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Can a monster with multiattack use this ability if they are missing a limb?



The Next CEO of Stack OverflowAre there rules for handling broken limbs or injuries?What is the definition of “hitting” when a move misses but still deals damageCan a Creature with Multiattack use it on an Opportunity Attack?Can monsters with multiattack take grapple and shove actions?Can a monster use its other actions during a Multiattack?Are Secondary Natural Attacks needed to take advantage of Multiattack?Can a creature with multiattack make more than one attack as part of a readied attack?When you polymorph into a creature do you retain your proficiencies and class abilities?Multiattack and ModifiersDoes a multiattack count as a single source of damage?Can a reaction interrupt multiattack?










12












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For example, could a Giant Ape with one arm still use Multiattack even though it is listed as "two fist attacks"?










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  • 2




    $begingroup$
    Are you the DM or a player? Why does the Giant Ape only have one arm? Are you using the variant rule in the DMG for certain attacks?
    $endgroup$
    – NautArch
    Mar 26 at 21:24










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    Welcome to RPG.SE! Take the tour if you haven't already, and check out the help center for more guidance.
    $endgroup$
    – V2Blast
    Mar 26 at 21:24






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    Related: Are there rules for handling broken limbs or injuries?
    $endgroup$
    – Ruse
    Mar 26 at 22:45















12












$begingroup$


For example, could a Giant Ape with one arm still use Multiattack even though it is listed as "two fist attacks"?










share|improve this question









New contributor




trollburgers is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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$endgroup$







  • 2




    $begingroup$
    Are you the DM or a player? Why does the Giant Ape only have one arm? Are you using the variant rule in the DMG for certain attacks?
    $endgroup$
    – NautArch
    Mar 26 at 21:24










  • $begingroup$
    Welcome to RPG.SE! Take the tour if you haven't already, and check out the help center for more guidance.
    $endgroup$
    – V2Blast
    Mar 26 at 21:24






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    Related: Are there rules for handling broken limbs or injuries?
    $endgroup$
    – Ruse
    Mar 26 at 22:45













12












12








12





$begingroup$


For example, could a Giant Ape with one arm still use Multiattack even though it is listed as "two fist attacks"?










share|improve this question









New contributor




trollburgers is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.







$endgroup$




For example, could a Giant Ape with one arm still use Multiattack even though it is listed as "two fist attacks"?







dnd-5e monsters multiattack






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share|improve this question









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edited Mar 26 at 21:00









Rubiksmoose

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asked Mar 26 at 20:59









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  • 2




    $begingroup$
    Are you the DM or a player? Why does the Giant Ape only have one arm? Are you using the variant rule in the DMG for certain attacks?
    $endgroup$
    – NautArch
    Mar 26 at 21:24










  • $begingroup$
    Welcome to RPG.SE! Take the tour if you haven't already, and check out the help center for more guidance.
    $endgroup$
    – V2Blast
    Mar 26 at 21:24






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    Related: Are there rules for handling broken limbs or injuries?
    $endgroup$
    – Ruse
    Mar 26 at 22:45












  • 2




    $begingroup$
    Are you the DM or a player? Why does the Giant Ape only have one arm? Are you using the variant rule in the DMG for certain attacks?
    $endgroup$
    – NautArch
    Mar 26 at 21:24










  • $begingroup$
    Welcome to RPG.SE! Take the tour if you haven't already, and check out the help center for more guidance.
    $endgroup$
    – V2Blast
    Mar 26 at 21:24






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    Related: Are there rules for handling broken limbs or injuries?
    $endgroup$
    – Ruse
    Mar 26 at 22:45







2




2




$begingroup$
Are you the DM or a player? Why does the Giant Ape only have one arm? Are you using the variant rule in the DMG for certain attacks?
$endgroup$
– NautArch
Mar 26 at 21:24




$begingroup$
Are you the DM or a player? Why does the Giant Ape only have one arm? Are you using the variant rule in the DMG for certain attacks?
$endgroup$
– NautArch
Mar 26 at 21:24












$begingroup$
Welcome to RPG.SE! Take the tour if you haven't already, and check out the help center for more guidance.
$endgroup$
– V2Blast
Mar 26 at 21:24




