Halberd, Longbow and Spiked Armor.

Thanee said:
I would say, that it is usually impossible, when wielding a guisarme, to also threaten the squares within 5 ft., Improved Unarmed Strike, spiked armor, or not.
Unarmed Strike: At 1st level, a monk gains Improved Unarmed Strike as a bonus feat. A monk’s attacks may be with either fist interchangeably or even from elbows, knees, and feet. This means that a monk may even make unarmed strikes with her hands full.
 

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I don't see how this changes what I have written.

Jacky Chan the monk carries a piano. Obviously his hands are full. He chooses his monk unarmed strike as his primary attack for the round. No AoO's with the piano.

Bye
Thanee
 


Point taken Patron.

If someonce thinks a piano and a longspear are weapons on equal terms, then there is little hope for them.

As far as reach weapons go, It is the weapon that has the "You can strike opponents 10 feet away with it, but you can’t use it against an adjacent foe." in no way does it inhibit your other attacks [it just happened there are not a lot of ways for most pc's to get other attacks]. Nor would a critter's natural weapons stop being an option because it has a glaive.

ATTACKS OF OPPORTUNITY
Sometimes a combatant in a melee lets her guard down. In this case, combatants near her can take advantage of her lapse in defense to attack her for free. These free attacks are called attacks of opportunity.
Threatened Squares: You threaten all squares into which you can make a melee attack, even when it is not your action. Generally, that means everything in all squares adjacent to your space (including diagonally). An enemy that takes certain actions while in a threatened square provokes an attack of opportunity from you. If you’re unarmed, you don’t normally threaten any squares and thus can’t make attacks of opportunity.
Reach Weapons: Most creatures of Medium or smaller size have a reach of only 5 feet. This means that they can make melee attacks only against creatures up to 5 feet (1 square) away. However, Small and Medium creatures wielding reach weapons threaten more squares than a typical creature. In addition, most creatures larger than Medium have a natural reach of 10 feet or more.
Provoking an Attack of Opportunity: Two kinds of actions can provoke attacks of opportunity: moving out of a threatened square and performing an action within a threatened square.
Moving: Moving out of a threatened square usually provokes an attack of opportunity from the threatening opponent. There are two common methods of avoiding such an attack—the 5-foot-step and the withdraw action (see below).
Performing a Distracting Act: Some actions, when performed in a threatened square, provoke attacks of opportunity as you divert your attention from the battle. Table: Actions in Combat notes many of the actions that provoke attacks of opportunity.
Remember that even actions that normally provoke attacks of opportunity may have exceptions to this rule.
Making an Attack of Opportunity: An attack of opportunity is a single melee attack, and you can only make one per round. You don’t have to make an attack of opportunity if you don’t want to.
An experienced character gets additional regular melee attacks (by using the full attack action), but at a lower attack bonus. You make your attack of opportunity, however, at your normal attack bonus—even if you’ve already attacked in the round.
An attack of opportunity “interrupts” the normal flow of actions in the round. If an attack of opportunity is provoked, immediately resolve the attack of opportunity, then continue with the next character’s turn (or complete the current turn, if the attack of opportunity was provoked in the midst of a character’s turn).
Combat Reflexes and Additional Attacks of Opportunity: If you have the Combat Reflexes feat you can add your Dexterity modifier to the number of attacks of opportunity you can make in a round. This feat does not let you make more than one attack for a given opportunity, but if the same opponent provokes two attacks of opportunity from you, you could make two separate attacks of opportunity (since each one represents a different opportunity). Moving out of more than one square threatened by the same opponent in the same round doesn’t count as more than one opportunity for that opponent. All these attacks are at your full normal attack bonus.
 
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Slightly off topic, but suppose your dealing with a mounted lancer w/ shield. If his taken the rtight feats, can he do the same with his shield?

PS: I remember reading a feat that allowed you to attack with your shield as an off-hand attack, and it allowed you to keep your AC bonus.
 

Storyteller01 said:
PS: I remember reading a feat that allowed you to attack with your shield as an off-hand attack, and it allowed you to keep your AC bonus.

Anyone may do the first, at the cost of their shield (and enhancement) bonus to AC. There's a feat that allows you to retain your AC bonus when you do this, called Improved Shield Bash.
 

Patryn of Elvenshae said:
Anyone may do the first, at the cost of their shield (and enhancement) bonus to AC. There's a feat that allows you to retain your AC bonus when you do this, called Improved Shield Bash.

Got it. Kept thinking that a shield bash was part of a charge attack. :confused:


Now the munchkin in me must ask (being a proactive, not reactive, DM):

Said lancer w/ shield is also wearing spiked armor (THAT POOR HORSE!!). Suppose said lancer uses his off-hand attack as a kick with a spiked boot...
 
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frankthedm said:
If someonce thinks a piano and a longspear are weapons on equal terms, then there is little hope for them.

Why not? A piano is an improvised weapon. :p

But you can replace it with longspear, it doesn't change anything of what I meant.

Threatened Squares: You threaten all squares into which you can make a melee attack, even when it is not your action.

This is the important part.

So, if a monk has a longspear in his hands and attacks with it without applying two-weapon penalties... can he then make melee attacks against targets within 5 ft.?

Answer: No, he cannot (see FAQ for details).

Bye
Thanee
 


Thanee said:
So, if a monk has a longspear in his hands and attacks with it without applying two-weapon penalties... can he then make melee attacks against targets within 5 ft.?

That's an interesting question, because it depends entirely upon your definition of "fighting this way."

To my mind, "fighting this way" means "using the TWF rules to gain extra attacks above those normally allowed by your BAB in a full-attack action."

In other words, if you've got two attacks at BAB +6 / +1, I don't have a problem with attacking at +6 with one weapon and at +1 with the other - in the same way that monks get to freely mix unarmed strikes and whatever they have in their hands.

It also ties more neatly into the way multiple natural attacks work, in that a monster with a bite attack with reach 10' and a claw attack with reach 5' threatens with both, and may take an AoO with either (subject to the normal primary / secondary penalties, if any).
 

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