Zaruthustran
The tingling means it’s working!
silentspace said:What you guys are saying is clearly right, and I'm not arguing the point, just saying what I've seen as a house rule, and was thinking about. I'm wondering what you fine people think? :
If a rogue (or I guess, by extension any character), through hiding/invisibility whatever, is previously undetected by an opponent, and he remains undetected, he gets a free partial action (equivalent of surprise round) when he enters combat, regardless of whether combat has otherwise started. It doesn't work if the opponents saw him and then he went invisible or something like that, since the opponent would be "aware" of them.
I don't like it. It doesn't fit the D&D "round" mechanic. In D&D all characters take actions within the same round. It doesn't work for individual characters to have personal surprise rounds.
It does work for individual characters to have individual actions: your proposed rule is served by the Expert Tactician feat. If you don't have S&S or S&F, the feat works like this: anytime a person you threaten is denied his Dex, you get to make a single free melee attack.
So, if an undetected hidden rogue sneaks up to a guy the rogue gets a free attack (a sneak attack) and then his standard action (either another attack or, better, a second move--like away from the bad guy and around a corner, where you can re-hide).
-z
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