$begingroup$
Welcome to RPG.SE! Take the tour if you haven't already, and check out the help center for more guidance.
$endgroup$
– V2Blast
Mar 26 at 21:24




2




2




$begingroup$
Related: Are there rules for handling broken limbs or injuries?
$endgroup$
– Ruse
Mar 26 at 22:45




$begingroup$
Related: Are there rules for handling broken limbs or injuries?
$endgroup$
– Ruse
Mar 26 at 22:45










2 Answers
2






active

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17












$begingroup$

Theoretically, yes, a creature could still Multiattack while missing a limb



Take, for example, a level 5 Fighter that uses Sword&Board, i.e. they fight with a Longsword (or some other one-handed weapon) and a Shield. In a given turn, they're permitted to make two attacks with their Action, one normally, and one permitted by their Extra Attack feature. This happens despite the fact that they're still only attacking with one weapon, held in one hand. If this same fighter were to lose an arm, they'd choose whether to stop wielding a weapon or stop wielding their shield; but they'd still be permitted to make two attacks each turn.



Same with the ape: the abstractions of the game mean that losing an arm doesn't necessarily mean they lose one of their attacks, because the rules don't expressly say that they do.



A Counterexample



In contrast, consider the Hydra, whose Multiattack feature expressly describes it as "having as many attacks as it has heads":




Multiple Heads. The hydra has five heads. While it has more than one head, the hydra has advantage on saving throws against being blinded, charmed, deafened, frightened, stunned, and knocked unconscious.



[...]



Multiattack. The hydra makes as many bite attacks as it has heads.



Hydra, Monster Manual, pg. 190




So because some creatures explicitly stipulate how many attacks they have as proportional to the number of "limbs" (heads) they have, whereas a Giant Ape does not, it's possible to interpret these statblocks as implying that the loss of a single limb does not penalize their normal mechanism of attack.



However...



The DM is empowered to make on-the-fly rulings on this matter



I certainly believe it is reasonable to impose some kind of handicap on a creature that is missing a limb. For a Giant Ape, if it lost one of its arms without straight-up dying in the process, then I might, as DM, remove one of its attacks each round or impose disadvantage on their attacks. But this would be a personal decision, and a DM is not required to support this ruling.



This would be a lot more clear-cut if we were taking about, say, a Humanoid wielding a greataxe: they definitely would not be able to fight using their normal statblock if they were missing an arm; if I were to even allow them to keep using the Greataxe in the first place. But I would also probably allow that creature to keep making multiple attacks if they instead switched to a one-handed weapon.



So this is ultimately a situation that comes down to your DM. The DM is empowered to make debilitating conditions (like losing an arm) come with mechanical penalties; but it's not strictly required for a DM to adjudicate that losing an arm means losing one of the attacks in a Multiattack, unless the statblock for the creature expressly says it would.






share|improve this answer









$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    I think inverting your answer would improve it. 5e doesn't even define what happens when you convert someone to dust by disintegration; there are no rules that dust cannot multi-attack either. If you flipped your answer, it would stress "Tthe DM has to make a call" over "there are no rules, so it can".
    $endgroup$
    – Yakk
    Mar 27 at 15:23


















12












$begingroup$

Depends on the specific limb and multiattack



There is an optional rule called "Injuries" (DMG p272), and two of the listed injuries are relevant:




Lose an Arm or a Hand. You can no longer hold anything with two hands, and you can hold only a single object at a time. Magic such as the regenerate spell can restore the lost appendage.







Lose a Foot or Leg. Your speed on foot is halved, and you must use a cane or crutch to move unless you have a peg leg or other prosthesis. You fall prone after using the Dash action. You have disadvantage on Dexterity checks made to balance. Magic such as the regenerate spell can restore the lost appendage.




Neighter of those injuries limits the number of attacks the injured character can make. However, those optional injuries are clearly meant for humanoids and there is no general rule for what other creatures missing a limb can or cannot do. Even the Sword of Sharpness doesn't attempt to list the effects of losing a limb:




Then roll another d20. If you roll a 20, you lop off one of the target's limbs, with the effect of such loss determined by the DM.




