Can Yew Wands be used as a focus for both druids and wizards?
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30
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As I was developing a level 4 character for a 5th edition D&D campaign I was playing with my friends, I settled on a multi-class character using the Druid and Wizard classes. When I went to choose a focus for the character, I saw the "yew wand" in the druid focus list and the "wand" in the wizard focus list. Could the yew wand then be used as a focus for both classes?
dnd-5e wizard druid arcane-focus
add a comment |
up vote
30
down vote
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As I was developing a level 4 character for a 5th edition D&D campaign I was playing with my friends, I settled on a multi-class character using the Druid and Wizard classes. When I went to choose a focus for the character, I saw the "yew wand" in the druid focus list and the "wand" in the wizard focus list. Could the yew wand then be used as a focus for both classes?
dnd-5e wizard druid arcane-focus
1
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– Rubiksmoose
Nov 28 at 18:10
Possible duplicate of Can a multi-class spellcaster have one thing be two different focuses?
– V2Blast
Nov 29 at 4:22
2
What can yew do...
– V2Blast
Nov 29 at 4:22
1
@V2Blast not necessarily, because this doesn't necessarily have 2 types of foci. The question is more of "is the yew wand for a druidic focus the same kind of wand as a wizard focus".
– Riker
Nov 29 at 4:30
add a comment |
up vote
30
down vote
favorite
up vote
30
down vote
favorite
As I was developing a level 4 character for a 5th edition D&D campaign I was playing with my friends, I settled on a multi-class character using the Druid and Wizard classes. When I went to choose a focus for the character, I saw the "yew wand" in the druid focus list and the "wand" in the wizard focus list. Could the yew wand then be used as a focus for both classes?
dnd-5e wizard druid arcane-focus
As I was developing a level 4 character for a 5th edition D&D campaign I was playing with my friends, I settled on a multi-class character using the Druid and Wizard classes. When I went to choose a focus for the character, I saw the "yew wand" in the druid focus list and the "wand" in the wizard focus list. Could the yew wand then be used as a focus for both classes?
dnd-5e wizard druid arcane-focus
dnd-5e wizard druid arcane-focus
edited Nov 28 at 18:08
Rubiksmoose
45.3k6226347
45.3k6226347
asked Nov 28 at 18:06
Pik
15113
15113
1
Welcome to RPG.se! Please take the tour when you get a quick minute to learn more about us. I hope to see you around!
– Rubiksmoose
Nov 28 at 18:10
Possible duplicate of Can a multi-class spellcaster have one thing be two different focuses?
– V2Blast
Nov 29 at 4:22
2
What can yew do...
– V2Blast
Nov 29 at 4:22
1
@V2Blast not necessarily, because this doesn't necessarily have 2 types of foci. The question is more of "is the yew wand for a druidic focus the same kind of wand as a wizard focus".
– Riker
Nov 29 at 4:30
add a comment |
1
Welcome to RPG.se! Please take the tour when you get a quick minute to learn more about us. I hope to see you around!
– Rubiksmoose
Nov 28 at 18:10
Possible duplicate of Can a multi-class spellcaster have one thing be two different focuses?
– V2Blast
Nov 29 at 4:22
2
What can yew do...
– V2Blast
Nov 29 at 4:22
1
@V2Blast not necessarily, because this doesn't necessarily have 2 types of foci. The question is more of "is the yew wand for a druidic focus the same kind of wand as a wizard focus".
– Riker
Nov 29 at 4:30
1
1
Welcome to RPG.se! Please take the tour when you get a quick minute to learn more about us. I hope to see you around!
– Rubiksmoose
Nov 28 at 18:10
Welcome to RPG.se! Please take the tour when you get a quick minute to learn more about us. I hope to see you around!
– Rubiksmoose
Nov 28 at 18:10
Possible duplicate of Can a multi-class spellcaster have one thing be two different focuses?
– V2Blast
Nov 29 at 4:22
Possible duplicate of Can a multi-class spellcaster have one thing be two different focuses?
– V2Blast
Nov 29 at 4:22
2
2
What can yew do...
– V2Blast
Nov 29 at 4:22
What can yew do...
– V2Blast
Nov 29 at 4:22
1
1
@V2Blast not necessarily, because this doesn't necessarily have 2 types of foci. The question is more of "is the yew wand for a druidic focus the same kind of wand as a wizard focus".
– Riker
Nov 29 at 4:30
@V2Blast not necessarily, because this doesn't necessarily have 2 types of foci. The question is more of "is the yew wand for a druidic focus the same kind of wand as a wizard focus".
