• NOW LIVE! Into the Woods--new character species, eerie monsters, and haunting villains to populate the woodlands of your D&D games.

Manyshot Damage Modifiers: HOW!?

Marshall said:
What if the arrows are of differing Enhancement bonus? Which attack bonus do the arrows get?

I'm thinking each arrow would get it's own enhancement bonus to attack, or they would all use the best one. As far as how the bow's enhancement bonus factors in there, I'm thinking it would apply to every single arrow.
 
Last edited:

log in or register to remove this ad

kreynolds said:


I'm thinking each arrow would get it's own enhancement bonus to attack, or they would all use the best one. As far as how the bow's enhancement bonus factors in there, I'm thinking it would apply to every single arrow.

I'm with ya on the bow thing,mostly. But you only get 1 attack roll, so if I fire 1 +5 arrow and 3 normals Would my one attack roll be at +5 or +0? Weird stuff. Definitely needs more clarification.
 

JavaBomberman said:


The feat states "both arrows use the same attack roll to determine success (with a -2 penalty on the attack) and deal damage as normal (but see below)." then below it states "you only apply precision based damage once."

and so that's what my question was; what is considered precision damage?

I´d say damage that only apply to targets within 30 feet; weapon specialization, sneack attack... remeber that in the description figures "The XXXX can´t aim with lethal precision beyond that distance" and similar statements.
 

Marshall said:
I'm with ya on the bow thing,mostly. But you only get 1 attack roll, so if I fire 1 +5 arrow and 3 normals Would my one attack roll be at +5 or +0? Weird stuff. Definitely needs more clarification.

I don't believe there would be just one attack roll though. Look at shurikens. You throw three with one attack. How many times do you roll? Three.
 


hong said:
Shuriken, being a word of Japanese origin, is of course the plural. The singular of shuriken is shurikaine. HTH!

My bad.
smilejap.gif


sagrin.gif
 

kreynolds said:

Not only that, but not many people know that the shurikaine got its name from its most famous proponent: Shuri Kaine, the wandering Shaolin ninja immortalised in the 1960s TV series, "Kung Fu". Pretty impressive, eh?
 

hong said:
Not only that, but not many people know that the shurikaine got its name from its most famous proponent: Shuri Kaine, the wandering Shaolin ninja immortalised in the 1960s TV series, "Kung Fu". Pretty impressive, eh?

LOL :) Dude, it's like National Geographic around here. I'm just know there's gonna be a shot of hippos humping any second now.

P.S. Are you serious about where the shurikaine got it's name? What was it called before that?
 
Last edited:

kreynolds said:


LOL :) Dude, it's like National Geographic around here. I'm just know there's gonna be a shot of hippos humping any second now.

Ah yes, your subconscious calls to you. This must be a reference to the seminal martial arts movie "Karate Kid", where the Kid is being trained (unbeknowst to him) by the old guy. He's given a series of chores, which are in fact the basis for martial arts techniques: waxing the car, painting the fence, humping the hippo, etc.

P.S. Are you serious about where the shurikaine got it's name?

Well, I can assure you that I always check my facts before posting nonsense to web boards.
 


Into the Woods

Remove ads

Top