Hypersmurf said:
The RAW seem clear to me, but since there is obvious dispute, it is apparent that regardless of individual perception, they are unclear.
Firstly, some of Skip Williams' interpretations are extremely loosely-connected to what's written. I'm not sure how you can take something that's written as a one-handed weapon, say "It's a two-handed weapon", and call it 'interpretation'.
Secondly, the INA ruling in question came from Andy Collins, as I understand it...?
-Hyp.
Not according to the OP from the other thread.
reveal said:
From the new Dragon mag #336, page 94, "Official Answers to your Questions"
Can a monk take Improved Natural Attack (Monster Manual, page 304) to improve his unarmed strike?
Quote:
Originally Posted by the Sage
Yes. As stated on page 41 of the Player's Handbook, a monk's unarmed strike "is treated as both a manufactured weapon and a natural weapon for the purpose of spells and effects that enhance or improve either," which includes feats such as Improved Natural Attack.
Barring multiclassing, the earliest a monk could take this feat would be at 6th level (due to the base attack bonus prerequisite), at which point her unarmed strike damage would improve from 1d8 to 2d6 (which represents an average increase of +2.5 points of damage). The same monk at 20th level would deal 3d8 points of damage with her unarmed strike.
Hmmm, and there it even says
official answers. It doesn't matter if you think the Sage's interpretations are incorrect. If something got written down in a way that jumbles up the original intention, that's something neither you nor I can readily see, but he can because he was there. Not like it matters if it was Skip Williams or Andy Collins, though, because they'r
both part of the design team.
Still, RAW unclear or not, spirit disputed or not, the
official rule is that they can take it. If you don't wanna allow it at your table, then that's a house rule. This is the Rules forum, though, which means it's about the official rules. Now that the question has an official answer in writing, I don't see how the debate about what's official can continue. Skip Williams helped write it, and without any of the others refuting it, we can safely say the word is pretty much
final. If you think he's wrong, well, that's a house rule. As a mod, you should already know that, though.
SIDE NOTE: About enhancing versus making things worse, please keep in mind that by the book definition of enhance, any change up or down is counted as such. A longsword -1 has a -1 enhancement. Yeah, I know it sounds silly, but it makes things simpler to keep track of at least. Anyway, that's what the book states. Enhance can be good OR bad. That's why you can have enhancement penalties.