2
edits
m
Both chapters in Advantage and Disadvantage are the same, just flipped. So which one works, and which not
No edit summary |
m (Both chapters in Advantage and Disadvantage are the same, just flipped. So which one works, and which not) |
||
Line 11: | Line 11: | ||
Example: You roll two {{D20}} for an Attack Roll, because you have Advantage. The results are 16 and 4. Your effective result is 16. | Example: You roll two {{D20}} for an Attack Roll, because you have Advantage. The results are 16 and 4. Your effective result is 16. | ||
Advantage is negated by Disadvantage. The number of Advantages and Disadvantages you have is irrelevant. Even if you have three sources of Advantage, a single source of Disadvantage will negate it. | Advantage is negated by Disadvantage. The number of Advantages and Disadvantages you have is irrelevant. Even if you have three sources of Advantage, a single source of Disadvantage will negate it. [Needs confirmation, because it is the same text like in {{Disadvantage}}] | ||
Examples of situations that grant Advantage: | Examples of situations that grant Advantage: | ||
Line 25: | Line 25: | ||
Example: You roll two {{D20}} for an Attack Roll, because you have Disadvantage. The results are 16 and 4. Your effective result is 4. | Example: You roll two {{D20}} for an Attack Roll, because you have Disadvantage. The results are 16 and 4. Your effective result is 4. | ||
Disadvantage is negated by Advantage. The number of Advantages and Disadvantages you have is irrelevant. Even if you have three sources of Disadvantage, a single source of Advantage will negate it. | Disadvantage is negated by Advantage. The number of Advantages and Disadvantages you have is irrelevant. Even if you have three sources of Disadvantage, a single source of Advantage will negate it. [Needs confirmation, because it is the same text like in {{Advantage}}] | ||
Examples of situations that grant Disadvantage: | Examples of situations that grant Disadvantage: |