Just give it to your warrior. I played a game where I wanted just ice spells for RP reasons, but most of the ice spells suck, so I just reskinned the fire ones as ice, and left the damage as “cold” fire (affected by fire resistance) so as not to affect the game balance.
Ice bolt, ice ball, ray of ice, etc.
so as not to affect the game balance
Obviously ask your DM first, but it’s worth noting that Crawford himself says that they literally just don’t take damage types into account when designing spells, so changing them shouldn’t break anything.
Of course, that’s kind absurd, but a slightly more sane take, from the homebrew community, is that damage types are roughly aligned in trios, and you can safely change damage types between the same level or worse without hurting anything.
Those trios being:
bludgeoning/piercing/slashing
cold/fire/poison
acid/lightning/necrotic
force/psychic/radiantSo a cold fireball would be fine, a slashing fireball would be slightly weaker, but a necrotic fireball would be a bit much, and a force fireball is (self-evidently) quite a bit more powerful. I use this myself, to allow casters to be a bit more thematic; at my table, when you learn a spell, you can set it to any equal or lesser damage type and reflavour it however you want. E.g. if someone took fireball, they might say it does piercing damage and flavour it as a blast of needles.
That setup only works if the Bludgeoning/Piercing/Slashing damage is non-magical - practically nothing resists magical B/P/S damage, to the point where I’d put in on the same tier as Force damage, if not higher.
I know what you mean but magical and non-magical B/P/S damage is not defined as such.
The resistance you mean is B/P/S damage from a non-magical weapon. Any source of damage that is not a weapon bypasses that.
So yeah, in the case of a needles fireball, make it damage from a non-magical weapon.
I’m sorry for being pedantic. I hate these rules too but this is how they’re written. Pathfinder 2E ends up a lot simpler if you use a VTT (Foundry VTT is amazing, and has no recurring costs).
Oh this is exactly one of the reasons my group is switching to PF2e. I got introduced to TTRPGs via 5e but there’s so much about it that irks me. The caster/martial gap, the “big 3” saves that you just have to take Resilient to make work at higher levels, that AC just doesn’t scale properly, balancing combats (especially at high levels), Rogue having a huge gap in subclass features, classes having dead levels, etc.
My group was a little trepidatious about Pathfinder 2e but Foundry automating a lot of the math has been super helpful. We’ll be starting a proper Spelljammer-inspired interplanar campaign once the remaster releases.
Ah! Exactly! When I DM, I take players requests as a challenge, and that makes it more fun for me. For this case I was a guest so I played it safe 😁
While I agree with the Steel Wind Strike being an insult to put on a wizard and none of the martial classes, this is a bad argument because pretty much every anime swordsman who would pull out a shit like Steel Wind Strike as it is written, is explicit supernatural. I get your sentiment but this is a very flawed, easy to dismantle argument.
That would be a good point if this was an argument, and not just me bellyaching. Also, the supernatural side of anime swordsmen tends to be “They studied the sword so much that they’ve got these expert abilities” rather than “they spent long enough in the library to unlock these techniques”. To my understanding, I’m not a big anime person.
Nah, a lot of the anime are having their own magic systems - chakra, nen, stands, pacts. It’s common to sometimes make mundane look like supernatural (Demon Slayer), but generally if someone teleports most anime would qualify that as a magic use.
Yeah, but there’s also plenty of magical martial arts right, like hamon? DnD wizards have a particular flavour of spellcasting (int based, using a spellbook and weird spell components) which doesn’t really fit well with stands or nen, right? Like, performing magic through sheer martial prowess rather than study and arcane research feels like something that DnD doesn’t have much support for.
3.5’s Tome of Battle, released at the end of the version’s life had three Martial Casters that hit all the anime highlights.
The book was also notorious for being broken as hell, but I really wish they’d have taken what worked from it instead of just dumping the whole idea after 4.0 was a fan flop.
Like, performing magic through sheer martial prowess rather than study and arcane research feels like something that DnD doesn’t have much support for.
It had plenty of support for that in 4e. These days only monks get to be magically martial
If a warrior can withstand the tail weapon of an adult dragon without batting an eye, they should be able to perform Steel Wind Strike just fine.
Besides, nothing in SWS is explicitly supernatural, except for the “teleport next to one of the targets” bit, which could be flavoured as “you move really fast next to them”.
That’s why I’ve said “as written”. I’m sure this was designed by people who hold the mindsets that doesn’t do reflavoring (the recent feat allowing you use deck of cards as spellcasting focus from Book of Many Things is another good example) and also thinks Fighter and Barbarian and Monk are just “guys at the gym”. Sadly same sentiments were in WotC since 3rd edition, hence why options martial should get were all given cringy anime names and relegated to new classes and explicit called magic by the text.
none of the martial classes
Classic ranger erasure.
Back in reddit days this community made it very clear that Rangers are casters to them, up to having memes about it.
I mean they are, half casters. But also it’s a 5th level spell which means Rangers get it at level 17. No one plays at level 17 so basically only wizards get it.
No one sees you hiding in the woods…
Back in 4e, fighters were explicitly supernatural
Which is the only way to stop people belly aching that they aren’t as world defining as wizards. Magic will always have a bigger effect on the world than a guy with a pointy stick.
I love Steel Wind Strike if only because it gives Bladesingers a group damage option that actually feels Bladesinger-y rather than being forced to throw out Fireballs and the like
Forced. At least it’s an option that works unlike Eldritch Knight. Don’t get me started on the double strike rules bending people pull with shadow blade and easily end up out damaging the fighter while also having free plate armor AC.
What do you mean by double strike rules bending?
Bladesinger ist just pretty broken, this spell especially.
Makes more sense for Rangers, honestly
Not the fact that you can’t push and trip people without taking an entire ass subclass?
You can always take the shove action. PHB 195.
Using the Attack action, you can make a special melee attack to shove a creature, either to knock it prone or push it away from you. If you’re able to make multiple attacks with the Attack action, this attack replaces one of them.
You only need the subclass (or the feat that gives you maneuvers) if you want to do it as part of your weapon attack.
Honestly, coming from Pathfinder 1e (where you needed a feat to use combat maneouvers without provoking an AoO) I was a real fan of 5e allowing for more use of those mechanics without paying a feat tax. It’s unfortunate that they’re rarely worth using in place of dealing damage, but that’s a seperate issue. Shoving, Disarming and Grappling are available to everyone in 5e without any feat or class investment, at least.
It was the two level dip in paladin on literally any caster that did it for me. Why ever play any other martial when you could do the same thing but with all of the narrative agency of a mage and get 10+ combat revives per day.