How does the Savage Attacker feat interact with opportunity attacks?
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The Savage Attacker feat (PHB, p. 169) states that you can reroll a melee weapon's damage dice "once per turn".
If I used Savage Attacker on my turn, and then I get an opportunity attack when an enemy moves away from me, can I also use the Savage Attacker feat to reroll my damage on the enemy's turn?
dnd-5e feats damage opportunity-attack
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
The Savage Attacker feat (PHB, p. 169) states that you can reroll a melee weapon's damage dice "once per turn".
If I used Savage Attacker on my turn, and then I get an opportunity attack when an enemy moves away from me, can I also use the Savage Attacker feat to reroll my damage on the enemy's turn?
dnd-5e feats damage opportunity-attack
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
The Savage Attacker feat (PHB, p. 169) states that you can reroll a melee weapon's damage dice "once per turn".
If I used Savage Attacker on my turn, and then I get an opportunity attack when an enemy moves away from me, can I also use the Savage Attacker feat to reroll my damage on the enemy's turn?
dnd-5e feats damage opportunity-attack
$endgroup$
The Savage Attacker feat (PHB, p. 169) states that you can reroll a melee weapon's damage dice "once per turn".
If I used Savage Attacker on my turn, and then I get an opportunity attack when an enemy moves away from me, can I also use the Savage Attacker feat to reroll my damage on the enemy's turn?
dnd-5e feats damage opportunity-attack
dnd-5e feats damage opportunity-attack
edited 7 hours ago
V2Blast
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20.6k359131
asked 17 hours ago
darnokdarnok
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1,036128
add a comment |
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
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oldest
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$begingroup$
Yes, you can use it again on someone else's turn
As you note, Savage Attacker can be used to reroll damage "once per turn". In a given round, each creature gets a different turn (PHB p. 189, "The Order of Combat"):
The game organizes the chaos of combat into a cycle of rounds and turns. A
round represents about 6 seconds in the game world. During a round, each participant in a battle takes a turn.
Provided the creature is moving on its own turn (not on your turn), you can use this feature again even if you used it during your turn.
This is a very similar reasoning to the rogue using Sneak Attack outside their turn, as it uses similar wording.
$endgroup$
1
$begingroup$
Note that this is definitely on purpose, not an accident. The prior version of D&D (4e) had things like rogue sneak attack be once/round, and they later explicitly changed it to once/turn as they felt "being able to be nasty on an opportunity attack" made sense. This lesson carried forward to 5e.
$endgroup$
– Yakk
15 hours ago
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Yes you can
Since the Feat allows you to reroll the damage once per turn, you can indeed use it for Opportunity attacks and other attacks multiple times during a round, up to once per turn. You understood the rule correctly.
An interesting consequence is that characters who have access to the Fighter's Action Surge class feature can use it to get a second action, use that action to Ready an Attack action in a manner that triggers quickly after their turn, and get more damage out of their second action this way.
$endgroup$
2
$begingroup$
Note that you can't use Extra Attack when readying, so this move is going to be useful for only a very short amount of time.
$endgroup$
– Erik
16 hours ago
1
$begingroup$
@Erik Not necessarily, the Action surge might be from a multiclass dip from a main class that doesn't have Extra attack. I could see this having a potentially workable synergy with Sneak Attack.
$endgroup$
– kviiri
16 hours ago
add a comment |
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
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active
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$begingroup$
Yes, you can use it again on someone else's turn
As you note, Savage Attacker can be used to reroll damage "once per turn". In a given round, each creature gets a different turn (PHB p. 189, "The Order of Combat"):
The game organizes the chaos of combat into a cycle of rounds and turns. A
round represents about 6 seconds in the game world. During a round, each participant in a battle takes a turn.
Provided the creature is moving on its own turn (not on your turn), you can use this feature again even if you used it during your turn.
This is a very similar reasoning to the rogue using Sneak Attack outside their turn, as it uses similar wording.
