Raven Crowking
First Post
Sorry if the OP only has the core books
Just suggesting that, perhaps, he was not feigning ignorance.
Happy Holidays!
RC
Sorry if the OP only has the core books
Not feigning ignorance, as I noted in my OP I'd acknowledged that there were feats for this and monster abilities that allowed it.
What I'm wondering is why the 3E designers decided that this cinematic move which everyone has seen done zillions of times in movies by ordinary folk wasn't a standard combat maneuver.
As an extension, there is no "throw" or "toss" type of maneuver that is also pretty common in movies. There is no way for a medium size creature to pick up a small sized creature and toss them across the room, or at least not in a nice little tidy subsystem wrapped up with a little bow for the players to consider.
If only the designers had gone with a more dynamic flow of movement and positioning when they laid down the keel of the system.
As an extension, there is no "throw" or "toss" type of maneuver that is also pretty common in movies. There is no way for a medium size creature to pick up a small sized creature and toss them across the room, or at least not in a nice little tidy subsystem wrapped up with a little bow for the players to consider.
Sounds neat, but at a -12 to BAB, that means my 16th level fighter would be BAB 4 to do this? Also, how do you determine if a weapon bonus gets added? If the maneuver uses the weapon or not? In that case, I would never try the bone-in-mouth maneuver because any weapon or melee type bonuses I would get would be negated.Outside of RCFG, use BAB for weapon ranks. The manoeuvre thus reduces BAB by 12, to a minimum of 0, at which a -4 attack penalty is applied. In 3e and 4e games, feats can be devised that increase your BAB (or decrease your penalty) relative to a manoeuvre.
This is an amazingly robust system (IMnsHO) and should serve you well.
Sounds neat, but at a -12 to BAB, that means my 16th level fighter would be BAB 4 to do this? Also, how do you determine if a weapon bonus gets added? If the maneuver uses the weapon or not? In that case, I would never try the bone-in-mouth maneuver because any weapon or melee type bonuses I would get would be negated.
Not feigning ignorance, as I noted in my OP I'd acknowledged that there were feats for this and monster abilities that allowed it.
What I'm wondering is why the 3E designers decided that this cinematic move which everyone has seen done zillions of times in movies by ordinary folk wasn't a standard combat maneuver.
As an extension, there is no "throw" or "toss" type of maneuver that is also pretty common in movies. There is no way for a medium size creature to pick up a small sized creature and toss them across the room, or at least not in a nice little tidy subsystem wrapped up with a little bow for the players to consider.