That said, there are some cases where the anatomy of creature comes into play. For example:



A Giant Crocodile cannot multiattack if it is missing its only tail




Multiattack. The crocodile makes two attacks: one with its bite and one with its tail.




Because the crocodile can't possibly attack with something it does not have.



A Giant Subterranean Lizard can multiattack if it is missing its only tail



So long as it chooses to replace its tail attack with a Swallow:




Multiattack. The lizard makes two attacks: one with its bite and one with its tail. One attack can be replaced by Swallow.




A Giant Ape can Multiattack if it is missing an arm



So long as it chooses to make both attacks with the same fist:




Multiattack. The ape makes two fist attacks.




Because "two fist attacks" does not necessarily mean "two attacks with distinct fists".



Moreover, while there are no general rules for missing limbs, there some rules that require hands, like the rules for Grappling: a two-armed Giant Ape can doubtlessly hold a grappled foe with one hand and multiattack with the other fist, but a one-armed Giant Ape can't do the same.






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    2 Answers
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    2 Answers
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    17












    $begingroup$

    Theoretically, yes, a creature could still Multiattack while missing a limb



    Take, for example, a level 5 Fighter that uses Sword&Board, i.e. they fight with a Longsword (or some other one-handed weapon) and a Shield. In a given turn, they're permitted to make two attacks with their Action, one normally, and one permitted by their Extra Attack feature. This happens despite the fact that they're still only attacking with one weapon, held in one hand. If this same fighter were to lose an arm, they'd choose whether to stop wielding a weapon or stop wielding their shield; but they'd still be permitted to make two attacks each turn.



    Same with the ape: the abstractions of the game mean that losing an arm doesn't necessarily mean they lose one of their attacks, because the rules don't expressly say that they do.



    A Counterexample



    In contrast, consider the Hydra, whose Multiattack feature expressly describes it as "having as many attacks as it has heads":




    Multiple Heads. The hydra has five heads. While it has more than one head, the hydra has advantage on saving throws against being blinded, charmed, deafened, frightened, stunned, and knocked unconscious.



    [...]



    Multiattack. The hydra makes as many bite attacks as it has heads.



    Hydra, Monster Manual, pg. 190




    So because some creatures explicitly stipulate how many attacks they have as proportional to the number of "limbs" (heads) they have, whereas a Giant Ape does not, it's possible to interpret these statblocks as implying that the loss of a single limb does not penalize their normal mechanism of attack.



    However...



    The DM is empowered to make on-the-fly rulings on this matter



    I certainly believe it is reasonable to impose some kind of handicap on a creature that is missing a limb. For a Giant Ape, if it lost one of its arms without straight-up dying in the process, then I might, as DM, remove one of its attacks each round or impose disadvantage on their attacks. But this would be a personal decision, and a DM is not required to support this ruling.



    This would be a lot more clear-cut if we were taking about, say, a Humanoid wielding a greataxe: they definitely would not be able to fight using their normal statblock if they were missing an arm; if I were to even allow them to keep using the Greataxe in the first place. But I would also probably allow that creature to keep making multiple attacks if they instead switched to a one-handed weapon.



    So this is ultimately a situation that comes down to your DM. The DM is empowered to make debilitating conditions (like losing an arm) come with mechanical penalties; but it's not strictly required for a DM to adjudicate that losing an arm means losing one of the attacks in a Multiattack, unless the statblock for the creature expressly says it would.






    share|improve this answer









    $endgroup$












    • $begingroup$
      I think inverting your answer would improve it. 5e doesn't even define what happens when you convert someone to dust by disintegration; there are no rules that dust cannot multi-attack either. If you flipped your answer, it would stress "Tthe DM has to make a call" over "there are no rules, so it can".
      $endgroup$
      – Yakk
      Mar 27 at 15:23















    17












    $begingroup$

    Theoretically, yes, a creature could still Multiattack while missing a limb



    Take, for example, a level 5 Fighter that uses Sword&Board, i.e. they fight with a Longsword (or some other one-handed weapon) and a Shield. In a given turn, they're permitted to make two attacks with their Action, one normally, and one permitted by their Extra Attack feature. This happens despite the fact that they're still only attacking with one weapon, held in one hand. If this same fighter were to lose an arm, they'd choose whether to stop wielding a weapon or stop wielding their shield; but they'd still be permitted to make two attacks each turn.



