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D&D 5E How to balance a flaw?

trentonjoe

Explorer
I am playing a thief that because of his backstory, I can’t use metal equipment. That seems like a pretty big penalty to me. Is it “balanced” to just get a free feat at 1st level?
 

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I am playing a thief that because of his backstory, I can’t use metal equipment. That seems like a pretty big penalty to me. Is it “balanced” to just get a free feat at 1st level?
Honestly, it somewhat depends on the feat--there's some pretty wide spread in the power of feats in 5e. Ritual Caster or almost any of the half-feats would seem reasonable. Lucky or Crossbow Expert might be too strong. If you're an Elf or Half-Elf, Elven Accuracy would definitely be too strong.
 





I’d just let you use normal equipment and describe it as being made from a non-metal material. Unless you specifically want the handicap of not being able to use most weapons and armor, I guess.
 

Free feat seems fine, since you're getting locked out of a lot of magic items a rogue would want. I'm assuming the no metal weapon constraint means you're limited in your weapon selection; if the DM gives out special material weapons (like a bone rapier or something) then a whole feat might not be warranted. If you're stuck with clubs and whips, then you definitely deserve a feat.
 

I am playing a thief that because of his backstory, I can’t use metal equipment. That seems like a pretty big penalty to me. Is it “balanced” to just get a free feat at 1st level?
No.

You chose the backstory, live with it.

It sounds like a not-so-cunning ploy to try and get a free feat, then work round the restrictions by using bone tools, a bow and a club.
 

I am playing a thief that because of his backstory, I can’t use metal equipment. That seems like a pretty big penalty to me. Is it “balanced” to just get a free feat at 1st level?

I would make sure the character gets plenty of non-metal replacements for daily tasks, and grant inspiration whenever the character makes a decision because of this restriction that leads to an immediate cost.
 

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