Bill Zebub
“It’s probably Matt Mercer’s fault.”
I haven't been paying attention to D&D for a while now, but I'm curious: has there been any hint about an official update to the Monk Kensai subclass? That was my favorite in 2014 D&D.
No hints at all. BTW, it should be "kensei" with an "e", not an "a" (sorry, it's just a pet peeve of mine).I haven't been paying attention to D&D for a while now, but I'm curious: has there been any hint about an official update to the Monk Kensai subclass? That was my favorite in 2014 D&D.
No hints at all. BTW, it should be "kensei" with an "e", not an "a" (sorry, it's just a pet peeve of mine).
What hinders you in doing this in 5e 24 just with any other monk class? They all have now access to short swords and Scimitar. You can also just reflavour these weapons.What I loved about the Kens....that particular subclass is that it played well (with some refluffing) as the "unarmored sword master" with no monk-like references. (Hilt-smashes get a little repetitive, but hey...)
What hinders you in doing this in 5e 24 just with any other monk class? They all have now access to short swords and Scimitar. You can also just reflavour these weapons.
Haha thats kind of the vibe I got from your initial post, because Kensei, except using weapons, is really not that interesting, and the new monk (without a subclass even) is not a worse fit for a sword master.EDIT: And your question makes me realize that this was, literally, the ONLY feature of the original subclass that I actually cared about. The other subclass features were fine, but I really just wanted to hold a longsword.
I don’t know what “official” would mean, but it’s pronounced like “say” which is generally written as sei in English.Are there official translations of kanji to English, or just convention? Certainly as fluid as English is, "sai" could have a range of pronunciations.
And I have about a hundred pet peeves far more picky and arbitrary than that, so I'm in no position to criticize....
Well official would mean what the roman writing of the sillable language used to write Kensei is. But normally it uses roman pronounciation so it its said like "say" it would be sei as you say.I don’t know what “official” would mean, but it’s pronounced like “say” which is generally written as sei in English.

(Dungeons & Dragons)
Rulebook featuring "high magic" options, including a host of new spells.