D&D 3E/3.5 [3.5] 5-Foot Step Rules Expanded

Okay, aside from the fact that they say "no you can't do a 5-foot and a move" is there any reason for this mechanically? Or does a "Move-equivalent" action really mean that it's a "Move-minus-5-feet-equivalent-action" such that for a human, a move equivalent action chews up 25 feet of their "move" (15 feet in heavy armor) so that they have 5 feet left?
 

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DWARF said:
Okay, aside from the fact that they say "no you can't do a 5-foot and a move" is there any reason for this mechanically? Or does a "Move-equivalent" action really mean that it's a "Move-minus-5-feet-equivalent-action" such that for a human, a move equivalent action chews up 25 feet of their "move" (15 feet in heavy armor) so that they have 5 feet left?

Don't think of the 5 foot step as your right. Think of it as a kind concession: if you don't move in this round, at least you get a step. :)
 

DWARF said:
Okay, aside from the fact that they say "no you can't do a 5-foot and a move" is there any reason for this mechanically? Or does a "Move-equivalent" action really mean that it's a "Move-minus-5-feet-equivalent-action" such that for a human, a move equivalent action chews up 25 feet of their "move" (15 feet in heavy armor) so that they have 5 feet left?

Mechanically, the difference comes down to whether you suffer an attack of opportunity.

What you're referring to (move in, strike, 5' back) is Spring Attack.
 

The clarification is just that taking a MeA does not mean you still can't move a 5' step. In the sense of Stand up move 5' and attack. This is now clarified as ok.
 

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