Can a monk's single staff be considered dual wielded, as per the Dual Wielder feat? Unicorn Meta Zoo #1: Why another podcast? Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar ManaraCan Monks gain the benefit of the Dual Wielder Feat with their Unarmed Strikes?How does the Dual Wielder feat interact with versatile weapons?Barbarian with Dual Wielder feat and shieldCan Dual Wielder be used with Tavern Brawler?Can you still hold 2 non-light weapons even without the Dual Wielder feat?Can I get the bonus AC from Dual Wielder when I have a shield and Tavern Brawler?Is the Polearm Master Feat compatible with the Two-Weapon Fighting style?What effect would the feat Dual Wielder have on a Monk primarily using unarmed strikes?Can I use main hand shield and longsword in off hand and benefit from dual wielder?Can I draw 2 weapons with the same hand (throwing one and then drawing another) using the Dual Wielder feat?

"Whatever a Russian does, they end up making the Kalashnikov gun"? Are there any similar proverbs in English?

Did war bonds have better investment alternatives during WWII?

What is a good way to write CSS for multiple borders?

Has a Nobel Peace laureate ever been accused of war crimes?

Suing a Police Officer Instead of the Police Department

Like totally amazing interchangeable sister outfit accessory swapping or whatever

What is a 'Key' in computer science?

Protagonist's race is hidden - should I reveal it?

How do I handle milestones for levels?

What to do with someone that cheated their way though university and a PhD program?

Is there a verb for listening stealthily?

Is it OK if I do not take the receipt in Germany?

Is this homebrew racial feat, Stonehide, balanced?

Coin Game with infinite paradox

Can gravitational waves pass through a black hole?

Is Bran literally the world's memory?

"Working on a knee"

Using NDEigensystem to solve the Mathieu equation

How much XP should you award if the encounter was not solved via battle?

false 'Security alert' from Google - every login generates mails from 'no-reply@accounts.google.com'

Writing a T-SQL stored procedure to receive 4 numbers and insert them into a table

Raising a bilingual kid. When should we introduce the majority language?

How can I make a line end at the edge of an irregular shape?

/bin/ls sorts differently than just ls



Can a monk's single staff be considered dual wielded, as per the Dual Wielder feat?



Unicorn Meta Zoo #1: Why another podcast?
Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar ManaraCan Monks gain the benefit of the Dual Wielder Feat with their Unarmed Strikes?How does the Dual Wielder feat interact with versatile weapons?Barbarian with Dual Wielder feat and shieldCan Dual Wielder be used with Tavern Brawler?Can you still hold 2 non-light weapons even without the Dual Wielder feat?Can I get the bonus AC from Dual Wielder when I have a shield and Tavern Brawler?Is the Polearm Master Feat compatible with the Two-Weapon Fighting style?What effect would the feat Dual Wielder have on a Monk primarily using unarmed strikes?Can I use main hand shield and longsword in off hand and benefit from dual wielder?Can I draw 2 weapons with the same hand (throwing one and then drawing another) using the Dual Wielder feat?



.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;








5












$begingroup$


If a monk uses a staff and has the Dual Wielder feat, can they use a 1d6 attack for one hand then 1d6 attack bonus for the other, plus gaining +1 to AC for holding a melee weapon in each hand?



Seems a bit much to otherwise require 2 staves.










share|improve this question











$endgroup$


















    5












    $begingroup$


    If a monk uses a staff and has the Dual Wielder feat, can they use a 1d6 attack for one hand then 1d6 attack bonus for the other, plus gaining +1 to AC for holding a melee weapon in each hand?



    Seems a bit much to otherwise require 2 staves.










    share|improve this question











    $endgroup$














      5












      5








      5





      $begingroup$


      If a monk uses a staff and has the Dual Wielder feat, can they use a 1d6 attack for one hand then 1d6 attack bonus for the other, plus gaining +1 to AC for holding a melee weapon in each hand?



      Seems a bit much to otherwise require 2 staves.










      share|improve this question











      $endgroup$




      If a monk uses a staff and has the Dual Wielder feat, can they use a 1d6 attack for one hand then 1d6 attack bonus for the other, plus gaining +1 to AC for holding a melee weapon in each hand?



