Hypersmurf said:
Yup. The feat doesn't need to spell them out, because the effects can be found in the existing rules.
Those existing rules exist under the headings of "Attack" under "Standard action" and "Full Attack" under "Full Round Action", which the FAQ clearly demonstrates we cannot trust to be a default for the rules for this, since it deviates from those rules in ways not defined in the feat.
Check footnote 7 on the Table of Action Types - "These attack forms substitute for a melee attack, not an action." A melee attack isn't an action. There are several actions that allow you to make a melee attack.
That would be an example of the right way to do it -- clearly delineate how the action/feat can be used in the action/feat description, and we explicitly know how, in the rules, to handle these actions without relying on some FAQ that is, in effect, de facto missing rules text.
Dual attack -- and manyshot -- lack any such clarification.
Spring Attack doesn't apply when you make a melee attack; it applies when you take the Attack action.
You will not find the phrase "attack action" in the rules section on combat actions, except preceded by the word "full". The FAQ admits this much.
That makes it apparent to me that the word "action" is implicit after the standard action "attack" and the full round action "full attack".
You will find the phrase "attack (melee)" and "attack (ranged)", listed under action types.
There are more actions than just Attack and Full Attack that allow one to make an attack; Charge is one, Cast a Spell (with a touch spell) is another, to pick just two examples.
And both of those are fully defined by the rules. I know explicitly that charging does not afford the enemy an attack of opportunity, for example, because the rules spell it out.
We resolve them as attacks. Just not as the Attack action.
That's insufficient under the rules. Attacks are only performed as part of one of several clearly defined actions, like attack (melee), charge, full attack, etc.
For what reason would you suffer one?
I would not assume you would. But the only way that I could
*technically* come to this conclusion is by referencing boilerplate text in the rules of another action. Which again, the rulings on these feats demonstrate is clearly not a safe thing to do.