KarinsDad said:
You asked a question and then gave your own version of the answer. I was stating that your answer was poor logic, not the question.
Your answer boiled down:
If it is an eratta, it doesn't matter.
If it is a clarification, it doesn't matter.
Ah, well, if that's what you read into my response that's clearly a point of miscommunication, as that's not what I was attempting to say. Just the opposite, in fact. Of course, in the main I was asking more specifically what had been said, but if there's an errata or a clarification it DOES matter.
Now, I do admit that I was saying that if there was an errata on Knockdown, and Knockdown used similiar language pre-errata, then that lends support to my opinion that Elusive target would 'need' an errata too, if we were to disallow making an attack after the trip attempt (per Improved Trip) that Elusive Target granted.
KarinsDad said:
You basically said that no matter what WotC stated and where they stated it, a ruling on Improved Trip for Knockdown does not matter because it is not the same rule.
Well, OK, I will own that partially. Although I didn't state that it does not matter so much as I expressed the opinion that an errata on Knockdown disallowing an attack after the trip actually strengthens the opinion that Elusive Target would grant the attack after the trip.
KarinsDad said:
I am not claiming it is the same rule. I am claiming that this rule supports the rule as written within Improved Trip (i.e. the "as if" clause that you are totally ignoring).
It was the Sword and Fist eratta.
"Knockdown
Insert to end of Benefit:
Use of this feat cannot be combined with Improved Trip to generate an extra attack."
The only thing that Knockdown illustrates is that the "as if" clause is interpreted this way for Knockdown. If it is interpreted that way for Knockdown, it should be interpreted the exact same way for every other combinations of feats, actions, and abilities.
Ignoring the "as if" clause is changing the rules.
I do state that ignoring the "as if" clause does not change the rules, because the clause itself is a clarification that it does grant the attack ANYWAY... and indeed that "as if" something is would be very similiar to something actually BEING< and the Imp Trip stated as if they hadn't used an attack to trip, whereas Elusive Target actually IS not having used a trip attempt....
Ahem.
Onwards. This errata of Knockdown. Now, Knockdown basically switches Improved Trip around. Using Knockdown you:
1) Make an attack
2) If the attack fails, stop
3) If the attack is successful, and deals at least X (10HP?) damage, proceed
4) Make a trip attempt free.
Whereas Improved Trip is the opposite
1) Make a trip attempt
2) If trip attempt fails, stop
3) If trip attempt succeeds, proceed
4) Make an attack.
Since the Knockdown Feat requires Improved Trip in the first place (I'm going by memory here, I could be wrong about this part ... I'm pretty sure I'm not, but I should be IMO, after all, it seems to me to be actually less powerful than Improved Trip), and it does not generate any extra attacks... it instead modifies Improved Trip, it makes sense (to me) that it would not allow a follow-up atteck to be made.
The fact that they made this errate for Knockdown means they felt the wording of Knockdown supported a belief that Knockdown, as it was worded, did indeed allow a follow up attack after the trip that was given for free by the attack. Which leads to the belief that the similiar wording of Elusive Target also allows a follow up attack after the trip.
However, Elusive Target only grants a 1)Trip ..... which with Improved Trip would follow up with a generated 2) Attack.
So this combo yields a 1) Trip attempt 2) Attack if successful.... with TWO feats.
Knockdown without the errata would have yielded with ONE feat a 1)Trip attempt after a normal attack 2) follow up attack after the first attack.
So the errata on Knockdown was to stop people from getting in two attacks from a trip. The Elusive Target combined with Improved Trip only generates ONE attack from a trip.