UltimaGabe
First Post
Hello!
I recently joined a 3.5 D&D game, and an issue came up that the DM and I disagreed on. He made a ruling for the session, and we both agreed to research it in the meantime to find out whether this was correct.
My character is 2nd level, and was using a bow. I fired once per round, and the DM (and another player) insisted that anybody using a bow can choose to fire twice as a full-round action (with no penalty to the attack roll) any time he wants. This sounded foreign to me, but since I haven't played 3.5 in a couple years, I could have been wrong. I (and the other player) have searched the Player's Handbook, and have found nothing aside from the Rapid Shot feat (which I do not have, and which also imposes a -2 penalty on both attacks when used) that would imply anything either way.
Would someone be able to point out a specific rule or page that would indicate whether a bow can naturally be fired once or twice per round? Any help would be most appreciated.
I recently joined a 3.5 D&D game, and an issue came up that the DM and I disagreed on. He made a ruling for the session, and we both agreed to research it in the meantime to find out whether this was correct.
My character is 2nd level, and was using a bow. I fired once per round, and the DM (and another player) insisted that anybody using a bow can choose to fire twice as a full-round action (with no penalty to the attack roll) any time he wants. This sounded foreign to me, but since I haven't played 3.5 in a couple years, I could have been wrong. I (and the other player) have searched the Player's Handbook, and have found nothing aside from the Rapid Shot feat (which I do not have, and which also imposes a -2 penalty on both attacks when used) that would imply anything either way.
Would someone be able to point out a specific rule or page that would indicate whether a bow can naturally be fired once or twice per round? Any help would be most appreciated.