    Same with the ape: the abstractions of the game mean that losing an arm doesn't necessarily mean they lose one of their attacks, because the rules don't expressly say that they do.



    A Counterexample



    In contrast, consider the Hydra, whose Multiattack feature expressly describes it as "having as many attacks as it has heads":




    Multiple Heads. The hydra has five heads. While it has more than one head, the hydra has advantage on saving throws against being blinded, charmed, deafened, frightened, stunned, and knocked unconscious.



    [...]



    Multiattack. The hydra makes as many bite attacks as it has heads.



    Hydra, Monster Manual, pg. 190




    So because some creatures explicitly stipulate how many attacks they have as proportional to the number of "limbs" (heads) they have, whereas a Giant Ape does not, it's possible to interpret these statblocks as implying that the loss of a single limb does not penalize their normal mechanism of attack.



    However...



    The DM is empowered to make on-the-fly rulings on this matter



    I certainly believe it is reasonable to impose some kind of handicap on a creature that is missing a limb. For a Giant Ape, if it lost one of its arms without straight-up dying in the process, then I might, as DM, remove one of its attacks each round or impose disadvantage on their attacks. But this would be a personal decision, and a DM is not required to support this ruling.



    This would be a lot more clear-cut if we were taking about, say, a Humanoid wielding a greataxe: they definitely would not be able to fight using their normal statblock if they were missing an arm; if I were to even allow them to keep using the Greataxe in the first place. But I would also probably allow that creature to keep making multiple attacks if they instead switched to a one-handed weapon.



    So this is ultimately a situation that comes down to your DM. The DM is empowered to make debilitating conditions (like losing an arm) come with mechanical penalties; but it's not strictly required for a DM to adjudicate that losing an arm means losing one of the attacks in a Multiattack, unless the statblock for the creature expressly says it would.






    share|improve this answer









    $endgroup$












    • $begingroup$
      I think inverting your answer would improve it. 5e doesn't even define what happens when you convert someone to dust by disintegration; there are no rules that dust cannot multi-attack either. If you flipped your answer, it would stress "Tthe DM has to make a call" over "there are no rules, so it can".
      $endgroup$
      – Yakk
      Mar 27 at 15:23













    17












    17








    17





    $begingroup$

    Theoretically, yes, a creature could still Multiattack while missing a limb



    Take, for example, a level 5 Fighter that uses Sword&Board, i.e. they fight with a Longsword (or some other one-handed weapon) and a Shield. In a given turn, they're permitted to make two attacks with their Action, one normally, and one permitted by their Extra Attack feature. This happens despite the fact that they're still only attacking with one weapon, held in one hand. If this same fighter were to lose an arm, they'd choose whether to stop wielding a weapon or stop wielding their shield; but they'd still be permitted to make two attacks each turn.



    Same with the ape: the abstractions of the game mean that losing an arm doesn't necessarily mean they lose one of their attacks, because the rules don't expressly say that they do.



    A Counterexample



    In contrast, consider the Hydra, whose Multiattack feature expressly describes it as "having as many attacks as it has heads":




    Multiple Heads. The hydra has five heads. While it has more than one head, the hydra has advantage on saving throws against being blinded, charmed, deafened, frightened, stunned, and knocked unconscious.



    [...]



    Multiattack. The hydra makes as many bite attacks as it has heads.



    Hydra, Monster Manual, pg. 190




    So because some creatures explicitly stipulate how many attacks they have as proportional to the number of "limbs" (heads) they have, whereas a Giant Ape does not, it's possible to interpret these statblocks as implying that the loss of a single limb does not penalize their normal mechanism of attack.



    However...



    The DM is empowered to make on-the-fly rulings on this matter



    I certainly believe it is reasonable to impose some kind of handicap on a creature that is missing a limb. For a Giant Ape, if it lost one of its arms without straight-up dying in the process, then I might, as DM, remove one of its attacks each round or impose disadvantage on their attacks. But this would be a personal decision, and a DM is not required to support this ruling.