      Seems a bit much to otherwise require 2 staves.







      dnd-5e feats monk two-weapon-fighting






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited Apr 5 at 21:07









      V2Blast

      27.8k598169




      27.8k598169










      asked Apr 5 at 12:50









      RikerRiker

      322




      322




















          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          14












          $begingroup$

          The Monk has to wield two staves to get the benefits you list



          The Dual Wielder feat specifies (PHB, p. 165; emphasis mine):




          You gain a +1 bonus to AC while you are wielding a separate melee weapon in each hand.




          So while the monk is using one staff, they don't gain this benefit, nor can one use Two-Weapon Fighting with a single weapon wielded in two hands (emphasis mine).




          When you take the Attack action and attack with a light melee weapon that you're holding in one hand, you can use a bonus action to attack with a different light melee weapon that you're holding in the other hand.




          With two staves, however, you can certainly benefit as you describe as Dual Wielder removes the requirement for light weapons:




          You can use two-weapon fighting even when the one-handed melee weapons you are wielding aren't light.




          Is this too strong?



          Using two staves in this way is no stronger (by itself) than any other dual-wielding combination with monk weapons, so there should be no issue.






          share|improve this answer











          $endgroup$








          • 6




            $begingroup$
            Might be worth noting that since monks already get a bonus action attack that adds their ability modifier to damage, two weapon fighting will deal significantly less damage than normal.
            $endgroup$
            – Derek Stucki
            Apr 5 at 14:36










          • $begingroup$
            And that just adding 2 to Dexterity or Wisdom instead of taking the feat will give them the same AC bonus (plus other bonuses) they would get from Dual Wielder.
            $endgroup$
            – Marq
            Apr 8 at 12:43


















          8












          $begingroup$

          It seems like your question is coming from a slight misquote; you left out an important word. The Dual Wielder feat (PHB, p. 165) doesn't say "a melee weapon in each hand", and it's very clear about what it requires:




          You gain a +1 bonus to AC while you are wielding a separate melee weapon in each hand.




          It specifically requires a separate weapon, not one weapon that you have both hands on. A single quarterstaff, no matter how you use it, is only a single weapon, and doesn't qualify.



          I'm not sure where you're getting two 1d6 attacks with a staff. Are you suggesting that a staff held in two hands would also count as two weapons for Two Weapon Fighting (it doesn't), or are you talking about the monk's Martial Arts ability to "make one unarmed strike as a bonus action" after an attack action (which would be an unarmed strike, not an attack with the staff)?



          Just to be clear, unarmed strikes aren't weapons, so they don't apply towards the "separate melee weapon" requirement. A weapon plus an empty hand doesn't work; two empty hands plus Martial Arts doesn't work; a staff held in two hands doesn't work; a weapon in hand plus a dancing sword doesn't work. You need two actual weapons in your actual hands.



          I'm not sure why you said 'two staves is a bit much' -- if you were going to do this with a monk, you'd probably want to use two smaller weapons, like nunchaku (clubs), short swords, or similar. Dual quarterstaves might be a bit silly, yes, but that's not the only option, or even the most obvious one.



          For more details on why unarmed strikes aren't weapons, see the Sage Advice Compendium question regarding Stunning Strike and the PHB errata document section marked Weapons (p. 149), as well as the errata for Melee Attacks (p. 195), which says in part:




          Instead of using a weapon to make a melee weapon attack, you can use an unarmed strike [...]




          (Since an unarmed strike is "instead of" a weapon, it clearly isn't one.)






          share|improve this answer











          $endgroup$












          • $begingroup$
            I can see where you may have gotten it, but I really don't think unarmed strikes are at all what OP is asking about. It is not a bad thing to cover necessarily, but I would recommend maybe delegating it to a side point?
            $endgroup$
            – Rubiksmoose
            Apr 5 at 14:14











          • $begingroup$
            I made some edits to make that part a little less central.
            $endgroup$
            – Darth Pseudonym
            Apr 5 at 14:32











          Your Answer








          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%2f144618%2fcan-a-monks-single-staff-be-considered-dual-wielded-as-per-the-dual-wielder-fe%23new-answer', 'question_page');

          );

          Post as a guest















          Required, but never shown

























          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes








          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          14












          $begingroup$

          The Monk has to wield two staves to get the benefits you list



          The Dual Wielder feat specifies (PHB, p. 165; emphasis mine):




          You gain a +1 bonus to AC while you are wielding a separate melee weapon in each hand.




