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| | 5gp || 1d4 || 1d6 || 1d8 || 2d6 || x3 || - || 9 lbs || align="left" | Piercing | | | 5gp || 1d4 || 1d6 || 1d8 || 2d6 || x3 || - || 9 lbs || align="left" | Piercing |
| |- | | |- |
| | colspan="10" align="left" | '''Weapon Properties: ''' Brace, reach | | | colspan="10" align="left" | '''Weapon Properties: ''' [[Weapon Properties#Brace|Brace]], [[Weapon Properties#Reach]] |
| |- | | |- |
| | colspan="10" align="left" | A long spear is exactly what it sounds like: A longer spear. The extra two to three feet of length makes them more clumsy to throw than their shorter cousins, but grants them reach. | | | colspan="10" align="left" | A long spear is exactly what it sounds like: A longer spear. The extra two to three feet of length makes them more clumsy to throw than their shorter cousins, but grants them reach. |
Revision as of 21:59, 17 February 2014
Go back to the Epic Path page.
Simple Two-Hand Melee Weapons
Longspear
|
Name |
Cost |
Tiny Dmg |
Sm Dmg |
Med Dmg |
Large Dmg |
Crit |
Range |
Wt |
Type
|
Longspear
|
5gp |
1d4 |
1d6 |
1d8 |
2d6 |
x3 |
- |
9 lbs |
Piercing
|
Weapon Properties: Brace, Weapon Properties#Reach
|
A long spear is exactly what it sounds like: A longer spear. The extra two to three feet of length makes them more clumsy to throw than their shorter cousins, but grants them reach.
|
Quarterstaff
|
Name |
Cost |
Tiny Dmg |
Sm Dmg |
Med Dmg |
Large Dmg |
Crit |
Range |
Wt |
Type
|
Quarterstaff
|
0gp |
1d3 |
1d4 |
1d6 |
1d8 |
x2 |
- |
4 lbs |
Bludgeoning
|
Weapon Properties: double, monk
|
Ah, the quarterstaff. Never has a device so simple had such power. Despite the extremely basic design and low, low cost of 'free', a person with a quarterstaff is actually very well armed indeed. A quarterstaff can be used with no skill exactly as it's shorter cousin, the club. But in the hands of a skillful user, the quarterstaff is a double weapon, attacking as two clubs, and the more skill the user has, the more dangerous that simple stick gets. And as if that wasn't bad enough, the quarterstaff can also be used by monks, who can show you how to really use a six foot long hunk of wood.
|
Spear
|
Name |
Cost |
Tiny Dmg |
Sm Dmg |
Med Dmg |
Large Dmg |
Crit |
Range |
Wt |
Type
|
Spear
|
2gp |
1d4 |
1d6 |
1d8 |
2d6 |
x3 |
20ft |
6 lbs |
Piercing
|
Weapon Properties: Brace
|
Take a hefty five foot long stick, put a nice sharp blade on the end and you have a spear. Spears are simple, economical, and for the investment, about the best weapons ever invented. If you need to arm thousands of troops really fast? You use spears. They hit extremely hard, they can be thrown for good distances, and they can brace to repel charging opponents. Just excellent.
|
Spear, Boar
|
Name |
Cost |
Tiny Dmg |
Sm Dmg |
Med Dmg |
Large Dmg |
Crit |
Range |
Wt |
Type
|
Spear, Boar
|
5gp |
1d4 |
1d6 |
1d8 |
2d6 |
x2 |
- |
8 lbs |
Piercing
|
Weapon Properties: Brace, charge defense
|
Take a regular spear and add some extra strength. Use a bigger head, and a thicker shaft. Add a set of crossbars below the head, too, to stop creatures from charging down the shaft. You wind up with the boar spear, which is surprisingly a little less likely than a regular spear to hit for critical damage due to the extra weight, but is much safer if you hit a charging foe. When set to receive a charge, if you hit, you receive an extra +2 un-typed bonus to your AC against that foe only until the end of your next turn.
