Can the help action trigger a Rogue's sneak attack?
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4
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Let's say that I determined the best course of action is using the Help action to give my Rogue buddy an advantage on his attack instead of attacking by myself. Would that attack then gain the sneak attack bonus since he's at attacking at advantage?
dnd-5e actions rogue sneak-attack helping
add a comment |
up vote
4
down vote
favorite
Let's say that I determined the best course of action is using the Help action to give my Rogue buddy an advantage on his attack instead of attacking by myself. Would that attack then gain the sneak attack bonus since he's at attacking at advantage?
dnd-5e actions rogue sneak-attack helping
3
Possible duplicate of Can a Familiar aid a Rogue's Sneak Attack?
– Luke
Nov 22 at 4:35
This is a weird case... on the one hand, it seems like a distinct question being slightly more broad, but on the other, the answers clearly overlap
– Ifusaso
Nov 22 at 5:57
@Axoren The real question is, would someone looking for an answer to THIS question click on the other question. I'd say no.
– Wesley Obenshain
Nov 22 at 7:06
1
If anything, the other question is a duplicate of this one, as it's a more specific example of this more general question.
– V2Blast
Nov 22 at 7:43
add a comment |
up vote
4
down vote
favorite
up vote
4
down vote
favorite
Let's say that I determined the best course of action is using the Help action to give my Rogue buddy an advantage on his attack instead of attacking by myself. Would that attack then gain the sneak attack bonus since he's at attacking at advantage?
dnd-5e actions rogue sneak-attack helping
Let's say that I determined the best course of action is using the Help action to give my Rogue buddy an advantage on his attack instead of attacking by myself. Would that attack then gain the sneak attack bonus since he's at attacking at advantage?
dnd-5e actions rogue sneak-attack helping
dnd-5e actions rogue sneak-attack helping
edited Nov 22 at 7:42
V2Blast
18.3k248114
18.3k248114
asked Nov 22 at 4:31
Cyanic
4219
4219
3
Possible duplicate of Can a Familiar aid a Rogue's Sneak Attack?
– Luke
Nov 22 at 4:35
This is a weird case... on the one hand, it seems like a distinct question being slightly more broad, but on the other, the answers clearly overlap
– Ifusaso
Nov 22 at 5:57
@Axoren The real question is, would someone looking for an answer to THIS question click on the other question. I'd say no.
– Wesley Obenshain
Nov 22 at 7:06
1
If anything, the other question is a duplicate of this one, as it's a more specific example of this more general question.
– V2Blast
Nov 22 at 7:43
add a comment |
3
Possible duplicate of Can a Familiar aid a Rogue's Sneak Attack?
– Luke
Nov 22 at 4:35
This is a weird case... on the one hand, it seems like a distinct question being slightly more broad, but on the other, the answers clearly overlap
– Ifusaso
Nov 22 at 5:57
@Axoren The real question is, would someone looking for an answer to THIS question click on the other question. I'd say no.
– Wesley Obenshain
Nov 22 at 7:06
1
If anything, the other question is a duplicate of this one, as it's a more specific example of this more general question.
– V2Blast
Nov 22 at 7:43
3
3
Possible duplicate of Can a Familiar aid a Rogue's Sneak Attack?
– Luke
Nov 22 at 4:35
Possible duplicate of Can a Familiar aid a Rogue's Sneak Attack?
– Luke
Nov 22 at 4:35
This is a weird case... on the one hand, it seems like a distinct question being slightly more broad, but on the other, the answers clearly overlap
– Ifusaso
Nov 22 at 5:57
This is a weird case... on the one hand, it seems like a distinct question being slightly more broad, but on the other, the answers clearly overlap
– Ifusaso
Nov 22 at 5:57
@Axoren The real question is, would someone looking for an answer to THIS question click on the other question. I'd say no.
– Wesley Obenshain
Nov 22 at 7:06
@Axoren The real question is, would someone looking for an answer to THIS question click on the other question. I'd say no.
– Wesley Obenshain
Nov 22 at 7:06
1
1
If anything, the other question is a duplicate of this one, as it's a more specific example of this more general question.
– V2Blast
Nov 22 at 7:43
If anything, the other question is a duplicate of this one, as it's a more specific example of this more general question.
– V2Blast
Nov 22 at 7:43
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
up vote
17
down vote
accepted
Sneak Attack says:
Once per turn, you can deal an extra 1d6 damage to one creature you hit with an attack if you have advantage on the attack roll.
The Help action says:
If your ally attacks the target before your next turn, the first attack
roll is made with advantage.
Sneak Attack can be used if the attack roll is made with advantage (or an enemy of the target to be with 5 feet); the Help action gives that advantage, as long as the rogue is the first ally to attack the target (and the advantage isn't canceled out by disadvantage). It's that simple.
"as long as the rogue is the first ally to attack the target" - why is that? The wording seems to suggest you are aiding a specific ally, not just the next person attacking that target...
– Chris
Nov 22 at 9:47
Ah. rpg.stackexchange.com/questions/128393/… seems to answer my question. Strange that the wording is seemingly different in different places.