$endgroup$
1
$begingroup$
Note that this is definitely on purpose, not an accident. The prior version of D&D (4e) had things like rogue sneak attack be once/round, and they later explicitly changed it to once/turn as they felt "being able to be nasty on an opportunity attack" made sense. This lesson carried forward to 5e.
$endgroup$
– Yakk
15 hours ago
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Yes, you can use it again on someone else's turn
As you note, Savage Attacker can be used to reroll damage "once per turn". In a given round, each creature gets a different turn (PHB p. 189, "The Order of Combat"):
The game organizes the chaos of combat into a cycle of rounds and turns. A
round represents about 6 seconds in the game world. During a round, each participant in a battle takes a turn.
Provided the creature is moving on its own turn (not on your turn), you can use this feature again even if you used it during your turn.
This is a very similar reasoning to the rogue using Sneak Attack outside their turn, as it uses similar wording.
$endgroup$
1
$begingroup$
Note that this is definitely on purpose, not an accident. The prior version of D&D (4e) had things like rogue sneak attack be once/round, and they later explicitly changed it to once/turn as they felt "being able to be nasty on an opportunity attack" made sense. This lesson carried forward to 5e.
$endgroup$
– Yakk
15 hours ago
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Yes, you can use it again on someone else's turn
As you note, Savage Attacker can be used to reroll damage "once per turn". In a given round, each creature gets a different turn (PHB p. 189, "The Order of Combat"):
The game organizes the chaos of combat into a cycle of rounds and turns. A
round represents about 6 seconds in the game world. During a round, each participant in a battle takes a turn.
Provided the creature is moving on its own turn (not on your turn), you can use this feature again even if you used it during your turn.
This is a very similar reasoning to the rogue using Sneak Attack outside their turn, as it uses similar wording.
$endgroup$
Yes, you can use it again on someone else's turn
As you note, Savage Attacker can be used to reroll damage "once per turn". In a given round, each creature gets a different turn (PHB p. 189, "The Order of Combat"):
The game organizes the chaos of combat into a cycle of rounds and turns. A
round represents about 6 seconds in the game world. During a round, each participant in a battle takes a turn.
Provided the creature is moving on its own turn (not on your turn), you can use this feature again even if you used it during your turn.
This is a very similar reasoning to the rogue using Sneak Attack outside their turn, as it uses similar wording.
edited 7 hours ago
V2Blast
20.6k359131
20.6k359131
answered 16 hours ago
SdjzSdjz
11.3k45497
11.3k45497
1
$begingroup$
Note that this is definitely on purpose, not an accident. The prior version of D&D (4e) had things like rogue sneak attack be once/round, and they later explicitly changed it to once/turn as they felt "being able to be nasty on an opportunity attack" made sense. This lesson carried forward to 5e.
$endgroup$
– Yakk
15 hours ago
add a comment |
1
$begingroup$
Note that this is definitely on purpose, not an accident. The prior version of D&D (4e) had things like rogue sneak attack be once/round, and they later explicitly changed it to once/turn as they felt "being able to be nasty on an opportunity attack" made sense. This lesson carried forward to 5e.
$endgroup$
– Yakk
15 hours ago
1
1
$begingroup$
Note that this is definitely on purpose, not an accident. The prior version of D&D (4e) had things like rogue sneak attack be once/round, and they later explicitly changed it to once/turn as they felt "being able to be nasty on an opportunity attack" made sense. This lesson carried forward to 5e.
$endgroup$
– Yakk
15 hours ago
$begingroup$
Note that this is definitely on purpose, not an accident. The prior version of D&D (4e) had things like rogue sneak attack be once/round, and they later explicitly changed it to once/turn as they felt "being able to be nasty on an opportunity attack" made sense. This lesson carried forward to 5e.
$endgroup$
– Yakk
15 hours ago
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Yes you can
Since the Feat allows you to reroll the damage once per turn, you can indeed use it for Opportunity attacks and other attacks multiple times during a round, up to once per turn. You understood the rule correctly.
