Their current relationship is of passionate friendship, and Oberon values the levelheaded counsel that Titania provides him with. The two have, in the past, been alternately lovers, mortal enemies, and for a century or two even managed to be both. His most famous romance, as well as longest-lasting, has been with Titania. His whirlwind romances are legendary, wherein he may spend a week, a month, or even just a single evening passionately wooing a beautiful woman, only to leave her without warning when the mood takes him to do so. Oberon's mood changes like the wind, and is so powerful that the weather itself reflects his whims. Rather, the wild fey defer to him whenever their paths cross not out of allegiance but out of respect for his prowess, as well as out of caution. As such, he does not rule a court in the same way that Titania or the Queen of Air and Darkness does. Oberon is the mightiest of the wild fey, those of independent disposition who refuse to bow to any ruler. He is Oberon, and he is the living soul of the Feywild. He is the greatest hunter to ever live none can best him in his realm. He can see as far as an eagle, he can hear an ant's footfalls, and he speaks the language of the trees. His skin is strong and brown like oak, his long unkempt hair is tangled with vines and flowers, his antlers mingle with the moss drooping from the branches. Like Whirlwind Attack, Volley is a single attack with multiple attack rolls.Deep within the glades of the Feywild roams a being as wild as a beast and as passionate as a thunderstorm. Lead rules designer Jeremy Crawford tweeted in September 2014 that this interpretation matches designer intent: Whirlwind Attack is unusual, in that it’s a single attack with multiple attack rolls.īecause there is common wording between the two variations of the Multiattack feature and because the Sage Advice Compendium informs us that one of these two variants is one attack with multiple rolls, the other (Volley) must necessarily be treated the same way. The Sage Advice Compendium specifically allows only the former interpretation for the Whirlwind Attack feature: The wording of the rules are identical other than the ranged/melee qualifications.īoth are unclear as to whether the ranged/melee "attack against any number of creatures" is a singular attack (which targets multiple creatures), or multiple attacks against each of the creatures. In essence, a Hunter ranger gets the Multiattack ability but can tailor it to match the melee or ranged combat style they have chosen to develop. with a separate attack roll for each target You can use your action to make a melee attack against any number of creatures within 5 feet of you. You must have ammunition for each target, as normal, and you make a separate attack roll for each target You can use your action to make a ranged attack against any number of creatures within 10 feet of a point you can see within your weapon's range. That multiattack manifests in one of two ways: Either a ranged type (Volley) or a melee type (Whirlwind Attack): MultiattackĪt 11th level, you gain one of the following features of your choice. Sage Advice sets the precedent that Volley is one attack with multiple rollsĪt level 11, a Hunter ranger gets a "Multiattack" feature per the PHB.
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