– Riker
Nov 29 at 4:30
add a comment |
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
up vote
38
down vote
You might say something like: "Oh, well, a wizard can use a wand to cast spells, and a druid's yew wand is a wand, so the wizard can use that."
But a wizard's arcane focus isn't just any old wand. A wizard's arcane focus is an item which was specifically created to be an arcane focus. If the druid's yew wand wasn't specifically created to be an arcane focus, we should expect it not to work for a wizard.
Here's the full rules text:
Arcane Focus. An arcane focus is a special item— an orb, a crystal, a rod, a specially constructed staff, a wand-‐‑like length of wood, or some similar item— designed to channel the power of arcane spells. A sorcerer, warlock, or wizard can use such an item as a spellcasting focus.
Druidic Focus. A druidic focus might be a sprig of mistletoe or holly, a wand or scepter made of yew or another special wood, a staff drawn whole out of a living tree, or a totem object incorporating feathers, fur, bones, and teeth from sacred animals. A druid can use such an object as a spellcasting focus.
So: a super-literal reading of the rules would tell us that a wizard probably can't use a "druid's yew wand" as a focus, because the "druid's yew wand" wasn't "designed to channel the power of arcane spells".
But, if a wizard gets a piece of yew wood and runs it through the process of creating a wizard wand, the result will be a "wand made of yew wood" and a druid can use that just fine.
This is still a bit ambiguous. Xirema notes that the rules for multiclassing tell you that you can only use a focus for spells of the appropriate class, which seems to imply that the designers might have intended for foci to be separate.
Another relevant consideration is that multiclassing tends to result in worse classes than single characters anyway. If we were making this ruling based on game balance, we should probably try to be lenient to the multiclass character, since they're going to have a harder time compared to single classes.
But the gripping hand is that we on stackexchange can still be overruled by your DM. If any rules are ever unclear or ambiguous (and these rules are), the way to resolve them is to ask your DM to make a ruling.
Go ask your DM to make a ruling. : )
Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
– mxyzplk♦
Nov 30 at 11:34
add a comment |
up vote
8
down vote
Yes.
Because a yew wand is a wand, a Yew Wand would be valid for both Druids and Wizards, so your character could use it for both their Wizard and their Druid spells.
add a comment |
up vote
-1
down vote
Rules as Written, no.
As written, an arcane focus is an arcane focus, and a druidic focus is a druidic focus. Everything else is just suggestions for descriptive text of what a specific focus might look like.
Rules as Fun, sure!
It totally makes sense for a cross-class character to double up their foci in a way that meets both requirements, so sure, go for it! (Pending DM permission, of course.) The only real, serious difference would be a matter of a few gold -- which is really no big deal for an adventurer of even 2nd level -- and potentially a question of how many hands you're using at any given time.
I don't think the 'number of hands' issue is worth worrying about unless the DM really likes to get fiddly about things like that. Consider the following complaint:
"Wait a minute, you're holding a torch in one hand and your arcane wand in the other, and you used your free object-interaction to put your wand away, so if you want to pull out your druidic focus you're going to have to use an action!"
If your DM might say something like that, then you may have an issue with 'doubling up' like that, as it would remove something your DM is treating as a limiting factor on your spellcasting. If your DM wouldn't say that, then sure, there's very likely no problem with a dual-use wand.
1
The same item satisfies both classes requirements. The RAW do not say otherwise.
– MarkTO
13 hours ago
1
The class requirement isn't "hold a stick of yew". The class requirement is "hold a druidic focus", which is a specific item in the equipment list. The fact that there is a potential overlap between possible general descriptions of two items doesn't mean those items are the same, any more than a crowbar is a crescent wrench just because both of them are generally "a length of metal held in the hand". By the RAW, if you buy or craft a druidic focus, you get a druidic focus. If you buy or craft an arcane focus, you get an arcane focus.
– Darth Pseudonym
13 hours ago
add a comment |
up vote
-3
down vote
You need two wands; the same wand cannot serve both classes
From the Multiclassing rules, as written in the Player's Handbook, page 163:
Spells Known and Prepared. You determine what spells you know and can prepare for each class individually...
[...]
... Similarly, a spellcasting focus, such as a holy symbol, can be used only for the spells from the class associated with that focus.
While a Yew Wand is almost certainly valid as a spellcasting focus for either a Druid or a Wizard, it's not valid for both at the same time. You'd need to acquire a second wand at the time you multiclass.
If focuses were permitted to be shared between multiple classes, the wording would read something like "can be used only for the spells from the classes associated with that focus"
5
Why can't the focus be associated to more than one class?
