Hypersmurf said:The Fullblade is a 2d8 weapon that can be wielded in two hands by a Large creature, or in one hand with the appropriate EWP feat. That's a Large Bastard Sword, not a Large Greatsword.
It's too large to be wielded by a Medium creature, unless he has the EWP feat, in which case he can use it in two hands. Which, if we ignore the FAQ answer about bastard swords, again describes a Large Bastard Sword.
-Hyp.
Tetsubo said:I guess that begs the question: Acceptable by whom?
I've banned the Spiked Chain in every game I've run. I would also not use it as a player. It has no basis in reality. (I am aware that there are real world chain weapons. But none of them do everything that a SC does. This has been argued to death...) It appears to be a weapon designed by the game writers to take advantage of the games mechanics. That sort of meta-gaming bugs me to no end...
The two-bladed sword at least has a passing resemblance to reality. There really are weapons out here in the world that have shafts and dangerous bits on both ends. Mostly esoteric Chinese martial arts weapons but they do exist, have been used and are still in use. So the two-bladed sword is OK in my book. Odd and not a choice I would make as a player but acceptable.
Not really, as long as the "It's magic" excuse is only applied to magic effects and the only "hand waving" is for somatic components.Shin Okada said:It is hard to talk about reality and realism in sword and sorcery world.
RigaMortus2 said:What does "reality" and "the real world" have to do with anything in D&D? Might as well ban magic and monsters too, no?
frankthedm said:Not really, as long as the "It's magic" excuse is only applied to magic effects and the only "hand waving" is for somatic components.![]()
Large size (or having enlarge cast on you) greatly improves the effectiveness of monkey-grip. However, you could also use monkey-grip to say, wield a gargantuan sunblade (medium PC's can normally wield a huge ones), increasing the damage from 3d8 to 4d8.Question said:Is it just me or is this feat only useful for PCs that are at least large sized?
mvincent said:However, you could also use monkey-grip to say, wield a gargantuan sunblade (medium PC's can normally wield a huge ones), increasing the damage from 3d8 to 4d8.
mvincent said:...However, you could also use monkey-grip to say, wield a gargantuan sunblade...
Depending on your DM, yes you certainly could.Hypersmurf said:No, you can't.
While that is the literal interpretation of the feat, the intent of the writer here can also be reasonably interpreted a bit more openly. Hopefully you can already see that side... i.e. many would consider the writer's intent to allow it to assist in wielding a huge longsword similarly to how it assists one to wield a large greatsword.neither of them are weapons designed for a creature one size larger than himself, and the feat therefore has no effect. (They are weapons designed for a creature two or three sizes larger respectively.)