erik542 |
The wording in the core rule book says that if you are allowed to act during the surprise round, you may take a standard or a move action (plus free actions).
How do swift actions work? Can you only take one instead of your standard or move action, or in addition to it?
Thanks
I've always played it counting as essentially a full round.
reefwood |
The wording in the core rule book says that if you are allowed to act during the surprise round, you may take a standard or a move action (plus free actions).
How do swift actions work? Can you only take one instead of your standard or move action, or in addition to it?
Thanks
My initial reaction was to answer YES, but after reading the rules, I'm not sure.
I believe 3.5 described a swift action as a free action that can only happen on your turn. As a type of free action in 3.5, it would seem fine to use a swift action during a surprise round (keeping in mind that only so many free actions can be performed as per DM discretion... so 1 swift action and 4 other free actions might be a bit much depending on what they are...anyway...).
However, the Pathfinder rules say:
Swift Action: A swift action consumes a very small amount of time, but represents a larger expenditure of effort and energy than a free action. You can perform only a single swift action per turn.
Seems like a swift action is no longer a type of free action. Seems more like it has become an action that falls into between the time/effort of a move action vs free action.
I want to say that you can take a swift action, in addition to a move or standard action, during a surprise round, but the rules having me thinking NO.
Also, I noticed another potential change from 3.5. In 3.5, you could always use an "easier" action in place of a more difficult action. Instead of taking a standard action and move action and swift action, you could take 2 move actions and a swift action, or you could take 3 swift actions (unless I am remembering incorrectly?).
However, in Pathfinder, it seems like you can only take a move action in place of a standard action, and you cannot take an additional swift action in place of a standard action or move action:
Action Types
In a normal round, you can perform a standard action and a move action, or you can perform a full-round action. You can also perform one swift action and one or more free actions. You can always take a move action in place of a standard action.
Swift Actions
A swift action consumes a very small amount of time, but represents a larger expenditure of effort than a free action. You can perform one swift action per turn without affecting your ability to perform other actions. In that regard, a swift action is like a free action. You can, however, perform only one single swift action per turn, regardless of what other actions you take. You can take a swift action anytime you would normally be allowed to take a free action. Swift actions usually involve spellcasting, activating a feat, or the activation of magic items.
Trainwreck |
Hmmm...
So I guess there are potentially two questions:
1. Can you perform a swift action in addition to your standard or move action during a surprise round?
and
2. If you cannot, would you be able to perform a swift action instead of your standard or move action?
Is there any consensus on this issue, or is it just something each group needs to decide for themselves?
Shoga |
You can only do swift/immediate/free actions if you can do a move action.
Different type of actions are allowed during a turn.. as follows:
Free actions: roughly 2 free actions allowed.. short sentences..etc
Immediate action: you can do this anytime but if you use a immediate action, you can't use a swift action. and only once a turn.
Swift action: use this only on your turn but you can't do an immediate action and only once a turn.
Move action: you can get up to 2 move actions by trading in your standard action.
Standard action: can be traded for a move.
Full Round action: takes up a move and a standard.
Knoebel |
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The rules are vague on this. However the only difference between a free action and a swift action is that it consumes more energy so you can only take one, but it consumes the same amount of time.
Swift ActionsA swift action consumes a very small amount of time, but represents a larger expenditure of effort than a free action. You can perform one swift action per turn without affecting your ability to perform other actions. In that regard, a swift action is like a free action. You can, however, perform only one single swift action per turn, regardless of what other actions you take. You can take a swift action anytime you would normally be allowed to take a free action. Swift actions usually involve spellcasting, activating a feat, or the activation of magic items.
And given that you can take a swift action whenever you can take a free action, I would say yes.
The Surprise Round:If some but not all of the combatants are aware of their opponents, a surprise round happens before regular rounds begin. In initiative order (highest to lowest), combatants who started the battle aware of their opponents each take a standard or move action during the surprise round. You can also take free actions during the surprise round. If no one or everyone is surprised, no surprise round occurs.
Gauss |
Shoga, do you have any citations for your statement regarding Free Actions? If we followed your statement then it would mean that an archer cannot fire more than 2 arrows per round. It also means that people with quickdraw would be limited to 2 drawn weapons per round.
Simply put, there is no actual rule limiting the number of free actions. There is a vague statement where the GM should put the brakes on the number of free actions if it gets ridiculous. Specifically, speaking should be limited to a sentence or two as a free action.
- Gauss
Alcomus |
Found this little gem, here's a RAW reference that will make things as clear as mud:
Ambush - At 4th level, a bandit becomes fully practiced in the art of ambushing. When she acts in the surprise round, she can take a move action, standard action, and swift action during the surprise round, not just a move or standard action. This ability replaces uncanny dodge.
Emphasis mine.
I would call that proof that you can't take a swift during a surprise round, but that's just me.
magnuskn |
My personal interpretation is that you can take your standard/move action and a swift action during the round. That's at least how we play it in the two rounds I am in ( with two completely different sets of players, aside from myself ).
Are |
The bandit ambush ability allows you to take all three during a single surprise round ("and", not "or").
Any other character has to choose between standard and move, but gets to add a free action (which can be swift, as Knoebel pointed out).