– NautArch
Nov 28 at 19:47
6
I don't see that interpretation as valid. Each class checks validity independently. Is it a Wand? Works for Wizard. Is it a Yew Want? Works for Druid. Same wand? Irrelevant. One wand can work fine for both. There is nothing in what you cited to support your assertion.
– MarkTO
Nov 28 at 19:50
6
I'm just not seeing the same thing you are. The quote says a focus can be used only for the spells from the class associated with that focus - but it's not saying that the focus can't associate to two classes and it doesn't say it can only do one. Unless I'm missing something.
– NautArch
Nov 28 at 20:08
6
This logic would imply that you could not use the same holy symbol for paladin and priest levels of the same faith. That seems... obviously incorrect.
– Ben Barden
Nov 28 at 20:51
2
@BenBarden Strictly speaking, in 5th edition, Paladins don't draw their power from the same source that Clerics do; Clerics draw their power from their Divine Connection, Paladins draw from their own Willpower and Convictions.
– Xirema
Nov 28 at 20:57
|
show 11 more comments
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
38
down vote
You might say something like: "Oh, well, a wizard can use a wand to cast spells, and a druid's yew wand is a wand, so the wizard can use that."
But a wizard's arcane focus isn't just any old wand. A wizard's arcane focus is an item which was specifically created to be an arcane focus. If the druid's yew wand wasn't specifically created to be an arcane focus, we should expect it not to work for a wizard.
Here's the full rules text:
Arcane Focus. An arcane focus is a special item— an orb, a crystal, a rod, a specially constructed staff, a wand-‐‑like length of wood, or some similar item— designed to channel the power of arcane spells. A sorcerer, warlock, or wizard can use such an item as a spellcasting focus.
Druidic Focus. A druidic focus might be a sprig of mistletoe or holly, a wand or scepter made of yew or another special wood, a staff drawn whole out of a living tree, or a totem object incorporating feathers, fur, bones, and teeth from sacred animals. A druid can use such an object as a spellcasting focus.
So: a super-literal reading of the rules would tell us that a wizard probably can't use a "druid's yew wand" as a focus, because the "druid's yew wand" wasn't "designed to channel the power of arcane spells".
But, if a wizard gets a piece of yew wood and runs it through the process of creating a wizard wand, the result will be a "wand made of yew wood" and a druid can use that just fine.
This is still a bit ambiguous. Xirema notes that the rules for multiclassing tell you that you can only use a focus for spells of the appropriate class, which seems to imply that the designers might have intended for foci to be separate.
Another relevant consideration is that multiclassing tends to result in worse classes than single characters anyway. If we were making this ruling based on game balance, we should probably try to be lenient to the multiclass character, since they're going to have a harder time compared to single classes.
But the gripping hand is that we on stackexchange can still be overruled by your DM. If any rules are ever unclear or ambiguous (and these rules are), the way to resolve them is to ask your DM to make a ruling.
Go ask your DM to make a ruling. : )
Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
– mxyzplk♦
Nov 30 at 11:34
add a comment |
up vote
38
down vote
You might say something like: "Oh, well, a wizard can use a wand to cast spells, and a druid's yew wand is a wand, so the wizard can use that."
But a wizard's arcane focus isn't just any old wand. A wizard's arcane focus is an item which was specifically created to be an arcane focus. If the druid's yew wand wasn't specifically created to be an arcane focus, we should expect it not to work for a wizard.
Here's the full rules text:
Arcane Focus. An arcane focus is a special item— an orb, a crystal, a rod, a specially constructed staff, a wand-‐‑like length of wood, or some similar item— designed to channel the power of arcane spells. A sorcerer, warlock, or wizard can use such an item as a spellcasting focus.
Druidic Focus. A druidic focus might be a sprig of mistletoe or holly, a wand or scepter made of yew or another special wood, a staff drawn whole out of a living tree, or a totem object incorporating feathers, fur, bones, and teeth from sacred animals. A druid can use such an object as a spellcasting focus.
So: a super-literal reading of the rules would tell us that a wizard probably can't use a "druid's yew wand" as a focus, because the "druid's yew wand" wasn't "designed to channel the power of arcane spells".
But, if a wizard gets a piece of yew wood and runs it through the process of creating a wizard wand, the result will be a "wand made of yew wood" and a druid can use that just fine.
This is still a bit ambiguous. Xirema notes that the rules for multiclassing tell you that you can only use a focus for spells of the appropriate class, which seems to imply that the designers might have intended for foci to be separate.
Another relevant consideration is that multiclassing tends to result in worse classes than single characters anyway. If we were making this ruling based on game balance, we should probably try to be lenient to the multiclass character, since they're going to have a harder time compared to single classes.
