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Finally, one could use the versatile tag, letting a character do a heavier version of the attack, such as slamming someone over the head with both fists clenched together, or to represent full-body attacks, such as a shoulder-check.Brand new to Dungeons & Dragons? Check out our Getting Started Thread! Learn more about our sub at the /r/DnD Wiki Get questions answered in our latest Weekly Questions Thread Find great artists in our latest Monthly Artists Thread Filters Another tag with potential is the finesse tag, allowing a character to use dexterity instead of strength as the damage bonus. Altered Unarmed Strike (3.5e Feat) Improved Unarmed Strike, Tome (3. Improved Unarmed Strike (5e Class Feature) Unarmed Strike (5e Variant Rule) 5e SRD: 4e Creatures 4e Classes 4e Races and Race Variants 4e Other: 3.5e Creatures 3.5e Races 3.5e Classes 3.5e Other. A commonly added property (though not usually consciously stated or noticed) is the "light" tag, allowing a character to give a left hook and right hook, or some variation thereof, on their turn. 5e Races, Subraces and Racial Variants 5e Other. Alternatively, damage could be set to scale with the character, dealing damage based on character level or proficiency bonus. A common variant is for it to deal 1d2, d3, or d4 damage, rather than flat 1 damage. This offers several variant options for altering how unarmed strikes work without tampering with the rules.ĭamage. Some may feel that this is either anticlimactic or too unrealistically weak, as fist fights between even untrained adults can easily be as lethal as a knife fight. The default unarmed strike is a simple 1 melee bludgeoning damage with no weapon traits. The unarmed strike itself is left vague so that any type of unarmed physical attack works the same a punch, a kick, a headbutt, elbowed in the face- whatever.

This is not the case, and there has been a revision of the PHB clarifying that the developers did, in fact, intend for attacks and the weapons that make them to be dissociated. Essentially, an attack must be made with a weapon, so a weapon was considered to be equivalent to an attack. At the time, it was assumed by this author that it was indicative of 5e's combat mechanics. The unarmed strike was included in the weapon list, rather than as a separate rule.
