Talk:Draconic Resilience: Difference between revisions
Latest comment: 13 March by Sparkle
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:Dragonic Resilience is the same as Mage Armour, they both set the base armor to 13 when not wearing an armor. However, Unarmoured Defence "adds" your Constitution Modifier to the base armor when not wearing an armor. This in my opinion should stack. [[User:RYANZKIE|RYANZKIE]] ([[User talk:RYANZKIE|talk]]) 05:47, 13 March 2024 (CET) | :Dragonic Resilience is the same as Mage Armour, they both set the base armor to 13 when not wearing an armor. However, Unarmoured Defence "adds" your Constitution Modifier to the base armor when not wearing an armor. This in my opinion should stack. [[User:RYANZKIE|RYANZKIE]] ([[User talk:RYANZKIE|talk]]) 05:47, 13 March 2024 (CET) | ||
::That's not how it works, Unarmoured Defence doesn't "add AC". Even in tabletop these are different ways of gaining AC, each with their own formula. You can't mix these formulas, only one applies. The D&D rulebook says ''"Some spells and class features give you a different way to calculate your AC. If you have multiple features that give you different ways to calculate your AC, you choose which one to use."'' This was done specifically to avoid stacking, which is part of the whole "bounded accuracy" philosophy in 5e, where all numbers are deliberately kept smaller [[User:Sparkle|Sparkle]] ([[User talk:Sparkle|talk]]) 06:41, 13 March 2024 (CET) |
Revision as of 06:41, 13 March 2024
Does not work with Barb or Monk's AC boost.
- Hi, thank you for notifying us. This is written on both the Unarmoured Defence pages and Mage Armour, so I'm not sure why it's not here. Nattern (talk) 08:03, 29 February 2024 (CET)
- Dragonic Resilience is the same as Mage Armour, they both set the base armor to 13 when not wearing an armor. However, Unarmoured Defence "adds" your Constitution Modifier to the base armor when not wearing an armor. This in my opinion should stack. RYANZKIE (talk) 05:47, 13 March 2024 (CET)
- That's not how it works, Unarmoured Defence doesn't "add AC". Even in tabletop these are different ways of gaining AC, each with their own formula. You can't mix these formulas, only one applies. The D&D rulebook says "Some spells and class features give you a different way to calculate your AC. If you have multiple features that give you different ways to calculate your AC, you choose which one to use." This was done specifically to avoid stacking, which is part of the whole "bounded accuracy" philosophy in 5e, where all numbers are deliberately kept smaller Sparkle (talk) 06:41, 13 March 2024 (CET)