But the gripping hand is that we on stackexchange can still be overruled by your DM. If any rules are ever unclear or ambiguous (and these rules are), the way to resolve them is to ask your DM to make a ruling.
Go ask your DM to make a ruling. : )
Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
– mxyzplk♦
Nov 30 at 11:34
add a comment |
up vote
38
down vote
up vote
38
down vote
You might say something like: "Oh, well, a wizard can use a wand to cast spells, and a druid's yew wand is a wand, so the wizard can use that."
But a wizard's arcane focus isn't just any old wand. A wizard's arcane focus is an item which was specifically created to be an arcane focus. If the druid's yew wand wasn't specifically created to be an arcane focus, we should expect it not to work for a wizard.
Here's the full rules text:
Arcane Focus. An arcane focus is a special item— an orb, a crystal, a rod, a specially constructed staff, a wand-‐‑like length of wood, or some similar item— designed to channel the power of arcane spells. A sorcerer, warlock, or wizard can use such an item as a spellcasting focus.
Druidic Focus. A druidic focus might be a sprig of mistletoe or holly, a wand or scepter made of yew or another special wood, a staff drawn whole out of a living tree, or a totem object incorporating feathers, fur, bones, and teeth from sacred animals. A druid can use such an object as a spellcasting focus.
So: a super-literal reading of the rules would tell us that a wizard probably can't use a "druid's yew wand" as a focus, because the "druid's yew wand" wasn't "designed to channel the power of arcane spells".
But, if a wizard gets a piece of yew wood and runs it through the process of creating a wizard wand, the result will be a "wand made of yew wood" and a druid can use that just fine.
This is still a bit ambiguous. Xirema notes that the rules for multiclassing tell you that you can only use a focus for spells of the appropriate class, which seems to imply that the designers might have intended for foci to be separate.
Another relevant consideration is that multiclassing tends to result in worse classes than single characters anyway. If we were making this ruling based on game balance, we should probably try to be lenient to the multiclass character, since they're going to have a harder time compared to single classes.
But the gripping hand is that we on stackexchange can still be overruled by your DM. If any rules are ever unclear or ambiguous (and these rules are), the way to resolve them is to ask your DM to make a ruling.
Go ask your DM to make a ruling. : )
You might say something like: "Oh, well, a wizard can use a wand to cast spells, and a druid's yew wand is a wand, so the wizard can use that."
But a wizard's arcane focus isn't just any old wand. A wizard's arcane focus is an item which was specifically created to be an arcane focus. If the druid's yew wand wasn't specifically created to be an arcane focus, we should expect it not to work for a wizard.
Here's the full rules text:
Arcane Focus. An arcane focus is a special item— an orb, a crystal, a rod, a specially constructed staff, a wand-‐‑like length of wood, or some similar item— designed to channel the power of arcane spells. A sorcerer, warlock, or wizard can use such an item as a spellcasting focus.
Druidic Focus. A druidic focus might be a sprig of mistletoe or holly, a wand or scepter made of yew or another special wood, a staff drawn whole out of a living tree, or a totem object incorporating feathers, fur, bones, and teeth from sacred animals. A druid can use such an object as a spellcasting focus.
So: a super-literal reading of the rules would tell us that a wizard probably can't use a "druid's yew wand" as a focus, because the "druid's yew wand" wasn't "designed to channel the power of arcane spells".
But, if a wizard gets a piece of yew wood and runs it through the process of creating a wizard wand, the result will be a "wand made of yew wood" and a druid can use that just fine.
This is still a bit ambiguous. Xirema notes that the rules for multiclassing tell you that you can only use a focus for spells of the appropriate class, which seems to imply that the designers might have intended for foci to be separate.
Another relevant consideration is that multiclassing tends to result in worse classes than single characters anyway. If we were making this ruling based on game balance, we should probably try to be lenient to the multiclass character, since they're going to have a harder time compared to single classes.
But the gripping hand is that we on stackexchange can still be overruled by your DM. If any rules are ever unclear or ambiguous (and these rules are), the way to resolve them is to ask your DM to make a ruling.
Go ask your DM to make a ruling. : )
edited Nov 29 at 3:25
answered Nov 28 at 18:44
Dan B
35.1k765137
35.1k765137
Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
– mxyzplk♦
Nov 30 at 11:34
add a comment |
Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
– mxyzplk♦
Nov 30 at 11:34
Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
– mxyzplk♦
Nov 30 at 11:34
Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
– mxyzplk♦
Nov 30 at 11:34
add a comment |
up vote
8
down vote
Yes.
