What if a revenant (monster) gains fire resistance? The Next CEO of Stack OverflowWas being instantly frozen like this right, even when wearing a Ring of Regeneration?How does the Life Domain Blessed Healer work with a Spell like Regenerate?Classes for preventing damageCan a Mace of Disruption kill a Vampire with its ability?Does a Troll benefit from its Regeneration trait if it is surprised?Is the Spirit Troll unable to be knocked out unless it doesn't regenerate?Are Trolls immune to all instant death effects?What happens to a Disintegrated Troll RAW?Does the Ancestral Guardian barbarian's Ancestral Protectors feature grant resistance against spells such as fireball and toll the dead?How does the troll's Regeneration trait work?

Increase performance creating Mandelbrot set in python

What does "Its cash flow is deeply negative" mean?

Science fiction short story involving a paper written by a schizophrenic

Is it my responsibility to learn a new technology in my own time my employer wants to implement?

What is the purpose of the Evocation wizard's Potent Cantrip feature?

Can a caster that cast Polymorph on themselves stop concentrating at any point even if their Int is low?

If/When UK leaves the EU, can a future goverment do a referendum to join EU

Monthly twice production release for my software project

What do "high sea" and "carry" mean in this sentence?

Inappropriate reference requests from Journal reviewers

Does it take more energy to get to Venus or to Mars?

Apart from "berlinern", do any other German dialects have a corresponding verb?

How do I go from 300 unfinished/half written blog posts, to published posts?

What is the difference between "behavior" and "behaviour"?

How do I construct this japanese bowl?

A "random" question: usage of "random" as adjective in Spanish

Can the Reverse Gravity spell affect the Meteor Swarm spell?

Is it safe to use c_str() on a temporary string?

Why didn't Khan get resurrected in the Genesis Explosion?

How to safely derail a train during transit?

How to make a variable always equal to the result of some calculations?

How to Reset Passwords on Multiple Websites Easily?

Indicator light circuit

Help understanding this unsettling image of Titan, Epimetheus, and Saturn's rings?



What if a revenant (monster) gains fire resistance?



The Next CEO of Stack OverflowWas being instantly frozen like this right, even when wearing a Ring of Regeneration?How does the Life Domain Blessed Healer work with a Spell like Regenerate?Classes for preventing damageCan a Mace of Disruption kill a Vampire with its ability?Does a Troll benefit from its Regeneration trait if it is surprised?Is the Spirit Troll unable to be knocked out unless it doesn't regenerate?Are Trolls immune to all instant death effects?What happens to a Disintegrated Troll RAW?Does the Ancestral Guardian barbarian's Ancestral Protectors feature grant resistance against spells such as fireball and toll the dead?How does the troll's Regeneration trait work?










16












$begingroup$


As a GM, I use some revenants for my campaign. Those revenants all have class abilities and 2 are spell casters (an abjuration mage and alchemist artificer). The "problem" (it's not a problem, but an "and what if they do that?") is that they can use the Protection from Energy spell, so they can have fire resistance.



They have a Regeneration feature, with the following rules:




Regeneration. The revenant regains 10 hit points at the start of its turn. If the revenant takes fire or radiant damage, this trait doesn’t function at the start of the revenant’s next turn. The revenant’s body is destroyed only if it starts its turn with 0 hit points and doesn’t regenerate.




My question is: What happens if they gain fire resistance (or radiant resistance)?
Would they lose the weakness that prevents Regeneration from working when fire damage is dealt?










share|improve this question











$endgroup$











  • $begingroup$
    Welcome to the site! You can take the tour as an introduction to the site. Good luck and happy gaming!
    $endgroup$
    – Sdjz
    Mar 22 at 10:20






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Robin, I made a couple of edits to your question to help clarify what you are asking: I added the text of the Regeneration feature, and changed the code formatting to regular formatting for the name of the Protection from Energy spell. If you disapprove of any of my edits, you can let me know or view the edit history and roll back the edit. Welcome to RPG.SE. This is an interesting question, and I hope you get helpful answers.
    $endgroup$
    – Bloodcinder
    Mar 22 at 12:35















16












$begingroup$


As a GM, I use some revenants for my campaign. Those revenants all have class abilities and 2 are spell casters (an abjuration mage and alchemist artificer). The "problem" (it's not a problem, but an "and what if they do that?") is that they can use the Protection from Energy spell, so they can have fire resistance.



