It’s been a thunder spell from the druid both times. I gave her owl stats but flavored her as a very small dragon who has a fondness for polyhedral gems. Yep, she’s a dice dragon. I guess that makes my familiar my self-insert character.

  • foyrkopp@lemmy.world
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    2 年前

    When I DM, I always keep the idea in my back pocket that an enemy that has been distracted by a familiar too often will ready an attack to get rid of it the next time it is in range.

    It’ll still eat their action, might miss, and I telegraph it sufficiently that an attentive player might adapt their familiar’s behavior, but it’s a thing that can mix up combat and keeps players on their toes.

    • CalamityEmu@ttrpg.networkOP
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      2 年前

      This is the other reason I chose owl, fly-by is very convenient for not getting offed. (or would be if she ever lived long enough to try it.)

      • foyrkopp@lemmy.world
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        2 年前

        Fly-By helps against opportunity attacks, but not against readied attacks.

        Which, to me, is fair, because readying attacks requires the foe to sacrifice their main action and reaction.

        • funkyb@ttrpg.network
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          2 年前

          If I’ve got intelligent enemies with ranged attacks they’re absolutely going for that thing once it makes its utility known. Though it’s not like they generally do much with their reactions anyway.

          • foyrkopp@lemmy.world
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            2 年前

            A smart player will try to keep the owl out of LoS during most of the round, so sacrificing action + reaction for “I attack it once it comes out of cover” is the best most NPCs can do.