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

Multiple attack monsters

pvandyck

First Post
I think I understand that a character, no matter if they have 2 weapons, or many attacks (because of being a high-level fighter), needs to use the full attack action to get to swing more than once (nevermind things like the extra partial action from haste, for now)

Does a monster like a troll, with a claw-claw-bite routine have the same restriction, even if they have feats like multiattack and multidexterity? Does a troll who moves up to you (more than a 5-foot-step) get only one swing with 1 claw? What about if it wanted to use it's bite (secondary attack form) instead? What about during an attack of oppurtunity?

Thelbar
 

log in or register to remove this ad

pvandyck said:
Does a monster like a troll, with a claw-claw-bite routine have the same restriction

Yes.

Does a troll who moves up to you (more than a 5-foot-step) get only one swing with 1 claw?

It gets one attack, at its highest attack bonus. The attack can be either a bite or a claw.
 


In the dragon magazine with the article on saurials, when a creature with a natural attack routine makes only one attack, it can treat that attack as a two-handed weapon. I seem to recall seeing this elsewhere (a sage advice maybe?)
 


Saeviomagy said:
In the dragon magazine with the article on saurials, when a creature with a natural attack routine makes only one attack, it can treat that attack as a two-handed weapon. I seem to recall seeing this elsewhere (a sage advice maybe?)
As I recall, that's only when it only *has* one natural weapon to begin with. A bear with its claw/claw/bite attack can't choose to only do a bite and add 1.5 times its Strength bonus to the damage. A snake that only has its bite as an attack in the first place does get the two-hander bonus.
 

Into the Woods

Remove ads

Top