They have a Regeneration feature, with the following rules:




Regeneration. The revenant regains 10 hit points at the start of its turn. If the revenant takes fire or radiant damage, this trait doesn’t function at the start of the revenant’s next turn. The revenant’s body is destroyed only if it starts its turn with 0 hit points and doesn’t regenerate.




My question is: What happens if they gain fire resistance (or radiant resistance)?
Would they lose the weakness that prevents Regeneration from working when fire damage is dealt?










share|improve this question











$endgroup$











  • $begingroup$
    Welcome to the site! You can take the tour as an introduction to the site. Good luck and happy gaming!
    $endgroup$
    – Sdjz
    Mar 22 at 10:20






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Robin, I made a couple of edits to your question to help clarify what you are asking: I added the text of the Regeneration feature, and changed the code formatting to regular formatting for the name of the Protection from Energy spell. If you disapprove of any of my edits, you can let me know or view the edit history and roll back the edit. Welcome to RPG.SE. This is an interesting question, and I hope you get helpful answers.
    $endgroup$
    – Bloodcinder
    Mar 22 at 12:35













16












16








16


1



$begingroup$


As a GM, I use some revenants for my campaign. Those revenants all have class abilities and 2 are spell casters (an abjuration mage and alchemist artificer). The "problem" (it's not a problem, but an "and what if they do that?") is that they can use the Protection from Energy spell, so they can have fire resistance.



They have a Regeneration feature, with the following rules:




Regeneration. The revenant regains 10 hit points at the start of its turn. If the revenant takes fire or radiant damage, this trait doesn’t function at the start of the revenant’s next turn. The revenant’s body is destroyed only if it starts its turn with 0 hit points and doesn’t regenerate.




My question is: What happens if they gain fire resistance (or radiant resistance)?
Would they lose the weakness that prevents Regeneration from working when fire damage is dealt?










share|improve this question











$endgroup$




As a GM, I use some revenants for my campaign. Those revenants all have class abilities and 2 are spell casters (an abjuration mage and alchemist artificer). The "problem" (it's not a problem, but an "and what if they do that?") is that they can use the Protection from Energy spell, so they can have fire resistance.



They have a Regeneration feature, with the following rules:




Regeneration. The revenant regains 10 hit points at the start of its turn. If the revenant takes fire or radiant damage, this trait doesn’t function at the start of the revenant’s next turn. The revenant’s body is destroyed only if it starts its turn with 0 hit points and doesn’t regenerate.




My question is: What happens if they gain fire resistance (or radiant resistance)?
Would they lose the weakness that prevents Regeneration from working when fire damage is dealt?







dnd-5e monsters magic damage-resistance






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Mar 22 at 12:33









Bloodcinder

23k382140




23k382140










asked Mar 22 at 9:59









RorpRorp

835




835











  • $begingroup$
    Welcome to the site! You can take the tour as an introduction to the site. Good luck and happy gaming!
    $endgroup$
    – Sdjz
    Mar 22 at 10:20






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Robin, I made a couple of edits to your question to help clarify what you are asking: I added the text of the Regeneration feature, and changed the code formatting to regular formatting for the name of the Protection from Energy spell. If you disapprove of any of my edits, you can let me know or view the edit history and roll back the edit. Welcome to RPG.SE. This is an interesting question, and I hope you get helpful answers.
    $endgroup$
    – Bloodcinder
    Mar 22 at 12:35
















  • $begingroup$
    Welcome to the site! You can take the tour as an introduction to the site. Good luck and happy gaming!
    $endgroup$
    – Sdjz
    Mar 22 at 10:20






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Robin, I made a couple of edits to your question to help clarify what you are asking: I added the text of the Regeneration feature, and changed the code formatting to regular formatting for the name of the Protection from Energy spell. If you disapprove of any of my edits, you can let me know or view the edit history and roll back the edit. Welcome to RPG.SE. This is an interesting question, and I hope you get helpful answers.
    $endgroup$
    – Bloodcinder
    Mar 22 at 12:35















$begingroup$
Welcome to the site! You can take the tour as an introduction to the site. Good luck and happy gaming!
$endgroup$
– Sdjz
Mar 22 at 10:20




$begingroup$
Welcome to the site! You can take the tour as an introduction to the site. Good luck and happy gaming!
$endgroup$
– Sdjz
Mar 22 at 10:20