Because a yew wand is a wand, a Yew Wand would be valid for both Druids and Wizards, so your character could use it for both their Wizard and their Druid spells.
add a comment |
up vote
8
down vote
Yes.
Because a yew wand is a wand, a Yew Wand would be valid for both Druids and Wizards, so your character could use it for both their Wizard and their Druid spells.
add a comment |
up vote
8
down vote
up vote
8
down vote
Yes.
Because a yew wand is a wand, a Yew Wand would be valid for both Druids and Wizards, so your character could use it for both their Wizard and their Druid spells.
Yes.
Because a yew wand is a wand, a Yew Wand would be valid for both Druids and Wizards, so your character could use it for both their Wizard and their Druid spells.
answered Nov 28 at 18:24
MarkTO
1,457117
1,457117
add a comment |
add a comment |
up vote
-1
down vote
Rules as Written, no.
As written, an arcane focus is an arcane focus, and a druidic focus is a druidic focus. Everything else is just suggestions for descriptive text of what a specific focus might look like.
Rules as Fun, sure!
It totally makes sense for a cross-class character to double up their foci in a way that meets both requirements, so sure, go for it! (Pending DM permission, of course.) The only real, serious difference would be a matter of a few gold -- which is really no big deal for an adventurer of even 2nd level -- and potentially a question of how many hands you're using at any given time.
I don't think the 'number of hands' issue is worth worrying about unless the DM really likes to get fiddly about things like that. Consider the following complaint:
"Wait a minute, you're holding a torch in one hand and your arcane wand in the other, and you used your free object-interaction to put your wand away, so if you want to pull out your druidic focus you're going to have to use an action!"
If your DM might say something like that, then you may have an issue with 'doubling up' like that, as it would remove something your DM is treating as a limiting factor on your spellcasting. If your DM wouldn't say that, then sure, there's very likely no problem with a dual-use wand.
1
The same item satisfies both classes requirements. The RAW do not say otherwise.
– MarkTO
13 hours ago
1
The class requirement isn't "hold a stick of yew". The class requirement is "hold a druidic focus", which is a specific item in the equipment list. The fact that there is a potential overlap between possible general descriptions of two items doesn't mean those items are the same, any more than a crowbar is a crescent wrench just because both of them are generally "a length of metal held in the hand". By the RAW, if you buy or craft a druidic focus, you get a druidic focus. If you buy or craft an arcane focus, you get an arcane focus.
– Darth Pseudonym
13 hours ago
add a comment |
up vote
-1
down vote
Rules as Written, no.
As written, an arcane focus is an arcane focus, and a druidic focus is a druidic focus. Everything else is just suggestions for descriptive text of what a specific focus might look like.
Rules as Fun, sure!
It totally makes sense for a cross-class character to double up their foci in a way that meets both requirements, so sure, go for it! (Pending DM permission, of course.) The only real, serious difference would be a matter of a few gold -- which is really no big deal for an adventurer of even 2nd level -- and potentially a question of how many hands you're using at any given time.
I don't think the 'number of hands' issue is worth worrying about unless the DM really likes to get fiddly about things like that. Consider the following complaint:
"Wait a minute, you're holding a torch in one hand and your arcane wand in the other, and you used your free object-interaction to put your wand away, so if you want to pull out your druidic focus you're going to have to use an action!"
If your DM might say something like that, then you may have an issue with 'doubling up' like that, as it would remove something your DM is treating as a limiting factor on your spellcasting. If your DM wouldn't say that, then sure, there's very likely no problem with a dual-use wand.
1
The same item satisfies both classes requirements. The RAW do not say otherwise.
– MarkTO
13 hours ago
1
The class requirement isn't "hold a stick of yew". The class requirement is "hold a druidic focus", which is a specific item in the equipment list. The fact that there is a potential overlap between possible general descriptions of two items doesn't mean those items are the same, any more than a crowbar is a crescent wrench just because both of them are generally "a length of metal held in the hand". By the RAW, if you buy or craft a druidic focus, you get a druidic focus. If you buy or craft an arcane focus, you get an arcane focus.
– Darth Pseudonym
13 hours ago
add a comment |
up vote
-1
down vote
up vote
-1
down vote
Rules as Written, no.
As written, an arcane focus is an arcane focus, and a druidic focus is a druidic focus. Everything else is just suggestions for descriptive text of what a specific focus might look like.
Rules as Fun, sure!
It totally makes sense for a cross-class character to double up their foci in a way that meets both requirements, so sure, go for it! (Pending DM permission, of course.) The only real, serious difference would be a matter of a few gold -- which is really no big deal for an adventurer of even 2nd level -- and potentially a question of how many hands you're using at any given time.
