It certainly doesn't provoke an AoO. It's an attack. Nothing about it provokes.Seeten said:The opportunity cost on the lich healing itself 1d8+5 is HIGH. It takes a round, and provokes an AoO.
Yes. Very unbalancing. It's why it's a Very Bad Idea™ to allow a ring of cure minor wounds at book guidelines.Seeten said:No Lich would ever use it in combat, which makes this an OOC ability. Really, who cares if liches can heal themselves to full out of combat. Is this somehow unbalancing?
Infiniti2000 said:Yes. Very unbalancing. It's why it's a Very Bad Idea™ to allow a ring of cure minor wounds at book guidelines.
It is the same. Liches have a LA and therefore are suitable for players per the rules. Whatever rule you have for liches works for PC and NPC liches.Crothian said:Not the same. One is a magical item anyone can use the other is an undead template. If one allows PCs to eventually bneome Lich's I can understand maybe restricting it but for NPCs it is just not a problem.
Infiniti2000 said:It is the same. Liches have a LA and therefore are suitable for players per the rules. Whatever rule you have for liches works for PC and NPC liches.
How's it any different? If you have different rules for each, then why doesn't a "magic ring for NPC's only" not fit well within your system?Crothian said:However that is still a lot different then a magical item ...
Infiniti2000 said:The precise wording with my emphasis is: "A lich without natural weapons has a touch attack that uses negative energy to deal 1d8+5 points of damage to living creatures..."