1




1




$begingroup$
Robin, I made a couple of edits to your question to help clarify what you are asking: I added the text of the Regeneration feature, and changed the code formatting to regular formatting for the name of the Protection from Energy spell. If you disapprove of any of my edits, you can let me know or view the edit history and roll back the edit. Welcome to RPG.SE. This is an interesting question, and I hope you get helpful answers.
$endgroup$
– Bloodcinder
Mar 22 at 12:35




$begingroup$
Robin, I made a couple of edits to your question to help clarify what you are asking: I added the text of the Regeneration feature, and changed the code formatting to regular formatting for the name of the Protection from Energy spell. If you disapprove of any of my edits, you can let me know or view the edit history and roll back the edit. Welcome to RPG.SE. This is an interesting question, and I hope you get helpful answers.
$endgroup$
– Bloodcinder
Mar 22 at 12:35










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















12












$begingroup$

By the rules, resistance doesn't matter



Revenant's regeneration is suppressed when it receives fire or radiant damage. Since the revenant still receives fire damage, the resistance doesn't protect it from losing its regeneration, except in the unlikely scenario where the revenant would take a single hit point of fire damage before the resistance was applied (in which case the revenant'd take no damage and therefore wouldn't lose their regeneration).



Being the GM of your game, it's up to you to figure out how you want these revenants to play out. As a general caution, many rules that applied to a monster may stop making sense after the monster is augmented with class abilities and other such new features. You've already changed the creature so I wouldn't worry about being careful to respect the original regeneration rules.



However, if you change the revenant so that it can gain fire resistance, and choose to rule that fire resistance also protects the revenant from losing its regeneration, you ought to give your players a fair idea about this and make sure they have the means to combat the revenant. They are near-indestructible without fire or radiant damage, and depending on the party's composition, the player characters might have inadequate means to fight if one of these is ruled out.






share|improve this answer











$endgroup$




















    37












    $begingroup$

    Nothing changes, except that the Revenant takes half damage from fire.



    The Regeneration trait states:




    If the revenant takes fire or radiant damage, this trait doesn't function at the start of the revenant's next turn.




    Just because the revenant has fire resistance doesn't enable him to regenerate despite taking fire damage. It makes some sense to think that the Regeneration trait is vulnerable to fire and fire resistance would cancel that out, but that's not the case, since nothing in the rules says so.



    The only case where fire resistance would allow the Regeneration trait to work as opposed to without resistance is when you take exactly 1 fire damage, and the resistance halves it to 0 - meaning you didn't take fire damage, and therefore nothing prevents the Regeneration.






    share|improve this answer









    $endgroup$




















      7












      $begingroup$


      What happend if they gain fire resistance (or radiant resistance)?




      They would take half damage from fire effects, but still affected by all additional consequences when they are included in a description of a fire spell or monster feature etc. That includes consequences based on any of their monster, race or class traits too as the target.




      Do you think they loose their regeneration weakness (that don't work if fire damage were dealt)?




      No. The fire (or radiant) damage keeps its type.



      The only way to block the regeneration weakness would be to gain immunity to fire, in which case no fire damage would be taken, and the regeneration weakness effect could not be triggered.



      However, it is quite a pragmatic thing for a revenant to use magical protection from fire if it is available. If they have resistance to fire, then either they take half damage from at least one attack per round or they regenerate on their turn. Enemies that know about a vulnerability will target it, so resistance to fire is likely to get a lot of use for a smart revenant character.






      share|improve this answer









      $endgroup$













        Your Answer





        StackExchange.ifUsing("editor", function ()
        return StackExchange.using("mathjaxEditing", function ()
        StackExchange.MarkdownEditor.creationCallbacks.add(function (editor, postfix)
        StackExchange.mathjaxEditing.prepareWmdForMathJax(editor, postfix, [["\$", "\$"]]);
        );
        );
        , "mathjax-editing");

        StackExchange.ready(function()
        var channelOptions =
        tags: "".split(" "),
        id: "122"
        ;
        initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

        StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
        // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
        if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
        StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
        createEditor();
        );

        else
        createEditor();

        );

        function createEditor()
        StackExchange.prepareEditor(
        heartbeatType: 'answer',
        autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
        convertImagesToLinks: false,
        noModals: true,
        showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
        reputationToPostImages: null,
        bindNavPrevention: true,
        postfix: "",
        imageUploader:
        brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
        contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
        allowUrls: true
        ,
        noCode: true, onDemand: true,
        discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
        ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
        );