          So while the monk is using one staff, they don't gain this benefit, nor can one use Two-Weapon Fighting with a single weapon wielded in two hands (emphasis mine).




          When you take the Attack action and attack with a light melee weapon that you're holding in one hand, you can use a bonus action to attack with a different light melee weapon that you're holding in the other hand.




          With two staves, however, you can certainly benefit as you describe as Dual Wielder removes the requirement for light weapons:




          You can use two-weapon fighting even when the one-handed melee weapons you are wielding aren't light.




          Is this too strong?



          Using two staves in this way is no stronger (by itself) than any other dual-wielding combination with monk weapons, so there should be no issue.






          share|improve this answer











          $endgroup$








          • 6




            $begingroup$
            Might be worth noting that since monks already get a bonus action attack that adds their ability modifier to damage, two weapon fighting will deal significantly less damage than normal.
            $endgroup$
            – Derek Stucki
            Apr 5 at 14:36










          • $begingroup$
            And that just adding 2 to Dexterity or Wisdom instead of taking the feat will give them the same AC bonus (plus other bonuses) they would get from Dual Wielder.
            $endgroup$
            – Marq
            Apr 8 at 12:43















          14












          $begingroup$

          The Monk has to wield two staves to get the benefits you list



          The Dual Wielder feat specifies (PHB, p. 165; emphasis mine):




          You gain a +1 bonus to AC while you are wielding a separate melee weapon in each hand.




          So while the monk is using one staff, they don't gain this benefit, nor can one use Two-Weapon Fighting with a single weapon wielded in two hands (emphasis mine).




          When you take the Attack action and attack with a light melee weapon that you're holding in one hand, you can use a bonus action to attack with a different light melee weapon that you're holding in the other hand.




          With two staves, however, you can certainly benefit as you describe as Dual Wielder removes the requirement for light weapons:




          You can use two-weapon fighting even when the one-handed melee weapons you are wielding aren't light.




          Is this too strong?



          Using two staves in this way is no stronger (by itself) than any other dual-wielding combination with monk weapons, so there should be no issue.






          share|improve this answer











          $endgroup$








          • 6




            $begingroup$
            Might be worth noting that since monks already get a bonus action attack that adds their ability modifier to damage, two weapon fighting will deal significantly less damage than normal.
            $endgroup$
            – Derek Stucki
            Apr 5 at 14:36










          • $begingroup$
            And that just adding 2 to Dexterity or Wisdom instead of taking the feat will give them the same AC bonus (plus other bonuses) they would get from Dual Wielder.
            $endgroup$
            – Marq
            Apr 8 at 12:43













          14












          14








          14





          $begingroup$

          The Monk has to wield two staves to get the benefits you list



          The Dual Wielder feat specifies (PHB, p. 165; emphasis mine):




          You gain a +1 bonus to AC while you are wielding a separate melee weapon in each hand.




          So while the monk is using one staff, they don't gain this benefit, nor can one use Two-Weapon Fighting with a single weapon wielded in two hands (emphasis mine).




          When you take the Attack action and attack with a light melee weapon that you're holding in one hand, you can use a bonus action to attack with a different light melee weapon that you're holding in the other hand.




          With two staves, however, you can certainly benefit as you describe as Dual Wielder removes the requirement for light weapons:




          You can use two-weapon fighting even when the one-handed melee weapons you are wielding aren't light.




          Is this too strong?



          Using two staves in this way is no stronger (by itself) than any other dual-wielding combination with monk weapons, so there should be no issue.






          share|improve this answer











          $endgroup$



          The Monk has to wield two staves to get the benefits you list



          The Dual Wielder feat specifies (PHB, p. 165; emphasis mine):




          You gain a +1 bonus to AC while you are wielding a separate melee weapon in each hand.




          So while the monk is using one staff, they don't gain this benefit, nor can one use Two-Weapon Fighting with a single weapon wielded in two hands (emphasis mine).




          When you take the Attack action and attack with a light melee weapon that you're holding in one hand, you can use a bonus action to attack with a different light melee weapon that you're holding in the other hand.




          With two staves, however, you can certainly benefit as you describe as Dual Wielder removes the requirement for light weapons:




          You can use two-weapon fighting even when the one-handed melee weapons you are wielding aren't light.




