Greenfield
Adventurer
First, all of the lycanthropic forms you mention are, well, lycanthropes. That is, they're templates, and barred by the spell.
Additionally the Werebear and Were Tiger are both well over the five hit dice limits of the spell.
As for flight, I agree that we need to enforce maneuverability and encumbrance rules, as well as limits to flying while injured.
Your call for Saves for certain maneuvers is fine, but there isn't anything anywhere in the rules that gives damage for collisions. Falling damage, based on distance, is there, but none for running into walls, door frames or opponents. And inventing "Speed =Falling distance" will draw a lot of arguments, since falling speed isn't linearly related to falling distance.
That is, doubling the distance doesn't double the speed. Speed is based on time spent falling, because, well, that's just the way gravity works. And it is a lot of work, far more than most are willing to go into at a game table, to reverse engineer speed (in feet per six seconds) into a falling distance.
So rather than trying to find ways to punish a PC for using a spell to do something entirely legal (and clearly within the spell's intent), maybe we should look for other solutions.
Additionally the Werebear and Were Tiger are both well over the five hit dice limits of the spell.
As for flight, I agree that we need to enforce maneuverability and encumbrance rules, as well as limits to flying while injured.
Your call for Saves for certain maneuvers is fine, but there isn't anything anywhere in the rules that gives damage for collisions. Falling damage, based on distance, is there, but none for running into walls, door frames or opponents. And inventing "Speed =Falling distance" will draw a lot of arguments, since falling speed isn't linearly related to falling distance.
That is, doubling the distance doesn't double the speed. Speed is based on time spent falling, because, well, that's just the way gravity works. And it is a lot of work, far more than most are willing to go into at a game table, to reverse engineer speed (in feet per six seconds) into a falling distance.
So rather than trying to find ways to punish a PC for using a spell to do something entirely legal (and clearly within the spell's intent), maybe we should look for other solutions.