DiFier said:
I'm a little confused by this quote. are you saying that if you miss while applying the -x to your attack that you are not power attacking and therefore didn't take the -x from the attack so then yuo resolve the attack as iff you had not powerattacked. you get to do regualar damage? In a regular mele situation if you were attacking a guy with 15 ac and had +15 to hit. You can use power attack and only give you a +10 to hit but if you hit you do an additional +5 damage. if you only roll a 4 on your attack your total is only 14 lower that AC there for you missed.
No, that's not what I'm saying. The situation I described is patently absurd, and it comes from the EXACT same logical basis that Dimwhit is arguing from.
Follow carefully.
The feat says:
"On your action, before making attack rolls for a round, you may choose to subtract a number from all melee attack rolls and add the same number to all melee damage rolls. This number may not exceed your base attack bonus. The penalty on attacks and bonus on damage apply until your next turn."
Or, to break it down
a) "Choose a value of X before you make any attack rolls"
b) "Subtract X from all attack rolls in a round"
c) "Add X to all damage rolls in a round"
Dimwhit is arguing that if you make no attack rolls, then you cannot do b). And if you cannot do b), you're not allowed to do a) nor c).
The exact same logical argument he is using could also be used to state that if you make no DAMAGE rolls, you cannot do c), nor are you allowed to do a) or b). This is possible because the feat uses the same language for modifying attack and damage rolls, and we are arguing the meaning of the phrases in the feat.
If that is the case, then when you miss all your attacks in a round, you make no damage rolls. Hence you should not be able to do b) or c), which is plainly absurd, as you've already done them - we therefore say that this argument is void.
Then, since that argument is void, Dimwhit's argument (which is identical) must also be void. The words plainly cannot mean what he says they mean.
Any argument made which says that the text about attack rolls means something particular can also be made about the text about damage rolls.
If you say that the feat works regardless of the number of attacks made in the round, then it also works regardless of the number of damage rolls made in a round, a situation which makes sense.