Do you have a source for this because doubling acts on your speed, which is affected by those modifiers.Doubling mostly takes place before other modifiers like bladesong etc just so you know… mostly.
Do you have a source for this because doubling acts on your speed, which is affected by those modifiers.Doubling mostly takes place before other modifiers like bladesong etc just so you know… mostly.
Do you have a source for this because doubling acts on your speed, which is affected by those modifiers.
A bladesinger in bladesong has a speed of 40 though not 30.Nope, you are obviously adding the "current" above. The reasoning works exactly the same way with the other option: the bladesinger has a speed of 30, so it's doubled by the haste. After that, bladsinging adds 10 feet to that speed and Ashardalon's Stride adds 25 feet to that speed. You have exactly zero ground to support that one is done before the other. On the other hand, spells and powers affect a creature, not its buffs.
I think you are confusing move and speed. They are added to your speed,not to your move. They don't just add to how far you move, they acttually change the speed.Do you have a source for this, because these modifiers are actually added to your speed, which is just doubled by haste.
A bladesinger in bladesong has a speed of 40 though not 30.
Also this bring up all kinds of conflicts:
What if I am over my max carrying weight and my speed is 0, does Haste add 30 because that is my base speed? What if I am a Monk?
I think you are confusing move and speed. They are added to your speed,not to your move.
Speed is a reference number, like hit points. Your speed value defines how far you can move.
Looking over the rules, I think the order of operations should be (base speed + modifiers) then doubled.
The wording of the Dash action implies this. Haste doubles your speed.
A Monk, for example, gains a bonus to their speed. If you were intended to calculate the bonus to speed after doubling, Haste would explicitly say so.
TLDR: to double speed, you have to determine what your speed IS. If your speed is increased by a numerical value, that is your speed.
Ok, just think a second. What's easier to do? Look at your speed on your character sheet, which should already take the bonus speed of say, a Monk, into account, and double that, or remember "oh if I am doubling my speed, I should remember that 10 feet of my speed is applied after doubling".