I must admit that until I read Knoebel's post, I was in the "no swift actions" camp.
MechE_ |
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In some situations, you may be unable to take a full round's worth of actions. In such cases, you are restricted to taking only a single standard action or a single move action (plus free and swift actions as normal). You can't take a full-round action (though you can start or complete a full-round action by using a standard action; see below).
To me, the above "restricted activity" section is exactly what a surprise round is, and the bolded section tells me that you should get a swift action on a round that you only get a single standard or move action.
Also, the concept of downgrading anything to a swift action is something that I believe came from 4th edition. I, personally, have been allowing it for my current campaign as I unintentionally house-ruled it for the first half of the game and don't want to change it. It is, however, not the rules as written and I won't allow it in the future.
A swift action consumes a very small amount of time, but represents a larger expenditure of effort and energy than a free action. You can perform only a single swift action per turn.
Gauss |
Alcomus, the presence of an enabling line should not be taken as proof that you could not do that thing. ESPECIALLY when something else clearly states you can do it. Just look at the Prone Shooter feat sometime. Before they FAQ'd it it granted something that everyone already had.
MechE is correct, you can take a swift action in addition to a standard or a move action during a surprise round.
- Gauss
DM_Blake |
My 2 cents:
No!
You get ONE standard action and 1-2 free actions.
This can be 'downgraded' to ONE move, or ONE swift.
I'm not sure I'd trade a plug nickel for your "2 cents". In other words, it's wrong.
There is no limit of "1-2 free actions". It is suggested that a GM can limit free actions, but that is up to the GM; there is no rule for it.
And while a standard action can be swapped for a move action (but not the other way around), no action can be swapped for a swift action.
DM_Blake |
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Found this little gem, here's a RAW reference that will make things as clear as mud:
Bandit Rogue Archetype wrote:Ambush - At 4th level, a bandit becomes fully practiced in the art of ambushing. When she acts in the surprise round, she can take a move action, standard action, and swift action during the surprise round, not just a move or standard action. This ability replaces uncanny dodge.Emphasis mine.
I would call that proof that you can't take a swift during a surprise round, but that's just me.
This is an all-too-common error on these forums.
There MUST be a rule somewhere. Game rules are not about reading 20 books and 100 supplements and memorizing every page to find some little call out in some obscure archetype that casually mentions a core mechanic that we're all expected to know and follow.
That's not game design. That isn't even design. Or game.
This "little gem" is an offhand reference that some dev added, more as fluff than anything else. The bolded part clarifies that this flavor of rogue can take a Move AND Standard action in the surprise round. In the first bit it mentions Swift actions, in the second bit it doesn't, but this is more likely just unclear writing than an actual stab at creating a core mechanic for the game.
Why?
Because no sane, intelligent developer would expect that a fluff description of a class ability of a corner-case archetype of one class in an optional source book is the correct place to define core game mechanics.
MeanMutton |
Alcomus wrote:Found this little gem, here's a RAW reference that will make things as clear as mud:
Bandit Rogue Archetype wrote:Ambush - At 4th level, a bandit becomes fully practiced in the art of ambushing. When she acts in the surprise round, she can take a move action, standard action, and swift action during the surprise round, not just a move or standard action. This ability replaces uncanny dodge.Emphasis mine.
I would call that proof that you can't take a swift during a surprise round, but that's just me.
This is an all-too-common error on these forums.
There MUST be a rule somewhere. Game rules are not about reading 20 books and 100 supplements and memorizing every page to find some little call out in some obscure archetype that casually mentions a core mechanic that we're all expected to know and follow.
That's not game design. That isn't even design. Or game.
This "little gem" is an offhand reference that some dev added, more as fluff than anything else. The bolded part clarifies that this flavor of rogue can take a Move AND Standard action in the surprise round. In the first bit it mentions Swift actions, in the second bit it doesn't, but this is more likely just unclear writing than an actual stab at creating a core mechanic for the game.
Why?
Because no sane, intelligent developer would expect that a fluff description of a class ability of a corner-case archetype of one class in an optional source book is the correct place to define core game mechanics.
This doesn't look to me like they're defining it, just restating the rules about a surprise round which state that you can only take a move action or standard action plus free actions:
The Surprise Round:
If some but not all of the combatants are aware of their opponents, a surprise round happens before regular rounds begin. In initiative order (highest to lowest), combatants who started the battle aware of their opponents each take a standard or move action during the surprise round. You can also take free actions during the surprise round. If no one or everyone is surprised, no surprise round occurs.
kestral287 |
Berinor wrote:Note to DM Blake - the people you're arguing with haven't posted in this thread in two years. I don't disagree with your points, though.Hah!
I didn't even check the dates; I guess the necromancer raised the zombie and it bit me - soon I'll be a zombie tarrasque...
That raises a new question!
How pathetic is a zombie Tarrasque and what's the minimum level needed for four Core Monks to kill one?
bbangerter |
This doesn't look to me like they're defining it, just restating the rules about a surprise round which state that you can only take a move action or standard action plus free actions:
Now please find the rule in the CRB where it talks about when you can take swift actions. :) it's in there - then match it up with this - and then you have what the rules actually are about whether you can take a swift during a surprise round or not.