        );













        draft saved

        draft discarded


















        StackExchange.ready(
        function ()
        StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2frpg.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f143699%2fwhat-if-a-revenant-monster-gains-fire-resistance%23new-answer', 'question_page');

        );

        Post as a guest















        Required, but never shown

























        3 Answers
        3






        active

        oldest

        votes








        3 Answers
        3






        active

        oldest

        votes









        active

        oldest

        votes






        active

        oldest

        votes









        12












        $begingroup$

        By the rules, resistance doesn't matter



        Revenant's regeneration is suppressed when it receives fire or radiant damage. Since the revenant still receives fire damage, the resistance doesn't protect it from losing its regeneration, except in the unlikely scenario where the revenant would take a single hit point of fire damage before the resistance was applied (in which case the revenant'd take no damage and therefore wouldn't lose their regeneration).



        Being the GM of your game, it's up to you to figure out how you want these revenants to play out. As a general caution, many rules that applied to a monster may stop making sense after the monster is augmented with class abilities and other such new features. You've already changed the creature so I wouldn't worry about being careful to respect the original regeneration rules.



        However, if you change the revenant so that it can gain fire resistance, and choose to rule that fire resistance also protects the revenant from losing its regeneration, you ought to give your players a fair idea about this and make sure they have the means to combat the revenant. They are near-indestructible without fire or radiant damage, and depending on the party's composition, the player characters might have inadequate means to fight if one of these is ruled out.






        share|improve this answer











        $endgroup$

















          12












          $begingroup$

          By the rules, resistance doesn't matter



          Revenant's regeneration is suppressed when it receives fire or radiant damage. Since the revenant still receives fire damage, the resistance doesn't protect it from losing its regeneration, except in the unlikely scenario where the revenant would take a single hit point of fire damage before the resistance was applied (in which case the revenant'd take no damage and therefore wouldn't lose their regeneration).



          Being the GM of your game, it's up to you to figure out how you want these revenants to play out. As a general caution, many rules that applied to a monster may stop making sense after the monster is augmented with class abilities and other such new features. You've already changed the creature so I wouldn't worry about being careful to respect the original regeneration rules.



          However, if you change the revenant so that it can gain fire resistance, and choose to rule that fire resistance also protects the revenant from losing its regeneration, you ought to give your players a fair idea about this and make sure they have the means to combat the revenant. They are near-indestructible without fire or radiant damage, and depending on the party's composition, the player characters might have inadequate means to fight if one of these is ruled out.






          share|improve this answer











          $endgroup$















            12












            12








            12





            $begingroup$

            By the rules, resistance doesn't matter



            Revenant's regeneration is suppressed when it receives fire or radiant damage. Since the revenant still receives fire damage, the resistance doesn't protect it from losing its regeneration, except in the unlikely scenario where the revenant would take a single hit point of fire damage before the resistance was applied (in which case the revenant'd take no damage and therefore wouldn't lose their regeneration).



            Being the GM of your game, it's up to you to figure out how you want these revenants to play out. As a general caution, many rules that applied to a monster may stop making sense after the monster is augmented with class abilities and other such new features. You've already changed the creature so I wouldn't worry about being careful to respect the original regeneration rules.



            However, if you change the revenant so that it can gain fire resistance, and choose to rule that fire resistance also protects the revenant from losing its regeneration, you ought to give your players a fair idea about this and make sure they have the means to combat the revenant. They are near-indestructible without fire or radiant damage, and depending on the party's composition, the player characters might have inadequate means to fight if one of these is ruled out.






            share|improve this answer











            $endgroup$



            By the rules, resistance doesn't matter



            Revenant's regeneration is suppressed when it receives fire or radiant damage. Since the revenant still receives fire damage, the resistance doesn't protect it from losing its regeneration, except in the unlikely scenario where the revenant would take a single hit point of fire damage before the resistance was applied (in which case the revenant'd take no damage and therefore wouldn't lose their regeneration).



            Being the GM of your game, it's up to you to figure out how you want these revenants to play out. As a general caution, many rules that applied to a monster may stop making sense after the monster is augmented with class abilities and other such new features. You've already changed the creature so I wouldn't worry about being careful to respect the original regeneration rules.



            However, if you change the revenant so that it can gain fire resistance, and choose to rule that fire resistance also protects the revenant from losing its regeneration, you ought to give your players a fair idea about this and make sure they have the means to combat the revenant. They are near-indestructible without fire or radiant damage, and depending on the party's composition, the player characters might have inadequate means to fight if one of these is ruled out.







