legendary, you instead use the expert proficiency bonus. Since spell attack & DC proficiency is no longer split up by tradition, the bold section can be omitted, leaving it as "If ... you don't have the ability to cast spells, use your level..." While spell attack and DC aren't ...
one thing I’ve noticed about 2E is they have several abilities that work only on the next attack you make. I specifically thought of this in the context of Basil’s Shared Stratagem, which lets me give out flat-footed to an ally for one attack, but I dimly remember seeing a couple ...
I took a look at it, and while I def appreciated the fact that you can design such a detailed character down to the finest minute detail with that 3。5e-based ruleset, it's tough to go back to a system that everyone admits is pretty bloated。Enter Pathfinder 2e - a really solid ble...
A magic sword lets you fly and gives you super strength and lets you cast spells and turns you invisible and shoots fireballs and talks to you and blah blah blah. He said D&D (2e) was the first time he ever saw a magic sword that wasn't magical. Robespierre Jan 21, 2012, 07:19...
creature would have some ability that would render it immune to sneak attack damage anyway. The lower emphasis on Attacks of Opportunity in 2E helps with the first part of that; not sure about the second, though we’ve been running into a lot of oozes lately. Read into that what you ...
I think he was just generally joking. But even for the other spells, it was more like “if you buff yourself before you enter, yeah, that buff stays with you, but if you cast a spell on someone already inside, it’s a crapshoot whether you can actually target them”. So I think ...