I don't think the 'number of hands' issue is worth worrying about unless the DM really likes to get fiddly about things like that. Consider the following complaint:
"Wait a minute, you're holding a torch in one hand and your arcane wand in the other, and you used your free object-interaction to put your wand away, so if you want to pull out your druidic focus you're going to have to use an action!"
If your DM might say something like that, then you may have an issue with 'doubling up' like that, as it would remove something your DM is treating as a limiting factor on your spellcasting. If your DM wouldn't say that, then sure, there's very likely no problem with a dual-use wand.
Rules as Written, no.
As written, an arcane focus is an arcane focus, and a druidic focus is a druidic focus. Everything else is just suggestions for descriptive text of what a specific focus might look like.
Rules as Fun, sure!
It totally makes sense for a cross-class character to double up their foci in a way that meets both requirements, so sure, go for it! (Pending DM permission, of course.) The only real, serious difference would be a matter of a few gold -- which is really no big deal for an adventurer of even 2nd level -- and potentially a question of how many hands you're using at any given time.
I don't think the 'number of hands' issue is worth worrying about unless the DM really likes to get fiddly about things like that. Consider the following complaint:
"Wait a minute, you're holding a torch in one hand and your arcane wand in the other, and you used your free object-interaction to put your wand away, so if you want to pull out your druidic focus you're going to have to use an action!"
If your DM might say something like that, then you may have an issue with 'doubling up' like that, as it would remove something your DM is treating as a limiting factor on your spellcasting. If your DM wouldn't say that, then sure, there's very likely no problem with a dual-use wand.
edited Nov 29 at 19:32
answered Nov 29 at 14:49
Darth Pseudonym
9,3782255
9,3782255
1
The same item satisfies both classes requirements. The RAW do not say otherwise.
– MarkTO
13 hours ago
1
The class requirement isn't "hold a stick of yew". The class requirement is "hold a druidic focus", which is a specific item in the equipment list. The fact that there is a potential overlap between possible general descriptions of two items doesn't mean those items are the same, any more than a crowbar is a crescent wrench just because both of them are generally "a length of metal held in the hand". By the RAW, if you buy or craft a druidic focus, you get a druidic focus. If you buy or craft an arcane focus, you get an arcane focus.
– Darth Pseudonym
13 hours ago
add a comment |
1
The same item satisfies both classes requirements. The RAW do not say otherwise.
– MarkTO
13 hours ago
1
The class requirement isn't "hold a stick of yew". The class requirement is "hold a druidic focus", which is a specific item in the equipment list. The fact that there is a potential overlap between possible general descriptions of two items doesn't mean those items are the same, any more than a crowbar is a crescent wrench just because both of them are generally "a length of metal held in the hand". By the RAW, if you buy or craft a druidic focus, you get a druidic focus. If you buy or craft an arcane focus, you get an arcane focus.
– Darth Pseudonym
13 hours ago
1
1
The same item satisfies both classes requirements. The RAW do not say otherwise.
– MarkTO
13 hours ago
The same item satisfies both classes requirements. The RAW do not say otherwise.
– MarkTO
13 hours ago
1
1
The class requirement isn't "hold a stick of yew". The class requirement is "hold a druidic focus", which is a specific item in the equipment list. The fact that there is a potential overlap between possible general descriptions of two items doesn't mean those items are the same, any more than a crowbar is a crescent wrench just because both of them are generally "a length of metal held in the hand". By the RAW, if you buy or craft a druidic focus, you get a druidic focus. If you buy or craft an arcane focus, you get an arcane focus.
– Darth Pseudonym
13 hours ago
The class requirement isn't "hold a stick of yew". The class requirement is "hold a druidic focus", which is a specific item in the equipment list. The fact that there is a potential overlap between possible general descriptions of two items doesn't mean those items are the same, any more than a crowbar is a crescent wrench just because both of them are generally "a length of metal held in the hand". By the RAW, if you buy or craft a druidic focus, you get a druidic focus. If you buy or craft an arcane focus, you get an arcane focus.
– Darth Pseudonym
13 hours ago
add a comment |
up vote
-3
down vote
You need two wands; the same wand cannot serve both classes
From the Multiclassing rules, as written in the Player's Handbook, page 163:
Spells Known and Prepared. You determine what spells you know and can prepare for each class individually...
[...]
... Similarly, a spellcasting focus, such as a holy symbol, can be used only for the spells from the class associated with that focus.
While a Yew Wand is almost certainly valid as a spellcasting focus for either a Druid or a Wizard, it's not valid for both at the same time. You'd need to acquire a second wand at the time you multiclass.