    This would be a lot more clear-cut if we were taking about, say, a Humanoid wielding a greataxe: they definitely would not be able to fight using their normal statblock if they were missing an arm; if I were to even allow them to keep using the Greataxe in the first place. But I would also probably allow that creature to keep making multiple attacks if they instead switched to a one-handed weapon.



    So this is ultimately a situation that comes down to your DM. The DM is empowered to make debilitating conditions (like losing an arm) come with mechanical penalties; but it's not strictly required for a DM to adjudicate that losing an arm means losing one of the attacks in a Multiattack, unless the statblock for the creature expressly says it would.






    share|improve this answer









    $endgroup$



    Theoretically, yes, a creature could still Multiattack while missing a limb



    Take, for example, a level 5 Fighter that uses Sword&Board, i.e. they fight with a Longsword (or some other one-handed weapon) and a Shield. In a given turn, they're permitted to make two attacks with their Action, one normally, and one permitted by their Extra Attack feature. This happens despite the fact that they're still only attacking with one weapon, held in one hand. If this same fighter were to lose an arm, they'd choose whether to stop wielding a weapon or stop wielding their shield; but they'd still be permitted to make two attacks each turn.



    Same with the ape: the abstractions of the game mean that losing an arm doesn't necessarily mean they lose one of their attacks, because the rules don't expressly say that they do.



    A Counterexample



    In contrast, consider the Hydra, whose Multiattack feature expressly describes it as "having as many attacks as it has heads":




    Multiple Heads. The hydra has five heads. While it has more than one head, the hydra has advantage on saving throws against being blinded, charmed, deafened, frightened, stunned, and knocked unconscious.



    [...]



    Multiattack. The hydra makes as many bite attacks as it has heads.



    Hydra, Monster Manual, pg. 190




    So because some creatures explicitly stipulate how many attacks they have as proportional to the number of "limbs" (heads) they have, whereas a Giant Ape does not, it's possible to interpret these statblocks as implying that the loss of a single limb does not penalize their normal mechanism of attack.



    However...



    The DM is empowered to make on-the-fly rulings on this matter



    I certainly believe it is reasonable to impose some kind of handicap on a creature that is missing a limb. For a Giant Ape, if it lost one of its arms without straight-up dying in the process, then I might, as DM, remove one of its attacks each round or impose disadvantage on their attacks. But this would be a personal decision, and a DM is not required to support this ruling.



    This would be a lot more clear-cut if we were taking about, say, a Humanoid wielding a greataxe: they definitely would not be able to fight using their normal statblock if they were missing an arm; if I were to even allow them to keep using the Greataxe in the first place. But I would also probably allow that creature to keep making multiple attacks if they instead switched to a one-handed weapon.



    So this is ultimately a situation that comes down to your DM. The DM is empowered to make debilitating conditions (like losing an arm) come with mechanical penalties; but it's not strictly required for a DM to adjudicate that losing an arm means losing one of the attacks in a Multiattack, unless the statblock for the creature expressly says it would.







    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered Mar 26 at 21:22









    XiremaXirema

    23k268132




    23k268132











    • $begingroup$
      I think inverting your answer would improve it. 5e doesn't even define what happens when you convert someone to dust by disintegration; there are no rules that dust cannot multi-attack either. If you flipped your answer, it would stress "Tthe DM has to make a call" over "there are no rules, so it can".
      $endgroup$
      – Yakk
      Mar 27 at 15:23
















    • $begingroup$
      I think inverting your answer would improve it. 5e doesn't even define what happens when you convert someone to dust by disintegration; there are no rules that dust cannot multi-attack either. If you flipped your answer, it would stress "Tthe DM has to make a call" over "there are no rules, so it can".
      $endgroup$
      – Yakk
      Mar 27 at 15:23















    $begingroup$
    I think inverting your answer would improve it. 5e doesn't even define what happens when you convert someone to dust by disintegration; there are no rules that dust cannot multi-attack either. If you flipped your answer, it would stress "Tthe DM has to make a call" over "there are no rules, so it can".
    $endgroup$
    – Yakk
    Mar 27 at 15:23




    $begingroup$
    I think inverting your answer would improve it. 5e doesn't even define what happens when you convert someone to dust by disintegration; there are no rules that dust cannot multi-attack either. If you flipped your answer, it would stress "Tthe DM has to make a call" over "there are no rules, so it can".
    $endgroup$
    – Yakk
    Mar 27 at 15:23













    12












    $begingroup$

    Depends on the specific limb and multiattack



    There is an optional rule called "Injuries" (DMG p272), and two of the listed injuries are relevant:




    Lose an Arm or a Hand. You can no longer hold anything with two hands, and you can hold only a single object at a time. Magic such as the regenerate spell can restore the lost appendage.