            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited Mar 24 at 4:52

























            answered Mar 22 at 10:15









            kviirikviiri

            37.9k13140215




            37.9k13140215























                37












                $begingroup$

                Nothing changes, except that the Revenant takes half damage from fire.



                The Regeneration trait states:




                If the revenant takes fire or radiant damage, this trait doesn't function at the start of the revenant's next turn.




                Just because the revenant has fire resistance doesn't enable him to regenerate despite taking fire damage. It makes some sense to think that the Regeneration trait is vulnerable to fire and fire resistance would cancel that out, but that's not the case, since nothing in the rules says so.



                The only case where fire resistance would allow the Regeneration trait to work as opposed to without resistance is when you take exactly 1 fire damage, and the resistance halves it to 0 - meaning you didn't take fire damage, and therefore nothing prevents the Regeneration.






                share|improve this answer









                $endgroup$

















                  37












                  $begingroup$

                  Nothing changes, except that the Revenant takes half damage from fire.



                  The Regeneration trait states:




                  If the revenant takes fire or radiant damage, this trait doesn't function at the start of the revenant's next turn.




                  Just because the revenant has fire resistance doesn't enable him to regenerate despite taking fire damage. It makes some sense to think that the Regeneration trait is vulnerable to fire and fire resistance would cancel that out, but that's not the case, since nothing in the rules says so.



                  The only case where fire resistance would allow the Regeneration trait to work as opposed to without resistance is when you take exactly 1 fire damage, and the resistance halves it to 0 - meaning you didn't take fire damage, and therefore nothing prevents the Regeneration.






                  share|improve this answer









                  $endgroup$















                    37












                    37








                    37





                    $begingroup$

                    Nothing changes, except that the Revenant takes half damage from fire.



                    The Regeneration trait states:




                    If the revenant takes fire or radiant damage, this trait doesn't function at the start of the revenant's next turn.




                    Just because the revenant has fire resistance doesn't enable him to regenerate despite taking fire damage. It makes some sense to think that the Regeneration trait is vulnerable to fire and fire resistance would cancel that out, but that's not the case, since nothing in the rules says so.



                    The only case where fire resistance would allow the Regeneration trait to work as opposed to without resistance is when you take exactly 1 fire damage, and the resistance halves it to 0 - meaning you didn't take fire damage, and therefore nothing prevents the Regeneration.






                    share|improve this answer









                    $endgroup$



                    Nothing changes, except that the Revenant takes half damage from fire.



                    The Regeneration trait states:




                    If the revenant takes fire or radiant damage, this trait doesn't function at the start of the revenant's next turn.




                    Just because the revenant has fire resistance doesn't enable him to regenerate despite taking fire damage. It makes some sense to think that the Regeneration trait is vulnerable to fire and fire resistance would cancel that out, but that's not the case, since nothing in the rules says so.



                    The only case where fire resistance would allow the Regeneration trait to work as opposed to without resistance is when you take exactly 1 fire damage, and the resistance halves it to 0 - meaning you didn't take fire damage, and therefore nothing prevents the Regeneration.







                    share|improve this answer












                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer










                    answered Mar 22 at 10:13









                    PixelMasterPixelMaster

                    12.3k347115




                    12.3k347115





















                        7












                        $begingroup$


                        What happend if they gain fire resistance (or radiant resistance)?




                        They would take half damage from fire effects, but still affected by all additional consequences when they are included in a description of a fire spell or monster feature etc. That includes consequences based on any of their monster, race or class traits too as the target.




                        Do you think they loose their regeneration weakness (that don't work if fire damage were dealt)?




                        No. The fire (or radiant) damage keeps its type.



                        The only way to block the regeneration weakness would be to gain immunity to fire, in which case no fire damage would be taken, and the regeneration weakness effect could not be triggered.



                        However, it is quite a pragmatic thing for a revenant to use magical protection from fire if it is available. If they have resistance to fire, then either they take half damage from at least one attack per round or they regenerate on their turn. Enemies that know about a vulnerability will target it, so resistance to fire is likely to get a lot of use for a smart revenant character.






                        share|improve this answer









                        $endgroup$

















                          7












                          $begingroup$


                          What happend if they gain fire resistance (or radiant resistance)?




                          They would take half damage from fire effects, but still affected by all additional consequences when they are included in a description of a fire spell or monster feature etc. That includes consequences based on any of their monster, race or class traits too as the target.