          Is this too strong?



          Using two staves in this way is no stronger (by itself) than any other dual-wielding combination with monk weapons, so there should be no issue.







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Apr 5 at 21:09









          V2Blast

          27.8k598169




          27.8k598169










          answered Apr 5 at 13:49









          David CoffronDavid Coffron

          40.8k3139292




          40.8k3139292







          • 6




            $begingroup$
            Might be worth noting that since monks already get a bonus action attack that adds their ability modifier to damage, two weapon fighting will deal significantly less damage than normal.
            $endgroup$
            – Derek Stucki
            Apr 5 at 14:36










          • $begingroup$
            And that just adding 2 to Dexterity or Wisdom instead of taking the feat will give them the same AC bonus (plus other bonuses) they would get from Dual Wielder.
            $endgroup$
            – Marq
            Apr 8 at 12:43












          • 6




            $begingroup$
            Might be worth noting that since monks already get a bonus action attack that adds their ability modifier to damage, two weapon fighting will deal significantly less damage than normal.
            $endgroup$
            – Derek Stucki
            Apr 5 at 14:36










          • $begingroup$
            And that just adding 2 to Dexterity or Wisdom instead of taking the feat will give them the same AC bonus (plus other bonuses) they would get from Dual Wielder.
            $endgroup$
            – Marq
            Apr 8 at 12:43







          6




          6




          $begingroup$
          Might be worth noting that since monks already get a bonus action attack that adds their ability modifier to damage, two weapon fighting will deal significantly less damage than normal.
          $endgroup$
          – Derek Stucki
          Apr 5 at 14:36




          $begingroup$
          Might be worth noting that since monks already get a bonus action attack that adds their ability modifier to damage, two weapon fighting will deal significantly less damage than normal.
          $endgroup$
          – Derek Stucki
          Apr 5 at 14:36












          $begingroup$
          And that just adding 2 to Dexterity or Wisdom instead of taking the feat will give them the same AC bonus (plus other bonuses) they would get from Dual Wielder.
          $endgroup$
          – Marq
          Apr 8 at 12:43




          $begingroup$
          And that just adding 2 to Dexterity or Wisdom instead of taking the feat will give them the same AC bonus (plus other bonuses) they would get from Dual Wielder.
          $endgroup$
          – Marq
          Apr 8 at 12:43













          8












          $begingroup$

          It seems like your question is coming from a slight misquote; you left out an important word. The Dual Wielder feat (PHB, p. 165) doesn't say "a melee weapon in each hand", and it's very clear about what it requires:




          You gain a +1 bonus to AC while you are wielding a separate melee weapon in each hand.




          It specifically requires a separate weapon, not one weapon that you have both hands on. A single quarterstaff, no matter how you use it, is only a single weapon, and doesn't qualify.



          I'm not sure where you're getting two 1d6 attacks with a staff. Are you suggesting that a staff held in two hands would also count as two weapons for Two Weapon Fighting (it doesn't), or are you talking about the monk's Martial Arts ability to "make one unarmed strike as a bonus action" after an attack action (which would be an unarmed strike, not an attack with the staff)?



          Just to be clear, unarmed strikes aren't weapons, so they don't apply towards the "separate melee weapon" requirement. A weapon plus an empty hand doesn't work; two empty hands plus Martial Arts doesn't work; a staff held in two hands doesn't work; a weapon in hand plus a dancing sword doesn't work. You need two actual weapons in your actual hands.



          I'm not sure why you said 'two staves is a bit much' -- if you were going to do this with a monk, you'd probably want to use two smaller weapons, like nunchaku (clubs), short swords, or similar. Dual quarterstaves might be a bit silly, yes, but that's not the only option, or even the most obvious one.



          For more details on why unarmed strikes aren't weapons, see the Sage Advice Compendium question regarding Stunning Strike and the PHB errata document section marked Weapons (p. 149), as well as the errata for Melee Attacks (p. 195), which says in part:




          Instead of using a weapon to make a melee weapon attack, you can use an unarmed strike [...]