    Lose a Foot or Leg. Your speed on foot is halved, and you must use a cane or crutch to move unless you have a peg leg or other prosthesis. You fall prone after using the Dash action. You have disadvantage on Dexterity checks made to balance. Magic such as the regenerate spell can restore the lost appendage.




    Neighter of those injuries limits the number of attacks the injured character can make. However, those optional injuries are clearly meant for humanoids and there is no general rule for what other creatures missing a limb can or cannot do. Even the Sword of Sharpness doesn't attempt to list the effects of losing a limb:




    Then roll another d20. If you roll a 20, you lop off one of the target's limbs, with the effect of such loss determined by the DM.




    That said, there are some cases where the anatomy of creature comes into play. For example:



    A Giant Crocodile cannot multiattack if it is missing its only tail




    Multiattack. The crocodile makes two attacks: one with its bite and one with its tail.




    Because the crocodile can't possibly attack with something it does not have.



    A Giant Subterranean Lizard can multiattack if it is missing its only tail



    So long as it chooses to replace its tail attack with a Swallow:




    Multiattack. The lizard makes two attacks: one with its bite and one with its tail. One attack can be replaced by Swallow.




    A Giant Ape can Multiattack if it is missing an arm



    So long as it chooses to make both attacks with the same fist:




    Multiattack. The ape makes two fist attacks.




    Because "two fist attacks" does not necessarily mean "two attacks with distinct fists".



    Moreover, while there are no general rules for missing limbs, there some rules that require hands, like the rules for Grappling: a two-armed Giant Ape can doubtlessly hold a grappled foe with one hand and multiattack with the other fist, but a one-armed Giant Ape can't do the same.






    share|improve this answer











    $endgroup$

















      12












      $begingroup$

      Depends on the specific limb and multiattack



      There is an optional rule called "Injuries" (DMG p272), and two of the listed injuries are relevant:




      Lose an Arm or a Hand. You can no longer hold anything with two hands, and you can hold only a single object at a time. Magic such as the regenerate spell can restore the lost appendage.







      Lose a Foot or Leg. Your speed on foot is halved, and you must use a cane or crutch to move unless you have a peg leg or other prosthesis. You fall prone after using the Dash action. You have disadvantage on Dexterity checks made to balance. Magic such as the regenerate spell can restore the lost appendage.




      Neighter of those injuries limits the number of attacks the injured character can make. However, those optional injuries are clearly meant for humanoids and there is no general rule for what other creatures missing a limb can or cannot do. Even the Sword of Sharpness doesn't attempt to list the effects of losing a limb:




      Then roll another d20. If you roll a 20, you lop off one of the target's limbs, with the effect of such loss determined by the DM.




      That said, there are some cases where the anatomy of creature comes into play. For example:



      A Giant Crocodile cannot multiattack if it is missing its only tail




      Multiattack. The crocodile makes two attacks: one with its bite and one with its tail.




      Because the crocodile can't possibly attack with something it does not have.



      A Giant Subterranean Lizard can multiattack if it is missing its only tail



      So long as it chooses to replace its tail attack with a Swallow:




      Multiattack. The lizard makes two attacks: one with its bite and one with its tail. One attack can be replaced by Swallow.




      A Giant Ape can Multiattack if it is missing an arm



      So long as it chooses to make both attacks with the same fist:




      Multiattack. The ape makes two fist attacks.




      Because "two fist attacks" does not necessarily mean "two attacks with distinct fists".



