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Attacks

From bg3.wiki
Revision as of 22:08, 29 January 2023 by Taylan (talk | contribs) (→‎Value of the Modifier: Use template for ability score modifier table.)

For a comprehensive summary of the mechanics behind all rolls and modifiers, see Die Rolls.

An Attack Roll happens when the game wants to decide whether an attack will hit its target. The Attack Roll uses a D20 and can be affected by Modifiers such as the Ability Score Modifier and Proficiency Bonus of the creature making the attack.

Result = D20.png d20 + Ability Score Modifier + (optional) Proficiency Bonus

The result of the roll is compared to the Armor Class of the target. If the Armor Class is reached or exceeded, the attack is a successful hit, and the game proceeds with a Damage Roll to determine the amount of damage dealt.

Attacks done with Weapons always use an Attack Roll to determine success. Some spells also use an Attack Roll to determine whether they hit their intended target (such as Fire Bolt or Eldritch Blast), though other spells hit the target automatically (such as Magic Missile or Fireball). A spell that hits its target automatically may allow the target to make a Saving Throw instead.

Critical Miss / Critical Hit

As a special case, a roll of 1 means that the attack fails regardless of bonuses and target Armor Class. This is called a Critical Miss. Likewise, a roll of 20 means the attack succeeds regardless of the target's Armor Class. This is called a Critical Hit. A critical hit also affects the result of the Damage Roll, though the details of how this will be implemented in the finished game are not known yet.

Modifiers

Attack Rolls can be affected by Advantage / Disadvantage, by the attacker's Ability Score Modifier, and the attacker's Proficiency Bonus.

Ability Score Modifier

A bonus or penalty may be applied to the result of the roll based on an Ability Score. Which ability is used depends on the type of attack being made.

Weapons

Melee and ranged weapon attacks use Strength or Dexterity, depending on the weapon. Usually, Strength for melee weapons, and Dexterity for ranged weapons. The exceptions are Finesse weapons, where the higher one of Strength and Dexterity will be used; and Thrown weapons, which use Strength for both melee and ranged attacks. If a weapon is both Thrown and a Finesse weapon, it will use the higher of Strength and Dexterity both for melee and ranged attacks.

Some examples, to make the possible combinations of Finesse and Thrown easier to understand:

  • Using a Maul for a melee attack always uses Strength.
  • Using a Rapier (Finesse) for a melee attack uses Strength or Dexterity; whichever the attacking creature has a higher score in.
  • Shooting a Longbow for a ranged attack always uses Dexterity.
  • Throwing a Handaxe (Thrown) for a ranged attack uses Strength.
  • Throwing a Dagger (Finesse & Thrown) for a ranged attack uses Strength or Dexterity; whichever the attacking creature has a higher score in.

If you use a weapon in a way it's not designed for at all, such as throwing a Maul at someone, or hitting someone over the head with a Longbow for a melee attack, then no Ability Score Modifier is applied at all. That being said, Improvised Weapon Proficiency can negate this penalty.

Spells

For spells, the Ability Score used for the Modifier depends on the class of the caster:

Table of classes by which Ability Score they use for spells
Intelligence Wisdom Charisma

Value of the Modifier

Whichever Ability Score ends up being used, the bonus or penalty value is based on this table, depending on how high the used Ability Score is:

Ability score modifier chart
Ability score Modifier value Ability score Modifier value
1 -5 16-17 +3
2-3 -4 18-19 +4
4-5 -3 20-21 +5
6-7 -2 22-23 +6
8-9 -1 24-25 +7
10-11 +0 26-27 +8
12-13 +1 28-29 +9
14-15 +2 30 +10

Proficiency Bonus

The attacking creature's Proficiency Bonus is added to the result of the roll if the creature has the correct kind of Proficiency for the attack it's making.

For weapon attacks, the creature must have proficiency in the weapon it's using to make the attack.

For spell attacks, the creature must have innate spell casting capabilities granted by its Class, Subclass, or Feats.

The lack of spell casting proficiency is rarely noticed, since any creature innately capable of casting spells has it. The lack of this proficiency only becomes apparent when items, such as Scrolls, are used to cast spells by a creature which otherwise couldn't cast any spells.

The value of the bonus depends simply on the attacking creature's Level:

Proficiency Bonus per Level
Level Proficiency Bonus
1 to 4 + 2
5 to 8 + 3
9 to 12 + 4
13 to 16 + 5
17 to 20 + 6