hand to perform these gestures."
If you have a shield equipped and are holding a weapon you do not have a free hand.
1. I would think it was weird that the player was upset, because we would have had a conversation and I would have made a decision. I wouldn't have ruled arbitrarily; the player would have been heard. So if the player has had their say and we still disagree: them's the breaks. Get over it. The player is welcome to rule the other way when they DM, taking us to...I would also like to ask:
How would you, as a DM, feel if a player was upset that you weren't using a certain common houserule?
And how would you feel as a player if a DM doesn't use a houserule that you were used to?
If you have a shield equipped and are holding a weapon you do not have a free hand.
Its guaranteed that no houserule is universal....just random statistics will get you there. The question is common, and of course "how common".Honestly, I wouldn't assume any houserules are all thwt common or universal. Lokez handwavinf ammo or carrying capacity...? That's not how I've ever seen D&D played.
The logic I have seen is as follows - the typical shield has a strap of the forearm, and a handle for the hand, and that hand can also grasp (but not wield) the sword at need. You use your free interaction with an object to shift the weapon to that shield hand.
Neither the sword or shield are useful for that round, mind you. When your next turn comes around, you use that free interaction to take the sword back into your weapon hand.
My DM enforces it... The houserule is you need BOTH hands free like 2e. So, in an all-human PCs game, no caster wants to hold the torch in a dungeonLike I said, I ignore it personally and assume the somatic component is completed with the weapon. I've never had another DM enforce it. YMMV of course.
People actually use torches and not the light cantrip?My DM enforces it... The houserule is you need BOTH hands free like 2e. So, in an all-human PCs game, no caster wants to hold the torch in a dungeon![]()