Improved Feint + Improved Trip

blargney the second

blargney the minute's son
If you successfully use Improved Feint then make a trip attempt with Improved Trip, is the target denied Dex only to the initial touch attack, or the "yay you've dropped him" attack as well?
 

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Well, after following the thread on Whirlwind Attack and Improved Trip, I would say that the opponent was denied dex bonus to AC in both cases. The wording for Improved Trip says (my emphasis):
If you trip an opponent in melee combat, you immediately get a melee attack against that opponent as if you hadn’t used your attack for the trip attempt.
 

Legildur said:
Well, after following the thread on Whirlwind Attack and Improved Trip, I would say that the opponent was denied dex bonus to AC in both cases.

While I'm inclined to agree, it can get murky when magic gets involved.

For example, True Strike operates on your next attack, but it also discharges. So if you get the +20 bonus on your touch attack for the trip, in theory, since the followup attack is as-though-you-didn't, it's still 'your next attack'... but since the spell has already discharged, it doesn't affect the followup attack.

To confuse matters more, I think if you had a Greater True Strike that affected your next three attacks, say, the trip-and-followup would only count as one of the three... unless the trip were the third one and the spell discharged before the followup attack.

-Hyp.
 

Sorry, hyp, but that's not quite right. Improved Trip specifically says otherwise, as Legildur stated. Free attack rolls that follow up on a prior attack (including the one granted by Improved Trip, as well as Cleave and Great Cleave) retain all the bonuses and penalties you took into the original attack; the only numbers that change are the ones that are circumstantial (such as flanking, higher ground, etc.). Basically, ask yourself if the bonuses would still remain if the character were confirming a critical hit on the first attack.
 

LonePaladin said:
Sorry, hyp, but that's not quite right. Improved Trip specifically says otherwise, as Legildur stated. Free attack rolls that follow up on a prior attack (including the one granted by Improved Trip, as well as Cleave and Great Cleave) retain all the bonuses and penalties you took into the original attack; the only numbers that change are the ones that are circumstantial (such as flanking, higher ground, etc.).

True Strike is a circumstantial bonus. The circumstance is that there is a spell in effect; after the first attack, which discharges the spell, there is no spell in effect, and you can't gain a bonus from a spell that isn't there.

For what it's worth, the 3E Main FAQ addressed this question directly:
If you use the true strike spell and you get a threat, does
the +20 bonus from the apply to the critical confirmation
roll? Would the +20 bonus apply to the extra attacks you
get from the Cleave, Great Cleave, or Whirlwind attack
feats?


When you roll to confirm a critical, you use whatever
bonuses applied to the attack roll that made the threat, no
matter where those bonuses came from.

True strike affects only one attack. (Rolling to confirm a
critical is not a separate attack for this purpose.) If you make
multiple attacks in a round, your bonus from true strike applies
only to the first attack you make, no matter how you managed
to get multiple attacks.


You agree that Cleave considers circumstantial modifiers separately - you don't get to apply a flanking bonus to an unflanked second opponent just because the first opponent was flanked, for example. In the same way, you can't apply a bonus from a non-existent spell to an second opponent just because it existed for the first opponent.

Similarly, there are circumstantial modifiers that differ between the initial trip and the followup attack. Taken to an extreme, we can say that if we had not used the first attack to trip, the opponent would not be prone, and thus he should not incur a -4 to AC against the second attack - since it is made as if we had not used an attack to trip. But the -4 does apply, because circumstances have changed. In the same way, the circumstances relating to True Strike have changed - on the trip attack, the spell was in effect, but on the followup attack, the spell has already discharged and is not in effect.

-Hyp.
 


So the target regains his Dex to AC after the touch attack? Bummer. That means I'm going to have to rewrite one of my villains. Sneak attack is such an annoying class feature...
 

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