Dagredhel
Explorer
Say a druid of 13th or higher level gets killed, and then reincarnated in non-humanoid form.
It seems to me that she could use her A Thousand Faces ability to assume the appearance of her original body. (Unless there is a difference of +/- 50% in size, that seems well within the scope of Alter Self, the effect of which A Thousand Faces duplicates.) Even if she were reincarnated as a smaller sized creature, she could Wildshape into something medium-sized, and then use A Thousand Faces. If she had been reincarnated as a creature good ability score adjustments, she'd have the benefit of those while freely resuming her previous appearance, wouldn't she? This appears to be a way of benefiting from Reincarnation while completely avoiding any downside.
On a similar note, a regular ol' (13+ level) non-reincarnated human druid Wildshapes into a bear, and then uses A Thousand Faces to appear just as he does as a man. He keeps the physical stats of the bear, right?
Are there any official rulings preventing the scenarios above?
It seems to me that she could use her A Thousand Faces ability to assume the appearance of her original body. (Unless there is a difference of +/- 50% in size, that seems well within the scope of Alter Self, the effect of which A Thousand Faces duplicates.) Even if she were reincarnated as a smaller sized creature, she could Wildshape into something medium-sized, and then use A Thousand Faces. If she had been reincarnated as a creature good ability score adjustments, she'd have the benefit of those while freely resuming her previous appearance, wouldn't she? This appears to be a way of benefiting from Reincarnation while completely avoiding any downside.
On a similar note, a regular ol' (13+ level) non-reincarnated human druid Wildshapes into a bear, and then uses A Thousand Faces to appear just as he does as a man. He keeps the physical stats of the bear, right?
Are there any official rulings preventing the scenarios above?