      Moreover, while there are no general rules for missing limbs, there some rules that require hands, like the rules for Grappling: a two-armed Giant Ape can doubtlessly hold a grappled foe with one hand and multiattack with the other fist, but a one-armed Giant Ape can't do the same.






      share|improve this answer











      $endgroup$















        12












        12








        12





        $begingroup$

        Depends on the specific limb and multiattack



        There is an optional rule called "Injuries" (DMG p272), and two of the listed injuries are relevant:




        Lose an Arm or a Hand. You can no longer hold anything with two hands, and you can hold only a single object at a time. Magic such as the regenerate spell can restore the lost appendage.







        Lose a Foot or Leg. Your speed on foot is halved, and you must use a cane or crutch to move unless you have a peg leg or other prosthesis. You fall prone after using the Dash action. You have disadvantage on Dexterity checks made to balance. Magic such as the regenerate spell can restore the lost appendage.




        Neighter of those injuries limits the number of attacks the injured character can make. However, those optional injuries are clearly meant for humanoids and there is no general rule for what other creatures missing a limb can or cannot do. Even the Sword of Sharpness doesn't attempt to list the effects of losing a limb:




        Then roll another d20. If you roll a 20, you lop off one of the target's limbs, with the effect of such loss determined by the DM.




        That said, there are some cases where the anatomy of creature comes into play. For example:



        A Giant Crocodile cannot multiattack if it is missing its only tail




        Multiattack. The crocodile makes two attacks: one with its bite and one with its tail.




        Because the crocodile can't possibly attack with something it does not have.



        A Giant Subterranean Lizard can multiattack if it is missing its only tail



        So long as it chooses to replace its tail attack with a Swallow:




        Multiattack. The lizard makes two attacks: one with its bite and one with its tail. One attack can be replaced by Swallow.




        A Giant Ape can Multiattack if it is missing an arm



        So long as it chooses to make both attacks with the same fist:




        Multiattack. The ape makes two fist attacks.




        Because "two fist attacks" does not necessarily mean "two attacks with distinct fists".



        Moreover, while there are no general rules for missing limbs, there some rules that require hands, like the rules for Grappling: a two-armed Giant Ape can doubtlessly hold a grappled foe with one hand and multiattack with the other fist, but a one-armed Giant Ape can't do the same.






        share|improve this answer











        $endgroup$



        Depends on the specific limb and multiattack



        There is an optional rule called "Injuries" (DMG p272), and two of the listed injuries are relevant:




        Lose an Arm or a Hand. You can no longer hold anything with two hands, and you can hold only a single object at a time. Magic such as the regenerate spell can restore the lost appendage.







        Lose a Foot or Leg. Your speed on foot is halved, and you must use a cane or crutch to move unless you have a peg leg or other prosthesis. You fall prone after using the Dash action. You have disadvantage on Dexterity checks made to balance. Magic such as the regenerate spell can restore the lost appendage.




        Neighter of those injuries limits the number of attacks the injured character can make. However, those optional injuries are clearly meant for humanoids and there is no general rule for what other creatures missing a limb can or cannot do. Even the Sword of Sharpness doesn't attempt to list the effects of losing a limb:




        Then roll another d20. If you roll a 20, you lop off one of the target's limbs, with the effect of such loss determined by the DM.




        That said, there are some cases where the anatomy of creature comes into play. For example:



        A Giant Crocodile cannot multiattack if it is missing its only tail




        Multiattack. The crocodile makes two attacks: one with its bite and one with its tail.




        Because the crocodile can't possibly attack with something it does not have.



        A Giant Subterranean Lizard can multiattack if it is missing its only tail



        So long as it chooses to replace its tail attack with a Swallow:




        Multiattack. The lizard makes two attacks: one with its bite and one with its tail. One attack can be replaced by Swallow.




        A Giant Ape can Multiattack if it is missing an arm



        So long as it chooses to make both attacks with the same fist:




        Multiattack. The ape makes two fist attacks.




        Because "two fist attacks" does not necessarily mean "two attacks with distinct fists".



        Moreover, while there are no general rules for missing limbs, there some rules that require hands, like the rules for Grappling: a two-armed Giant Ape can doubtlessly hold a grappled foe with one hand and multiattack with the other fist, but a one-armed Giant Ape can't do the same.







        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited Mar 26 at 23:51

























        answered Mar 26 at 21:56









        RuseRuse

        6,89411558




        6,89411558




















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