
thorin001 |

Can a character who can do non-lethal damage, at no penalty, with a weapon that is normally lethal, such as via the Merciful enchantment or the Bludgeoner feat, sneak attack with it?
With a weapon that deals nonlethal damage (like a sap, whip, or an unarmed strike), a rogue can make a sneak attack that deals nonlethal damage instead of lethal damage. She cannot use a weapon that deals lethal damage to deal nonlethal damage in a sneak attack, not even with the usual –4 penalty.

Akkurscid |

With a weapon that deals nonlethal damage (like a sap, whip, or an unarmed strike), a rogue can make a sneak attack that deals nonlethal damage instead of lethal damage.
Bludgeoner (Combat)
You can knock foes out cold with just about any blunt instrument.
Benefit: You take no penalty on attack rolls for using a lethal bludgeoning weapon to deal nonlethal damage.
Normal: You take a –4 penalty on attack rolls when using a lethal weapon to deal nonlethal damage. You cannot use a lethal weapon to deal nonlethal damage in a sneak attack.
Special: A rogue with this feat can use a lethal bludgeoning weapon to deal nonlethal damage with a sneak attack.
She cannot use a weapon that deals lethal damage to deal nonlethal damage in a sneak attack, not even with the usual –4 penalty.
This is changed by the Bludgeoner feat. Slashing/Piercing weapons would still only do lethal damage.
Should note a Merciful weapon can't do lethal damage...

Akkurscid |

That tends to imply that Merciful does not allow Sneak Attack. Merely removing the -4 to do non-lethal is not enough to automatically allow Sneak Attack.
If you want to rule that way it's up to you.
I think it means rogues who do sneak attack with merciful weapons can only do non-lethal damage. They can already do non-lethal damage with saps, unarmed etc.
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Merciful is making the weapon deal non-lethal like a sap.
Yes, but the weapon itself still does lethal. If you voluntarily lower the enchantment, or are in an anti-magic field, the weapon reverts to lethal. It doesn't have an exception to allow rogues to do non-lethal sneak attack like bludgeoner.

Akkurscid |

Chess Pwn wrote:Merciful is making the weapon deal non-lethal like a sap.Yes, but the weapon itself still does lethal. If you voluntarily lower the enchantment, or are in an anti-magic field, the weapon reverts to lethal. It doesn't have an exception to allow rogues to do non-lethal sneak attack like bludgeoner.
I think you are over thinking it. The weapon in question does whatever type of damage it is currently capable of doing whether lethal or non-lethal. Rogues can already do either type of damage depending on the weapon, so they are not restricted.

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Imbicatus wrote:I think you are over thinking it. The weapon in question does whatever type of damage it is currently capable of doing whether lethal or non-lethal. Rogues can already do either type of damage depending on the weapon, so they are not restricted.Chess Pwn wrote:Merciful is making the weapon deal non-lethal like a sap.Yes, but the weapon itself still does lethal. If you voluntarily lower the enchantment, or are in an anti-magic field, the weapon reverts to lethal. It doesn't have an exception to allow rogues to do non-lethal sneak attack like bludgeoner.
They are not capable of doing non-lethal sneak attack damage with a lethal weapon. If they want to use non-lethal sneak attack, they need to use a whip, a sap, an unarmed strike, or the bludgeoner feat.

Akkurscid |

Akkurscid wrote:They are not capable of doing non-lethal sneak attack damage with a lethal weapon. If they want to use non-lethal sneak attack, they need to use a whip, a sap, an unarmed strike, or the bludgeoner feat.Imbicatus wrote:I think you are over thinking it. The weapon in question does whatever type of damage it is currently capable of doing whether lethal or non-lethal. Rogues can already do either type of damage depending on the weapon, so they are not restricted.Chess Pwn wrote:Merciful is making the weapon deal non-lethal like a sap.Yes, but the weapon itself still does lethal. If you voluntarily lower the enchantment, or are in an anti-magic field, the weapon reverts to lethal. It doesn't have an exception to allow rogues to do non-lethal sneak attack like bludgeoner.
If you want to rule that way it is up to you. But it doesn't seem like that's the case. The Bludgeoner feat says "Special: A rogue with this feat can use a lethal bludgeoning weapon to deal nonlethal damage with a sneak attack." Because if it didn't the rogue could not use sneak attack with this feat to do non-lethal damage. Merciful weapons do non-lethal damage because of magic, they don't need a feat.

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TriOmegaZero wrote:A merciful weapon is a weapon that deals nonlethal damage while the enchantment is active. Jeff and Chess have it right. Sneak Attack works.All Merciful says it does is remove the -4. According to Bludgoner that is not enough to allow Sneak Attack.
What? That's not what merciful says at all:
A merciful weapon deals an extra 1d6 points of damage, but all damage it deals is nonlethal damage. On command, the weapon suppresses this ability until told to resume it (allowing it to deal lethal damage, but without any bonus damage from this ability).
Merciful just flat out makes the weapon nonlethal (unless you suppress the ability), it doesn't merely remove the penalty for using a lethal weapon nonlethally.

