Iry
Legend
I'm not talking about unarmed strikes.It's under the combat section:
I'm not talking about unarmed strikes.It's under the combat section:
I'm not talking about unarmed strikes.
I didn't feel the need since I made my position clear in Post #29. I can see someone getting confused if they only read one of my posts but not the post before that, but that's hardly my fault.The person you quoted was (along with others). If you're going to quote someone talking about X and Y, and you only are referencing Y, then it helps if you clarify that rather than make a blanket comment. Otherwise people will infer your'e talking about the whole sentence you're quoting. And you said there was no other definition of what a weapon is, which there is, as i pointed out.
Yeah, you've made it clear how you feel. But guess what? Jeremy wrote the rules. So his opinion carries a bit more weight on how those rules should work than your opinion or my opinion. Do what you want at your own table, as always. But you are factually wrong when you say the rules don't work the way they do.
There shouldn't be a debate on this. We know how the rules work. The only debate is people saying they don't like it, and that's expressing opinion, not debating, since you really can't debate opinions (at least not get anywhere by doing so). I'm not going to argue with someone based on their opinion, because it would be like arguing why someone doesn't like ice cream. What's the point in arguing that?
Divine Smite and magic weapon do not, RAW, work with unarmed attacks. End of story.![]()
LOL, when, WHEN? did I ever say what I was saying was NOT my opinion?
Does it matter if you can use magic weapon on natural attacks? Nope. Not a lick.
What about using a Paladin's Sacred Weapon channel divinity on an unarmed strike? Sure! Sounds great.
And JC is just another person. Sure, he is one of the designers, but so am I, so is everyone who plays and makes the game their own. D&D doesn't belong to JC anymore than it belongs to you or me.
End of story.![]()
Here:
Because it does matter. It's against the RAW. And that's important because:
Wrong. He's the official designer. So while you can do what you want at your table, his rules matter in AL and neither yours nor mine do. That's not an insignificant difference. It's like you're acting like AL doesn't exist or something.
You seem to be not quoting the very first sentence I wrote in this thread:
"The best thing you can do is get rid of all the nonsense imposed by the 5E designers."
Sorry if I didn't include IMO with every thing I wrote thereafter.
And for me, AL doesn't exist, I've never seen it, never even heard of anyone playing it anywhere near where I live, so I don't give a fig about it.
The OP asked for clarity, and my answer was to ignore the silly restrictions placed by the designers on the game and just have fun with it.
Well, actually I said I never heard of anyone playing it here, not that I've never heard of AL. These forums were the only place however, and if no one had ever mentioned them, I wouldn't even know about AL at all.Well, that's fine you've never heard of AL, but lots of players do play in it. Additionally, it's not just AL. The rules are the default assumption how people play. Any variance is a house rule, and house rules aren't applied to every non-official campaign; it's table specific. So it's important to know what the default rules are, because it's not just AL that follows that rule, it might be the group you just joined that does as well.
Therefore, you can't just tell players it's perfectly OK to always ignore the rules because that only applies in exceptions, not the default mode of play, and they can run into problems if they join an AL game or someone else's game. "But dnd4r told me on a forum I can totally do this!"
Unless explicitly pointed out otherwise in that particular group, people should assume game tables follow the RAW.
That would be very nice. It would also help to streamline the difference between Weapons, Natural Weapons, and Improvised Weapons since... the differences are almost completely imaginary. Right now Jane could rip her own arm off and use it as an improvised weapon, which counts as a weapon when attacking with it, but only sometimes counts as a natural weapon, and may or may not count as a weapon when it's still attached to her body depending on how your DM is feeling that day.Confusion just evaporates.