          (Since an unarmed strike is "instead of" a weapon, it clearly isn't one.)






          share|improve this answer











          $endgroup$












          • $begingroup$
            I can see where you may have gotten it, but I really don't think unarmed strikes are at all what OP is asking about. It is not a bad thing to cover necessarily, but I would recommend maybe delegating it to a side point?
            $endgroup$
            – Rubiksmoose
            Apr 5 at 14:14











          • $begingroup$
            I made some edits to make that part a little less central.
            $endgroup$
            – Darth Pseudonym
            Apr 5 at 14:32















          8












          $begingroup$

          It seems like your question is coming from a slight misquote; you left out an important word. The Dual Wielder feat (PHB, p. 165) doesn't say "a melee weapon in each hand", and it's very clear about what it requires:




          You gain a +1 bonus to AC while you are wielding a separate melee weapon in each hand.




          It specifically requires a separate weapon, not one weapon that you have both hands on. A single quarterstaff, no matter how you use it, is only a single weapon, and doesn't qualify.



          I'm not sure where you're getting two 1d6 attacks with a staff. Are you suggesting that a staff held in two hands would also count as two weapons for Two Weapon Fighting (it doesn't), or are you talking about the monk's Martial Arts ability to "make one unarmed strike as a bonus action" after an attack action (which would be an unarmed strike, not an attack with the staff)?



          Just to be clear, unarmed strikes aren't weapons, so they don't apply towards the "separate melee weapon" requirement. A weapon plus an empty hand doesn't work; two empty hands plus Martial Arts doesn't work; a staff held in two hands doesn't work; a weapon in hand plus a dancing sword doesn't work. You need two actual weapons in your actual hands.



          I'm not sure why you said 'two staves is a bit much' -- if you were going to do this with a monk, you'd probably want to use two smaller weapons, like nunchaku (clubs), short swords, or similar. Dual quarterstaves might be a bit silly, yes, but that's not the only option, or even the most obvious one.



          For more details on why unarmed strikes aren't weapons, see the Sage Advice Compendium question regarding Stunning Strike and the PHB errata document section marked Weapons (p. 149), as well as the errata for Melee Attacks (p. 195), which says in part:




          Instead of using a weapon to make a melee weapon attack, you can use an unarmed strike [...]




          (Since an unarmed strike is "instead of" a weapon, it clearly isn't one.)






          share|improve this answer











          $endgroup$












          • $begingroup$
            I can see where you may have gotten it, but I really don't think unarmed strikes are at all what OP is asking about. It is not a bad thing to cover necessarily, but I would recommend maybe delegating it to a side point?
            $endgroup$
            – Rubiksmoose
            Apr 5 at 14:14











          • $begingroup$
            I made some edits to make that part a little less central.
            $endgroup$
            – Darth Pseudonym
            Apr 5 at 14:32













          8












          8








          8





          $begingroup$

          It seems like your question is coming from a slight misquote; you left out an important word. The Dual Wielder feat (PHB, p. 165) doesn't say "a melee weapon in each hand", and it's very clear about what it requires:




          You gain a +1 bonus to AC while you are wielding a separate melee weapon in each hand.




          It specifically requires a separate weapon, not one weapon that you have both hands on. A single quarterstaff, no matter how you use it, is only a single weapon, and doesn't qualify.



          I'm not sure where you're getting two 1d6 attacks with a staff. Are you suggesting that a staff held in two hands would also count as two weapons for Two Weapon Fighting (it doesn't), or are you talking about the monk's Martial Arts ability to "make one unarmed strike as a bonus action" after an attack action (which would be an unarmed strike, not an attack with the staff)?



          Just to be clear, unarmed strikes aren't weapons, so they don't apply towards the "separate melee weapon" requirement. A weapon plus an empty hand doesn't work; two empty hands plus Martial Arts doesn't work; a staff held in two hands doesn't work; a weapon in hand plus a dancing sword doesn't work. You need two actual weapons in your actual hands.



          I'm not sure why you said 'two staves is a bit much' -- if you were going to do this with a monk, you'd probably want to use two smaller weapons, like nunchaku (clubs), short swords, or similar. Dual quarterstaves might be a bit silly, yes, but that's not the only option, or even the most obvious one.



          For more details on why unarmed strikes aren't weapons, see the Sage Advice Compendium question regarding Stunning Strike and the PHB errata document section marked Weapons (p. 149), as well as the errata for Melee Attacks (p. 195), which says in part:




          Instead of using a weapon to make a melee weapon attack, you can use an unarmed strike [...]




