![]() It is our intent to work within this license in good faith. If you see any page that contains SRD material and does not show this license statement, please contact an admin so that this license statement can be added. To distinguish it, these items will have this notice. It is covered by the Open Game License v1.0a, rather than the GNU Free Documentation License 1.3. This is part of the (3.5e) Revised System Reference Document. If you do not wield it, the weapon behaves as if unaffected by this spell.īack to Main Page → 3.5e Open Game Content → System Reference Document → Spells Open Game Content ( place problems on the discussion page). Popular attractions Coollattin Golf Club and Tinahely Courthouse Arts. Enjoy free WiFi, free parking and a kitchen. These effects only occur when the weapon is wielded by you. Stay at this 3.5-star cottage in Shillelagh. (A quarterstaff gains this enhancement for both ends of the weapon.) It deals damage as if it were two size categories larger (a Small club or quarterstaff so transmuted deals 1d8 points of damage, a Medium 2d6, and a Large 3d6), +1 for its enhancement bonus. Your own nonmagical club or quarterstaff becomes a weapon with a +1 enhancement bonus on attack and damage rolls. For the duration, you can use your spellcasting ability instead of. One touched nonmagical oak club or quarterstaff For the duration, you can use your spellcasting ability instead of Strength for the attack and damage rolls of melee attacks using that weapon, and the weapons. The wood of a club or quarterstaff you are holding is imbued with natures power. Thompson's private collection, the Blackthorn Shillelagh mimics the look, feel and balance of the original, but made from high-impact polymer that will withstand even the harshest weather conditions. Modeled after an ancient cudgel in Lynn C. ![]() In fact, because they list the shortspear and spear separately I would have thought it was obvious that Druids are not proficient in long spears, or more generally all spears.This material is published under the OGL 1.0a. A shorter, lighter model that we simply named the Blackthorn Shillelagh. So no, they are no proficient with the long spear, the boar spear, or the weighted spear or any other type of spear unless listed in the proficiency statement for the class (like the shortspear). Magic oils are similar to potions, except that oils are applied externally rather than imbibed. They mean specifically the thing that says spear on the equipment table. Leprechaun Shillelagh (3.5e Equipment) The Leprechaun shillelagh is a Small weapon, resembling a longer, thinner club, or a shorter, thicker quarterstaff. A potion is a magic liquid that produces its effect when imbibed. When the druid entry says proficient with spear, they don't mean all spear weapons or spear like weapons or weapons with spear in the name. (Though there is a specific example of Tengu's swordtrained, but that is an obvious exception). The is no such thing as being proficient in "spears" as a category. There are no weapon categories for proficiency except simple, martial exotic and for determining things related to the Fighter class weapon training (and a few other very niche examples). Shadowlords wrote: Wait so druids can not use a long spear, or a boar spear or a weighted spear, because they are not specifically called out as proficient with them, do they not fall under the spear category? It helps cut down on MADness quite a bit. I use Shillelagh a lot in Gish-type builds, if I can squeeze it in. Likewise, in a campaign with heavy use of the Tree stride spell, oak trees can serve as portals and would likely be more restricted in placement. For example, you can cast Shillelagh, and use Extra Attack with the new Wis-based weapon, or stack Smite onto it, use it to deliver BB/GFB, or apply Shillelagh to your Pact Blade and get Life Drinker damage on top. In most situations, having every wooden item you own and every tree you encounter being oak, won't actually create any issues.īasically, the logic is that the GM can give you a spruce club, should the shillelagh club be more than they intended to give you. Again, I think this is more a GM plot device/balance option. ![]() The tree stride spell, also varies by wood type. It doesn't target "an oak club, or a quarterstaff."Īnd as for getting oak, I've always assumed that the idea was that you could pick normal wood types when you buy the item, but the oak restriction is just there for the GM to have a way to limit the spell if it becomes problematic or if they want to add a plot device. On a side note, using proper English, the quarterstaff has to be oak too. Though that said, if you do allow clubs to include greatclubs, then can druid use a longspear? I think the intention is likely that only normal clubs qualify, so if you want the greatclub damage, you'll have to take the -2 attack roll for an oversized club. Mechanically, the medium greatclub is a large club without the size penalty. Seems silly that a greatclub wouldn't be allowed, but club one size too large would.
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