Wonderstell |

TriOmegaZero wrote:A merciful weapon is a weapon that deals nonlethal damage while the enchantment is active. Jeff and Chess have it right. Sneak Attack works.All Merciful says it does is remove the -4. According to Bludgoner that is not enough to allow Sneak Attack.
Where have you read that?
A merciful weapon deals an extra 1d6 points of damage, but all damage it deals is nonlethal damage. On command, the weapon suppresses this ability until told to resume it (allowing it to deal lethal damage, but without any bonus damage from this ability).
You may be confusing the Merciful weapon enchantment with the Blade of Mercy Trait.

Akkurscid |

TriOmegaZero wrote:A merciful weapon is a weapon that deals nonlethal damage while the enchantment is active. Jeff and Chess have it right. Sneak Attack works.All Merciful says it does is remove the -4. According to Bludgoner that is not enough to allow Sneak Attack.
Merciful weapons don't do lethal damage unless commanded to. It is all non-lethal when damage when active. I can see your points, and you can rule that way if you like... but the RAW really supports the rogue doing non-lethal damage with a weapon that is "non-lethal" at the time it is used.
Merciful
Price +1 bonus
Aura faint conjuration; CL 5th; Weight —DESCRIPTION
A merciful weapon deals an extra 1d6 points of damage, but all damage it deals is nonlethal damage. On command, the weapon suppresses this ability until told to resume it (allowing it to deal lethal damage, but without any bonus damage from this ability).
CONSTRUCTION REQUIREMENTS
Craft Magic Arms and Armor, cure light wounds; Cost +1 bonus

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Merciful weapons can not do sneak attack damage when using it to do Lethal damage.
Read that again.
It is when you take the penalty (-4) that disallows the sneak attack. A merciful weapon makes it's normal damage into Non-Lethal, making Lethal Damage "harder" to effect.
Looking at the post above, a standard action will turn Merciful off, making the weapon "normal." This is good for times when creatures/enemies are immune to non-lethal damage. (like Undead, I believe)

shanti rethelli |
Chess Pwn wrote:Merciful is making the weapon deal non-lethal like a sap.Yes, but the weapon itself still does lethal. If you voluntarily lower the enchantment, or are in an anti-magic field, the weapon reverts to lethal. It doesn't have an exception to allow rogues to do non-lethal sneak attack like bludgeoner.
A merciful weapon deals an extra 1d6 points of damage, but all damage it deals is nonlethal damage. On command, the weapon suppresses this ability until told to resume it (allowing it to deal lethal damage, but without any bonus damage from this ability. This states that all
damage the weapon does is converted to nonlethal, I think that thisincludes sneak attack.

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I'm having trouble understanding the other interpretation.
A merciful weapon is still a lethal weapon that converts all damage +1d6 to non lethal. Sneak attack should work fine. There is no penalty for using it as the welder still attacks with it the same way as any other weapon. The typical non lethal penalty is from using the weapon in an improvised manner (flat of the blade or less important body attacks). For this reason sneak attack (hitting someone where it hurts more) typically doesn't work with non lethal strikes unless the weapon was explicit for that purpose (like a sap).
The Merciful enchantment converts it to non lethal so the weapon is welded the same way as lethally. Factor in the fact any sneak attack damage is converted to the same type as the original damage (in this case, non lethal) and sneak attacking with a merciful weapon makes perfect sense.

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You can still sneak attack with a weapon doing non-lethal damage, it's just the sneak attack damage is still lethal. If you have 3d6 sneak attack and use blade of mercy to turn a scimitar into non-lethal damage without a penalty, you will do 1d6+mod+2 non-lethal + 3d6 lethal damage on a sneak attack.
For the merciful weapon, I can see an argument for allowing the sneak attack to be converted to non-lethal, because it's magic. But it's not clear, and I could see table variation either way.
But without the enchantment or a specific exception like bludgeoner, if you do non-lethal with a weapon that normally does lethal you will still do lethal on the sneak attack.

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The attacker must use a weapon optimally to make a sneak attack. If the attacker takes the -4 penalty to deal nonlethal damage, no sneak attack is possible. (A weapon that normally deals nonlethal damage, such as a sap, can be used in a sneak attack; however, you deal nonlethal damage if you do so.)
Source. The text has not changed, but perhaps the PDT's intent did. However, I doubt it.

Lilith Knight |

You can definitely sneak attack, think of it this way, using a lethal weapon to deal not lethal damage means you have to wield it in a way it wasn't intended to be used so you can't hit the "weak point", the enchantment just makes it deal non-lethal damage, this has nothing to do with how you wield the weapon, you aren't taking the -4 penalty and it's that penalty that makes you unable to do sneak attack damage. You definitely get the extra dice.