An interesting consequence is that characters who have access to the Fighter's Action Surge class feature can use it to get a second action, use that action to Ready an Attack action in a manner that triggers quickly after their turn, and get more damage out of their second action this way.
$endgroup$
2
$begingroup$
Note that you can't use Extra Attack when readying, so this move is going to be useful for only a very short amount of time.
$endgroup$
– Erik
16 hours ago
1
$begingroup$
@Erik Not necessarily, the Action surge might be from a multiclass dip from a main class that doesn't have Extra attack. I could see this having a potentially workable synergy with Sneak Attack.
$endgroup$
– kviiri
16 hours ago
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Yes you can
Since the Feat allows you to reroll the damage once per turn, you can indeed use it for Opportunity attacks and other attacks multiple times during a round, up to once per turn. You understood the rule correctly.
An interesting consequence is that characters who have access to the Fighter's Action Surge class feature can use it to get a second action, use that action to Ready an Attack action in a manner that triggers quickly after their turn, and get more damage out of their second action this way.
$endgroup$
2
$begingroup$
Note that you can't use Extra Attack when readying, so this move is going to be useful for only a very short amount of time.
$endgroup$
– Erik
16 hours ago
1
$begingroup$
@Erik Not necessarily, the Action surge might be from a multiclass dip from a main class that doesn't have Extra attack. I could see this having a potentially workable synergy with Sneak Attack.
$endgroup$
– kviiri
16 hours ago
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Yes you can
Since the Feat allows you to reroll the damage once per turn, you can indeed use it for Opportunity attacks and other attacks multiple times during a round, up to once per turn. You understood the rule correctly.
An interesting consequence is that characters who have access to the Fighter's Action Surge class feature can use it to get a second action, use that action to Ready an Attack action in a manner that triggers quickly after their turn, and get more damage out of their second action this way.
$endgroup$
Yes you can
Since the Feat allows you to reroll the damage once per turn, you can indeed use it for Opportunity attacks and other attacks multiple times during a round, up to once per turn. You understood the rule correctly.
An interesting consequence is that characters who have access to the Fighter's Action Surge class feature can use it to get a second action, use that action to Ready an Attack action in a manner that triggers quickly after their turn, and get more damage out of their second action this way.
answered 16 hours ago
kviirikviiri
35k8131200
35k8131200
2
$begingroup$
Note that you can't use Extra Attack when readying, so this move is going to be useful for only a very short amount of time.
$endgroup$
– Erik
16 hours ago
1
$begingroup$
@Erik Not necessarily, the Action surge might be from a multiclass dip from a main class that doesn't have Extra attack. I could see this having a potentially workable synergy with Sneak Attack.
$endgroup$
– kviiri
16 hours ago
add a comment |
2
$begingroup$
Note that you can't use Extra Attack when readying, so this move is going to be useful for only a very short amount of time.
$endgroup$
– Erik
16 hours ago
1
$begingroup$
@Erik Not necessarily, the Action surge might be from a multiclass dip from a main class that doesn't have Extra attack. I could see this having a potentially workable synergy with Sneak Attack.
$endgroup$
– kviiri
16 hours ago
2
2
$begingroup$
Note that you can't use Extra Attack when readying, so this move is going to be useful for only a very short amount of time.
$endgroup$
– Erik
16 hours ago
$begingroup$
Note that you can't use Extra Attack when readying, so this move is going to be useful for only a very short amount of time.
$endgroup$
– Erik
16 hours ago
1
1
$begingroup$
@Erik Not necessarily, the Action surge might be from a multiclass dip from a main class that doesn't have Extra attack. I could see this having a potentially workable synergy with Sneak Attack.
$endgroup$
– kviiri
16 hours ago
$begingroup$
@Erik Not necessarily, the Action surge might be from a multiclass dip from a main class that doesn't have Extra attack. I could see this having a potentially workable synergy with Sneak Attack.
$endgroup$
– kviiri
16 hours ago
add a comment |
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