– Chris
Nov 22 at 9:49
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
17
down vote
accepted
Sneak Attack says:
Once per turn, you can deal an extra 1d6 damage to one creature you hit with an attack if you have advantage on the attack roll.
The Help action says:
If your ally attacks the target before your next turn, the first attack
roll is made with advantage.
Sneak Attack can be used if the attack roll is made with advantage (or an enemy of the target to be with 5 feet); the Help action gives that advantage, as long as the rogue is the first ally to attack the target (and the advantage isn't canceled out by disadvantage). It's that simple.
"as long as the rogue is the first ally to attack the target" - why is that? The wording seems to suggest you are aiding a specific ally, not just the next person attacking that target...
– Chris
Nov 22 at 9:47
Ah. rpg.stackexchange.com/questions/128393/… seems to answer my question. Strange that the wording is seemingly different in different places.
– Chris
Nov 22 at 9:49
add a comment |
up vote
17
down vote
accepted
Sneak Attack says:
Once per turn, you can deal an extra 1d6 damage to one creature you hit with an attack if you have advantage on the attack roll.
The Help action says:
If your ally attacks the target before your next turn, the first attack
roll is made with advantage.
Sneak Attack can be used if the attack roll is made with advantage (or an enemy of the target to be with 5 feet); the Help action gives that advantage, as long as the rogue is the first ally to attack the target (and the advantage isn't canceled out by disadvantage). It's that simple.
"as long as the rogue is the first ally to attack the target" - why is that? The wording seems to suggest you are aiding a specific ally, not just the next person attacking that target...
– Chris
Nov 22 at 9:47
Ah. rpg.stackexchange.com/questions/128393/… seems to answer my question. Strange that the wording is seemingly different in different places.
– Chris
Nov 22 at 9:49
add a comment |
up vote
17
down vote
accepted
up vote
17
down vote
accepted
Sneak Attack says:
Once per turn, you can deal an extra 1d6 damage to one creature you hit with an attack if you have advantage on the attack roll.
The Help action says:
If your ally attacks the target before your next turn, the first attack
roll is made with advantage.
Sneak Attack can be used if the attack roll is made with advantage (or an enemy of the target to be with 5 feet); the Help action gives that advantage, as long as the rogue is the first ally to attack the target (and the advantage isn't canceled out by disadvantage). It's that simple.
Sneak Attack says:
Once per turn, you can deal an extra 1d6 damage to one creature you hit with an attack if you have advantage on the attack roll.
The Help action says:
If your ally attacks the target before your next turn, the first attack
roll is made with advantage.
Sneak Attack can be used if the attack roll is made with advantage (or an enemy of the target to be with 5 feet); the Help action gives that advantage, as long as the rogue is the first ally to attack the target (and the advantage isn't canceled out by disadvantage). It's that simple.
edited Nov 22 at 7:44
V2Blast
18.3k248114
18.3k248114
answered Nov 22 at 4:54
Purple Monkey
37.5k8152232
37.5k8152232
"as long as the rogue is the first ally to attack the target" - why is that? The wording seems to suggest you are aiding a specific ally, not just the next person attacking that target...
– Chris
Nov 22 at 9:47
Ah. rpg.stackexchange.com/questions/128393/… seems to answer my question. Strange that the wording is seemingly different in different places.
– Chris
Nov 22 at 9:49
add a comment |
"as long as the rogue is the first ally to attack the target" - why is that? The wording seems to suggest you are aiding a specific ally, not just the next person attacking that target...
– Chris
Nov 22 at 9:47
Ah. rpg.stackexchange.com/questions/128393/… seems to answer my question. Strange that the wording is seemingly different in different places.
– Chris
Nov 22 at 9:49
"as long as the rogue is the first ally to attack the target" - why is that? The wording seems to suggest you are aiding a specific ally, not just the next person attacking that target...
– Chris
Nov 22 at 9:47
"as long as the rogue is the first ally to attack the target" - why is that? The wording seems to suggest you are aiding a specific ally, not just the next person attacking that target...
– Chris
Nov 22 at 9:47
Ah. rpg.stackexchange.com/questions/128393/… seems to answer my question. Strange that the wording is seemingly different in different places.
– Chris
Nov 22 at 9:49
Ah. rpg.stackexchange.com/questions/128393/… seems to answer my question. Strange that the wording is seemingly different in different places.
– Chris
Nov 22 at 9:49
add a comment |
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3
Possible duplicate of Can a Familiar aid a Rogue's Sneak Attack?
– Luke
Nov 22 at 4:35
This is a weird case... on the one hand, it seems like a distinct question being slightly more broad, but on the other, the answers clearly overlap
– Ifusaso
Nov 22 at 5:57
@Axoren The real question is, would someone looking for an answer to THIS question click on the other question. I'd say no.
– Wesley Obenshain
Nov 22 at 7:06
1
If anything, the other question is a duplicate of this one, as it's a more specific example of this more general question.
– V2Blast
Nov 22 at 7:43