If focuses were permitted to be shared between multiple classes, the wording would read something like "can be used only for the spells from the classes associated with that focus"
5
Why can't the focus be associated to more than one class?
– NautArch
Nov 28 at 19:47
6
I don't see that interpretation as valid. Each class checks validity independently. Is it a Wand? Works for Wizard. Is it a Yew Want? Works for Druid. Same wand? Irrelevant. One wand can work fine for both. There is nothing in what you cited to support your assertion.
– MarkTO
Nov 28 at 19:50
6
I'm just not seeing the same thing you are. The quote says a focus can be used only for the spells from the class associated with that focus - but it's not saying that the focus can't associate to two classes and it doesn't say it can only do one. Unless I'm missing something.
– NautArch
Nov 28 at 20:08
6
This logic would imply that you could not use the same holy symbol for paladin and priest levels of the same faith. That seems... obviously incorrect.
– Ben Barden
Nov 28 at 20:51
2
@BenBarden Strictly speaking, in 5th edition, Paladins don't draw their power from the same source that Clerics do; Clerics draw their power from their Divine Connection, Paladins draw from their own Willpower and Convictions.
– Xirema
Nov 28 at 20:57
|
show 11 more comments
up vote
-3
down vote
You need two wands; the same wand cannot serve both classes
From the Multiclassing rules, as written in the Player's Handbook, page 163:
Spells Known and Prepared. You determine what spells you know and can prepare for each class individually...
[...]
... Similarly, a spellcasting focus, such as a holy symbol, can be used only for the spells from the class associated with that focus.
While a Yew Wand is almost certainly valid as a spellcasting focus for either a Druid or a Wizard, it's not valid for both at the same time. You'd need to acquire a second wand at the time you multiclass.
If focuses were permitted to be shared between multiple classes, the wording would read something like "can be used only for the spells from the classes associated with that focus"
5
Why can't the focus be associated to more than one class?
– NautArch
Nov 28 at 19:47
6
I don't see that interpretation as valid. Each class checks validity independently. Is it a Wand? Works for Wizard. Is it a Yew Want? Works for Druid. Same wand? Irrelevant. One wand can work fine for both. There is nothing in what you cited to support your assertion.
– MarkTO
Nov 28 at 19:50
6
I'm just not seeing the same thing you are. The quote says a focus can be used only for the spells from the class associated with that focus - but it's not saying that the focus can't associate to two classes and it doesn't say it can only do one. Unless I'm missing something.
– NautArch
Nov 28 at 20:08
6
This logic would imply that you could not use the same holy symbol for paladin and priest levels of the same faith. That seems... obviously incorrect.
– Ben Barden
Nov 28 at 20:51
2
@BenBarden Strictly speaking, in 5th edition, Paladins don't draw their power from the same source that Clerics do; Clerics draw their power from their Divine Connection, Paladins draw from their own Willpower and Convictions.
– Xirema
Nov 28 at 20:57
|
show 11 more comments
up vote
-3
down vote
up vote
-3
down vote
You need two wands; the same wand cannot serve both classes
From the Multiclassing rules, as written in the Player's Handbook, page 163:
Spells Known and Prepared. You determine what spells you know and can prepare for each class individually...
[...]
... Similarly, a spellcasting focus, such as a holy symbol, can be used only for the spells from the class associated with that focus.
While a Yew Wand is almost certainly valid as a spellcasting focus for either a Druid or a Wizard, it's not valid for both at the same time. You'd need to acquire a second wand at the time you multiclass.
If focuses were permitted to be shared between multiple classes, the wording would read something like "can be used only for the spells from the classes associated with that focus"
You need two wands; the same wand cannot serve both classes
From the Multiclassing rules, as written in the Player's Handbook, page 163:
Spells Known and Prepared. You determine what spells you know and can prepare for each class individually...
[...]
... Similarly, a spellcasting focus, such as a holy symbol, can be used only for the spells from the class associated with that focus.
While a Yew Wand is almost certainly valid as a spellcasting focus for either a Druid or a Wizard, it's not valid for both at the same time. You'd need to acquire a second wand at the time you multiclass.
If focuses were permitted to be shared between multiple classes, the wording would read something like "can be used only for the spells from the classes associated with that focus"
edited Nov 28 at 20:53
answered Nov 28 at 19:04
Xirema
13.6k24083
13.6k24083
5
Why can't the focus be associated to more than one class?
