Hypersmurf said:
But we know that Unarmed Strike is a weapon, because it's on the list.
So I'm looking at the weapon list again, just to make certain I read it right...
It seems that even there, an unarmed strike isn't really considered a weapon. The weapon categories are Unarmed Attacks (under which is listed gauntlets and unarmed strike), Light Melee Weapons, One-handed Melee Weapons, Two-Handed Melee Weapons and Ranged Weapons. I know it's just terminology, but it seems rather significant that all the other categories are 'weapons' while the unarmed category is just an 'attack'.
Also the descriptive text for Strike, Unarmed states that it is
considered a light weapon, as opposed to actually being a light weapon.
I'd be curious as to what one of the D&D Experts, like The Sage, think about it.
Hypersmurf said:
(Which I'll also happily argue does not use an unarmed strike, but is rather an unarmed attack in its own right.)
All else aside, this sentence makes an extraodinary amount of sense.
Hypersmurf said:
That's a question for the people who wrote the rules, and who did include Grapple, but not the others.
But again, that's not what happened. Grapple is an option for Weapon Focus.
Yeah, I know, I was just grumbling rhetorically... The questions weren't really directed toward you. I just despise rule inconsistancies and rules that are needlessly complicated.
My point was that the 'special attack' rules, especially with regards to unarmed combat if all types could be improved.
Hypersmurf said:
Absolutely you can. A Disarm is made with a weapon, and therefore it can be performed 'with the same weapon' that dropped the original opponent (including a Disarm with an Unarmed Strike, if such was the weapon that dropped him).
A Grapple is not, and therefore it cannot.
Right. And that the crux of my whole arguement... Grappling is gross inconsistancy within the general rules and guidelines for special attacks. All the other special attacks are just that, actions that you can substitute for an attack. Grappling, on the other hand, sometimes gets treated as a special attack, sometimes gets treated as a completely different and unique type of action, and sometimes as a weapon. It's silly, it's needlessly complicated, and it doen't make sense.
I'm not saying that the rule don't work the way you say they do. I'm saying I just realized I don't like the way it works.
By the way, thanks for the discussion, it's been quite enjoyable. Right or wrong, it's these sorts of debates that force me to produce a better understanding of the rules, and better justifications for house rules.