Trainz
Explorer
Borlon said:But he says that if we had natural weapons we would always threaten the area around us.
Doesn't a monk actually threaten since he's considered armed ?
Borlon said:But he says that if we had natural weapons we would always threaten the area around us.
Trainz said:Doesn't a monk actually threaten since he's considered armed ?
Humans aren't in the monsters section of the SRD, but elves are. Elves have unarmed strikes too, right, so they'll do.Dimwhit said:No, an unarmed attacked doesn't have to be enhanced before it's a natural weapon. All INA does is enhance an existing natural weapon, and the Monk's unarmed attack is counted as a natural weapon for spells and other effects. So they're already natural attacks before being enhanced.
So elves have unarmed strikes, but no natural weapons (unless you consider that the longsword and the longbow are somehow built inSRD said:Attack: Longsword +2 melee (1d8+1/19–20) or longbow +3 ranged (1d8/x3)
There's no question of prevenience from my perspective, because the the enhancement from INA doesn't make the monk's unarmed strike count as a natural weapon. What makes the monk's unarmed strike count as a natural weapon is the sentence in the description of its class features which states:Borlon said:If the enhancement from INA is going to make the monk's unarmed attack count as a natural weapon, it has to do it at the time when the prerequisites are satisfied, which is before the feat is taken. To do this, the enhancement effect would have to be prevenient. I can't see how this is possible.
Precisely, the monk is a valid target before there is any effect on him.Hypersmurf said:He's a valid target when the spell is cast, which is when targets must be selected.
-Hyp.
Borlon said:You can't cast this spell on a natural weapon, such as an unarmed strike.
Patryn of Elvenshae said:The problem is that the extra text in this sentence is incorrect.
It's no different from:
"You can only eat citrus fruit, such as apples."