Yeah, it has a lot of trolls, you and anyone else trying to argue against pure fact.
If you were here saying you thought it was unbalanced to allow the monk to take the feat, I could understand that. I'd disagree, but I'd leave it at that.
Unfortunately, you're here arguing that the rules don't allow the monk to take the feat, when the rules, plain as day, do. The monk's description is crystal clear. The unarmed strike is a natural weapon, and as such counts for the purposes of this feat. Just as Magic Fang is allowed, so too is this feat. The requirements are exactly the same to have both effects (Magic Fang and Improved Natural Attack), therefore it's quite obvious that they both work for that very reason.
I honestly can't understand how anyone could misunderstand it. The words speak for themselves. The Sage got this one right. This is so easy he never should have needed to say so.
If you were here saying you thought it was unbalanced to allow the monk to take the feat, I could understand that. I'd disagree, but I'd leave it at that.
Unfortunately, you're here arguing that the rules don't allow the monk to take the feat, when the rules, plain as day, do. The monk's description is crystal clear. The unarmed strike is a natural weapon, and as such counts for the purposes of this feat. Just as Magic Fang is allowed, so too is this feat. The requirements are exactly the same to have both effects (Magic Fang and Improved Natural Attack), therefore it's quite obvious that they both work for that very reason.
I honestly can't understand how anyone could misunderstand it. The words speak for themselves. The Sage got this one right. This is so easy he never should have needed to say so.