Difference between revisions of "Incidental Damage"
From The Authentic D&D Wiki
Jump to navigationJump to searchTao alexis (talk | contribs) |
Tao alexis (talk | contribs) |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
− | '''Incidental damage''' describes the unintended or accidental harm caused by monsters that are considerably larger in size than humanoid combatants. Due to their size and strength, as these creatures whirl and attack, their large limbs and appendages come into random contact with their opponents, causing [[Damage (hit points)|damage]]. With excessively-sized monsters, incidental damage can wipe out whole contingents of low-calibre combatants in a brief span of time. | + | [[File:Incidental Damage.jpg|right|490px|thumb]] |
+ | '''Incidental damage''' describes the unintended or accidental harm caused by monsters that are considerably larger in size than humanoid combatants. Due to their size and strength, as these creatures whirl and attack, their large limbs and appendages come into random contact with their opponents, causing [[Damage (hit points)|damage]]. With excessively-sized monsters, incidental damage can wipe out whole contingents of low-calibre combatants in a brief span of time. In some cases, damage results from the debris that's being thrown about by the monster's movements. |
Revision as of 17:12, 16 August 2023
Incidental damage describes the unintended or accidental harm caused by monsters that are considerably larger in size than humanoid combatants. Due to their size and strength, as these creatures whirl and attack, their large limbs and appendages come into random contact with their opponents, causing damage. With excessively-sized monsters, incidental damage can wipe out whole contingents of low-calibre combatants in a brief span of time. In some cases, damage results from the debris that's being thrown about by the monster's movements.