I'm running an Eastern flavored campaign and wondered if I should exclude the weapons and armor found in the core rule book and exclusively use the eastern stuff from Ultimate Combat or should I merge the two.
I guess part of the problem was too many actions in a turn. move to the rogue, grab the rogue, carry him away. two moves and a standard.
I think it would be different from a cleric " touching" an ally to heal, and a leopard " grabbing" you with his teeth and dragging you away.
A player in my group last night wanted to send in her Leopard to take an injured companion out of combat. She got upset after I told her that she would have to make a grapple check on the PC.
My thought was that the PC was focusing on the opponent and had his guard up. To complicate matters...
I created Pyramid Head from Silent Hill and thought I would share. (Note: I've never played the games, but I did watch the movies and did a little research in creating this - so no flaming) I copy and pasted from excel, so there are positioning issues. If you have any suggestions, let me know...
I know a lot of this is going to be fiat, but I'm trying to break down some of the specific weapons into component costs. I'm stuck on Frost Brand (http://paizo.com/pathfinderRPG/prd/magicItems/weapons.html#_weapons)
the total price s 54,475 GP
+3 Frost Greatsword = 32,350 GP leaving 22,125 GP...
I'm upgrading the Large Scorpion to the Black Emperor Scorpion (CR 11, 16 HD) and I'm down to the Poison entry and I think that the 1d2 str damage doesn't seem potent enough for a gargantuan scorpion. I found where someone else advanced it on d20fpsrd...
neither, but he didn't have to. some one else can. from my reading, a staff is 4-7 ft long, as long as a shaft on a glaive. a quarter staff doesn't have tech because of how it's held.
I guess the concept of a polearm/staff of fire is cool to him. I don't have a problem with him doing it. I'm just thinking how to make it work. Treating it as a double weapon makes sense or more appropriately like shield spikes, a separate thing being mounted onto a non-weapon that can be used...
First, when (most) people go to sleep, their brains trigger paralysis on the body to keep them in bed instead of acting out their dreams. This is how I interpret how hold person works.
Can they fall over? yes
Can they move their arms? no.