          (Since an unarmed strike is "instead of" a weapon, it clearly isn't one.)






          share|improve this answer











          $endgroup$



          It seems like your question is coming from a slight misquote; you left out an important word. The Dual Wielder feat (PHB, p. 165) doesn't say "a melee weapon in each hand", and it's very clear about what it requires:




          You gain a +1 bonus to AC while you are wielding a separate melee weapon in each hand.




          It specifically requires a separate weapon, not one weapon that you have both hands on. A single quarterstaff, no matter how you use it, is only a single weapon, and doesn't qualify.



          I'm not sure where you're getting two 1d6 attacks with a staff. Are you suggesting that a staff held in two hands would also count as two weapons for Two Weapon Fighting (it doesn't), or are you talking about the monk's Martial Arts ability to "make one unarmed strike as a bonus action" after an attack action (which would be an unarmed strike, not an attack with the staff)?



          Just to be clear, unarmed strikes aren't weapons, so they don't apply towards the "separate melee weapon" requirement. A weapon plus an empty hand doesn't work; two empty hands plus Martial Arts doesn't work; a staff held in two hands doesn't work; a weapon in hand plus a dancing sword doesn't work. You need two actual weapons in your actual hands.



          I'm not sure why you said 'two staves is a bit much' -- if you were going to do this with a monk, you'd probably want to use two smaller weapons, like nunchaku (clubs), short swords, or similar. Dual quarterstaves might be a bit silly, yes, but that's not the only option, or even the most obvious one.



          For more details on why unarmed strikes aren't weapons, see the Sage Advice Compendium question regarding Stunning Strike and the PHB errata document section marked Weapons (p. 149), as well as the errata for Melee Attacks (p. 195), which says in part:




          Instead of using a weapon to make a melee weapon attack, you can use an unarmed strike [...]




          (Since an unarmed strike is "instead of" a weapon, it clearly isn't one.)







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Apr 5 at 21:11









          V2Blast

          27.8k598169




          27.8k598169










          answered Apr 5 at 13:44









          Darth PseudonymDarth Pseudonym

          16.3k34188




          16.3k34188











          • $begingroup$
            I can see where you may have gotten it, but I really don't think unarmed strikes are at all what OP is asking about. It is not a bad thing to cover necessarily, but I would recommend maybe delegating it to a side point?
            $endgroup$
            – Rubiksmoose
            Apr 5 at 14:14











          • $begingroup$
            I made some edits to make that part a little less central.
            $endgroup$
            – Darth Pseudonym
            Apr 5 at 14:32
















          • $begingroup$
            I can see where you may have gotten it, but I really don't think unarmed strikes are at all what OP is asking about. It is not a bad thing to cover necessarily, but I would recommend maybe delegating it to a side point?
            $endgroup$
            – Rubiksmoose
            Apr 5 at 14:14











          • $begingroup$
            I made some edits to make that part a little less central.
            $endgroup$
            – Darth Pseudonym
            Apr 5 at 14:32















          $begingroup$
          I can see where you may have gotten it, but I really don't think unarmed strikes are at all what OP is asking about. It is not a bad thing to cover necessarily, but I would recommend maybe delegating it to a side point?
          $endgroup$
          – Rubiksmoose
          Apr 5 at 14:14





          $begingroup$
          I can see where you may have gotten it, but I really don't think unarmed strikes are at all what OP is asking about. It is not a bad thing to cover necessarily, but I would recommend maybe delegating it to a side point?
          $endgroup$
          – Rubiksmoose
          Apr 5 at 14:14













          $begingroup$
          I made some edits to make that part a little less central.
          $endgroup$
          – Darth Pseudonym
          Apr 5 at 14:32




          $begingroup$
          I made some edits to make that part a little less central.
          $endgroup$
          – Darth Pseudonym
          Apr 5 at 14:32

















          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%2f144618%2fcan-a-monks-single-staff-be-considered-dual-wielded-as-per-the-dual-wielder-fe%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

          Luettelo Yhdysvaltain laivaston lentotukialuksista Lähteet | Navigointivalikko

          Gary (muusikko) Sisällysluettelo Historia | Rockin' High | Lähteet | Aiheesta muualla | NavigointivalikkoInfobox OKTuomas "Gary" Keskinen Ancaran kitaristiksiProjekti Rockin' High