– NautArch
Nov 28 at 19:47
6
I don't see that interpretation as valid. Each class checks validity independently. Is it a Wand? Works for Wizard. Is it a Yew Want? Works for Druid. Same wand? Irrelevant. One wand can work fine for both. There is nothing in what you cited to support your assertion.
– MarkTO
Nov 28 at 19:50
6
I'm just not seeing the same thing you are. The quote says a focus can be used only for the spells from the class associated with that focus - but it's not saying that the focus can't associate to two classes and it doesn't say it can only do one. Unless I'm missing something.
– NautArch
Nov 28 at 20:08
6
This logic would imply that you could not use the same holy symbol for paladin and priest levels of the same faith. That seems... obviously incorrect.
– Ben Barden
Nov 28 at 20:51
2
@BenBarden Strictly speaking, in 5th edition, Paladins don't draw their power from the same source that Clerics do; Clerics draw their power from their Divine Connection, Paladins draw from their own Willpower and Convictions.
– Xirema
Nov 28 at 20:57
|
show 11 more comments
5
Why can't the focus be associated to more than one class?
– NautArch
Nov 28 at 19:47
6
I don't see that interpretation as valid. Each class checks validity independently. Is it a Wand? Works for Wizard. Is it a Yew Want? Works for Druid. Same wand? Irrelevant. One wand can work fine for both. There is nothing in what you cited to support your assertion.
– MarkTO
Nov 28 at 19:50
6
I'm just not seeing the same thing you are. The quote says a focus can be used only for the spells from the class associated with that focus - but it's not saying that the focus can't associate to two classes and it doesn't say it can only do one. Unless I'm missing something.
– NautArch
Nov 28 at 20:08
6
This logic would imply that you could not use the same holy symbol for paladin and priest levels of the same faith. That seems... obviously incorrect.
– Ben Barden
Nov 28 at 20:51
2
@BenBarden Strictly speaking, in 5th edition, Paladins don't draw their power from the same source that Clerics do; Clerics draw their power from their Divine Connection, Paladins draw from their own Willpower and Convictions.
– Xirema
Nov 28 at 20:57
5
5
Why can't the focus be associated to more than one class?
– NautArch
Nov 28 at 19:47
Why can't the focus be associated to more than one class?
– NautArch
Nov 28 at 19:47
6
6
I don't see that interpretation as valid. Each class checks validity independently. Is it a Wand? Works for Wizard. Is it a Yew Want? Works for Druid. Same wand? Irrelevant. One wand can work fine for both. There is nothing in what you cited to support your assertion.
– MarkTO
Nov 28 at 19:50
I don't see that interpretation as valid. Each class checks validity independently. Is it a Wand? Works for Wizard. Is it a Yew Want? Works for Druid. Same wand? Irrelevant. One wand can work fine for both. There is nothing in what you cited to support your assertion.
– MarkTO
Nov 28 at 19:50
6
6
I'm just not seeing the same thing you are. The quote says a focus can be used only for the spells from the class associated with that focus - but it's not saying that the focus can't associate to two classes and it doesn't say it can only do one. Unless I'm missing something.
– NautArch
Nov 28 at 20:08
I'm just not seeing the same thing you are. The quote says a focus can be used only for the spells from the class associated with that focus - but it's not saying that the focus can't associate to two classes and it doesn't say it can only do one. Unless I'm missing something.
– NautArch
Nov 28 at 20:08
6
6
This logic would imply that you could not use the same holy symbol for paladin and priest levels of the same faith. That seems... obviously incorrect.
– Ben Barden
Nov 28 at 20:51
This logic would imply that you could not use the same holy symbol for paladin and priest levels of the same faith. That seems... obviously incorrect.
– Ben Barden
Nov 28 at 20:51
2
2
@BenBarden Strictly speaking, in 5th edition, Paladins don't draw their power from the same source that Clerics do; Clerics draw their power from their Divine Connection, Paladins draw from their own Willpower and Convictions.
– Xirema
Nov 28 at 20:57
@BenBarden Strictly speaking, in 5th edition, Paladins don't draw their power from the same source that Clerics do; Clerics draw their power from their Divine Connection, Paladins draw from their own Willpower and Convictions.
– Xirema
Nov 28 at 20:57
|
show 11 more comments
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– Rubiksmoose
Nov 28 at 18:10
Possible duplicate of Can a multi-class spellcaster have one thing be two different focuses?
– V2Blast
Nov 29 at 4:22
2
What can yew do...
– V2Blast
Nov 29 at 4:22
1
@V2Blast not necessarily, because this doesn't necessarily have 2 types of foci. The question is more of "is the yew wand for a druidic focus the same kind of wand as a wizard focus".
– Riker
Nov 29 at 4:30