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Is this correct? <Forge of Fury spoiler warning>

vic20

Fool
In Nightscale's "Tactics" section, the second paragraph begins:

"In the following round, Nightscale climbs up on the ledge behind the party (a move-equivilent action) and then executes a partial charge to attack a character in the rear of the party with her bite, claws, and wings."

I thought that a creature had to take a Full Attack to use all of its natural weapons, which only allows a 5-ft step. What am I missing, or is this just an early 'bug' in a core module?

Thanks for the light,
Vic20
 

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You are correct, a creature using more than one attack must make a full round action to do so. I think its just telling you that that is what it does in the following round(s). They usually explain the creatures tactics when they are presented in the book, I don't think it was an intentional error. I would just have the creature move up and make one attack, then multiple attacks on the following rounds.
 

Unless of corse the creature has Pounce ability (like a tiger), or similar.

[Edit]
Oh, and you cannot, ever, take first a move action and then a partial charge.
You can only take a partial action when you are not allowed to take a full action.
[/Edit]
 
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That about covers it. As written, it is an error. You cannot make more than one attack unless you execute a full attack, and you cannot take a MEA and a partial charge. I just ignored the tactics section when I ran this encounter and used my own.
 

Dr. Zoom said:
That about covers it. As written, it is an error. You cannot make more than one attack unless you execute a full attack, and you cannot take a MEA and a partial charge. I just ignored the tactics section when I ran this encounter and used my own.


Are you sure you cannot take a MEA and ready a partial charge in the same straight line that you took the MEA?


Example: I move upto the bridge and Ready a partial charge if something steps on the bridge. Seems a perfectly logical move to me.


That is a MEA and a readied action, of a partial charge.
 

Macbrea said:

Example: I move upto the bridge and Ready a partial charge if something steps on the bridge. Seems a perfectly logical move to me.

That is a MEA and a ready action (a standard action), which is allowed. The readied action is a partial action.

But you cannot take a partial action during your turn, if you're allowed a full action.
 

The actions described would take three round:

Round one, climb up the ledge,

Round two, charge,

Round three, full attack.


The reasons being, of course, that your movement on the round you charge must all be in a straight line, and that you need a full attack action to make more than a single attack.
 

Macbrea said:
Are you sure you cannot take a MEA and ready a partial charge in the same straight line that you took the MEA?


Example: I move upto the bridge and Ready a partial charge if something steps on the bridge. Seems a perfectly logical move to me.


That is a MEA and a readied action, of a partial charge.
I was responding only to the written tactics for Nightscale in Forge of Fury.

You may, as a standard action, take a move or MEA, and then ready a partial charge. You must continue in a straight line if you moved already. But that is not what those tactics in FoF say.
 

Could you ready an action that would go off right after you ready it? "If I see an enemy" or something along those lines? Thus performing a partial action in place of a standard?
 

Thanks all. I'm relieved that I haven't been totally wrong in my handling of full attacks & natural weapons.

The encounter with Nightscale ended two adventuring careers last night, although the dragon didn't resort to the rules abuse discussed in this thread. I witnessed some of the worst (ok, *the* worst) player rolls yet in my campaign. 3/4 players failed DC 6 climb rolls. 3/4 players rolled 1 for initiative in the critical battle. One player, running along the slick stone bank, rolled a 2 for Balance, followed by a 2 Reflex Save, and ended up in the water, where his first two swim rolls were 2s. Ugly....
 

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