If you want to charge into battle with two swords held high, Dual Wielder 5eis the feat for you. It’s not going to make you a much better attacker, and it’ll do nothing for your action economy, but it gives you a slight edge if you’ve leanedhardinto two-weapon fighting. Shield...
Dual Wielder has a prerequisite that means your character must be level four and have a Strength or Dexterity score of 13+. It also now buffs your Strength or Dexterity by one, but you no longer get an armor class bonus when wielding two weapons. Additionally, you no longer seem to be ...
The Dual Wielder feat allows the use of non-light weapons in dual-wielding, and gives a +1 to AC while wielding two weapons. But the important thing is that Two-Weapon Fighting uses your bonus action, meaning there are many features, spells, and abilities you cannot use in combina...
[Birth] feat 1st level only May not have another [Birth] feat 1st level only May not have another [Birth] feat 1st level only May not have another [Birth] feat 1st level only May not have another [Birth] feat 1st level only May not have another [Birth] feat 1st level only May not...
The Soulknife is first to the draw in any combat that starts with weapons sheathed, and will always pass muster when patted down by a bodyguard. Just remember that they aren’t actuallyarmed,except when they’re attacking, so they can’t gain the +1AC bonus from the Dual Wielder feat. ...
In a pinch, one or both handaxes can be used as thrown weapons, sustaining your Rage on a turn that your foes are outside smashing range – or take the Dual Wielder feat for +1AC, and upgrade to a pair of d8 damage Battle Axes. ...
After attacking with Unarmed Strike or one of their order’s weapons, Monks can use their bonus action to make another unarmed strike (although this behaves a lot like an instance of two-weapon fighting, it doesn’t interact with5e featslike Dual Wielder or the Two-Weapon Fighting style). ...