                          Do you think they loose their regeneration weakness (that don't work if fire damage were dealt)?




                          No. The fire (or radiant) damage keeps its type.



                          The only way to block the regeneration weakness would be to gain immunity to fire, in which case no fire damage would be taken, and the regeneration weakness effect could not be triggered.



                          However, it is quite a pragmatic thing for a revenant to use magical protection from fire if it is available. If they have resistance to fire, then either they take half damage from at least one attack per round or they regenerate on their turn. Enemies that know about a vulnerability will target it, so resistance to fire is likely to get a lot of use for a smart revenant character.






                          share|improve this answer









                          $endgroup$















                            7












                            7








                            7





                            $begingroup$


                            What happend if they gain fire resistance (or radiant resistance)?




                            They would take half damage from fire effects, but still affected by all additional consequences when they are included in a description of a fire spell or monster feature etc. That includes consequences based on any of their monster, race or class traits too as the target.




                            Do you think they loose their regeneration weakness (that don't work if fire damage were dealt)?




                            No. The fire (or radiant) damage keeps its type.



                            The only way to block the regeneration weakness would be to gain immunity to fire, in which case no fire damage would be taken, and the regeneration weakness effect could not be triggered.



                            However, it is quite a pragmatic thing for a revenant to use magical protection from fire if it is available. If they have resistance to fire, then either they take half damage from at least one attack per round or they regenerate on their turn. Enemies that know about a vulnerability will target it, so resistance to fire is likely to get a lot of use for a smart revenant character.






                            share|improve this answer









                            $endgroup$




                            What happend if they gain fire resistance (or radiant resistance)?




                            They would take half damage from fire effects, but still affected by all additional consequences when they are included in a description of a fire spell or monster feature etc. That includes consequences based on any of their monster, race or class traits too as the target.




                            Do you think they loose their regeneration weakness (that don't work if fire damage were dealt)?




                            No. The fire (or radiant) damage keeps its type.



                            The only way to block the regeneration weakness would be to gain immunity to fire, in which case no fire damage would be taken, and the regeneration weakness effect could not be triggered.



                            However, it is quite a pragmatic thing for a revenant to use magical protection from fire if it is available. If they have resistance to fire, then either they take half damage from at least one attack per round or they regenerate on their turn. Enemies that know about a vulnerability will target it, so resistance to fire is likely to get a lot of use for a smart revenant character.







                            share|improve this answer












                            share|improve this answer



                            share|improve this answer










                            answered Mar 22 at 10:06









                            Neil SlaterNeil Slater

                            12k33971




                            12k33971



























                                draft saved

                                draft discarded
















































                                Thanks for contributing an answer to Role-playing Games Stack Exchange!


                                • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

                                But avoid


                                • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

                                • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

                                Use MathJax to format equations. MathJax reference.


                                To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




                                draft saved


                                draft discarded














                                StackExchange.ready(
                                function ()
                                StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2frpg.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f143699%2fwhat-if-a-revenant-monster-gains-fire-resistance%23new-answer', 'question_page');

                                );

                                Post as a guest















                                Required, but never shown





















































                                Required, but never shown














                                Required, but never shown












                                Required, but never shown







                                Required, but never shown

































                                Required, but never shown














                                Required, but never shown












                                Required, but never shown







                                Required, but never shown







                                Popular posts from this blog

                                Adding axes to figuresAdding axes labels to LaTeX figuresLaTeX equivalent of ConTeXt buffersRotate a node but not its content: the case of the ellipse decorationHow to define the default vertical distance between nodes?TikZ scaling graphic and adjust node position and keep font sizeNumerical conditional within tikz keys?adding axes to shapesAlign axes across subfiguresAdding figures with a certain orderLine up nested tikz enviroments or how to get rid of themAdding axes labels to LaTeX figures

                                Tähtien Talli Jäsenet | Lähteet | NavigointivalikkoSuomen Hippos – Tähtien Talli

                                Do these cracks on my tires look bad? The Next CEO of Stack OverflowDry rot tire should I replace?Having to replace tiresFishtailed so easily? Bad tires? ABS?Filling the tires with something other than air, to avoid puncture hassles?Used Michelin tires safe to install?Do these tyre cracks necessitate replacement?Rumbling noise: tires or mechanicalIs it possible to fix noisy feathered tires?Are bad winter tires still better than summer tires in winter?Torque converter failure - Related to replacing only 2 tires?Why use snow tires on all 4 wheels on 2-wheel-drive cars?