|
Martial Two-Hand Melee Weapons
Bardiche
|
Name |
Cost |
Tiny Dmg |
Sm Dmg |
Med Dmg |
Large Dmg |
Crit |
Range |
Wt |
Type
|
Bardiche
|
13gp |
1d6 |
1d8 |
1d10 |
2d8 |
19-20x2 |
- |
12 lbs |
Slashing
|
Weapon Properties: Brace, Reach, hard to sunder
|
A bardiche has a huge curving blade which attaches to its sturdy haft in two places. They are useful polearms, with the added advantage of being extremely durable due to their solid and redundant construction techniques. A bardiche adds a +2 bonus to the users CMD to resist sunder attempts
|
Bill
|
Name |
Cost |
Tiny Dmg |
Sm Dmg |
Med Dmg |
Large Dmg |
Crit |
Range |
Wt |
Type
|
Bill
|
8gp |
1d8 |
1d10 |
1d12 |
3d6 |
x3 |
- |
10 lbs |
Slashing
|
Weapon Properties: Reach
|
A bill is a hefty forward hooked blade sharpened on the inner curve only. They are simple and sturdy devices, granting the user reach, and they hit really hard, even for polearms. Bills are surprisingly common as tools and farm implements, where they are called brush hooks or pruning hooks. In the hands of a user with martial weapons skill, the lowly farm implement becomes an extremely lethal, if unsophisticated, weapon.
|
Falchion
|
Name |
Cost |
Tiny Dmg |
Sm Dmg |
Med Dmg |
Large Dmg |
Crit |
Range |
Wt |
Type
|
Falchion
|
30gp |
1d4 |
1d6 |
2d4 |
2d6 |
18-20x2 |
- |
8 lbs |
Slashing
|
Weapon Properties:
|
The falchion is the smallest and least sophisticated of the heavy two-handed swords. But this does not mean the falchion is a poor weapon! The compact dimensions and solid construction make the falchion surprisingly fast to maneuver, and as a result a falchion can score many dangerous critical hits.
|
Flail, Heavy
|
Name |
Cost |
Tiny Dmg |
Sm Dmg |
Med Dmg |
Large Dmg |
Crit |
Range |
Wt |
Type
|
Flail, Heavy
|
15gp |
1d6 |
1d8 |
1d10 |
2d8 |
19-20x2 |
- |
10 lbs |
Bludgeoning and piercing
|
Weapon Properties: disarm, trip
|
A heavy flail has a handle quite similar to a flail, except with more space for gripping and stronger hardware. The chain is much heftier than a standard flail as well. The big difference is in the striking head. On a heavy flail, the striking head is twice as large and cylinder shaped, not to mention still liberally equipped with spikes. The heavy flail is still a flexible weapon, and gives bonuses to trip and disarm attempts.
|
Glaive
|
Name |
Cost |
Tiny Dmg |
Sm Dmg |
Med Dmg |
Large Dmg |
Crit |
Range |
Wt |
Type
|
Glaive
|
11gp |
1d4 |
1d6 |
1d8 |
2d6 |
x3 |
- |
11 lbs |
Slashing
|
Weapon Properties: brace, disarm, reach, full defense bonus, bonus vs mounted
|
The blade of this polearm is a curved chopping blade with a spiked projection on the back of the blade. The spike is commonly used to block and parry. Despite the fairly simple design, the glaive is remarkably handy in combat. When fighting defensively or with full defense, this weapon gives you a +1 shield bonus to AC. A mounted opponent hit by a glaive takes a –1 penalty on his Ride checks to stay mounted. Sadly, a glaive does not hit as hard as some other polearms.
|
Greataxe
|
Name |
Cost |
Tiny Dmg |
Sm Dmg |
Med Dmg |
Large Dmg |
Crit |
Range |
Wt |
Type
|
Greataxe
|
20gp |
1d8 |
1d10 |
1d12 |
3d6 |
x3 |
- |
12 lbs |
Slashing
|
Weapon Properties:
|
A greataxe is a larger, meaner, two-handed version of the battle axe, and a perennial favorite of barbarians everywhere. There's nothing that says 'barbaric' like a big honkin' axe.
|
Greatclub
|
Name |
Cost |
Tiny Dmg |
Sm Dmg |
Med Dmg |
Large Dmg |
Crit |
Range |
Wt |
Type
|
Greatclub
|
5gp |
1d6 |
1d8 |
1d10 |
2d8 |
x2 |
- |
8 lbs |
Bludgeoning
|
Weapon Properties:
|
A greatclub is the huger and two-handed version of the old reliable club. A greatclub is shorter and much heavier than a quarterstaff, and is almost always worked over by a craftsman to improve its performance in combat. A greatclub is nothing fancy, but it will certainly get the job done and can be bought or made almost anywhere out of almost anything.
|
Greatsword
|
Name |
Cost |
Tiny Dmg |
Sm Dmg |
Med Dmg |
Large Dmg |
Crit |
Range |
Wt |
Type
|
Greatsword
|
50gp |
1d8 |
1d10 |
2d6 |
3d6 |
19-20x2 |
- |
8 lbs |
Slashing
|
Weapon Properties:
|
To many, the greatsword is the king of the large martial swords. It is longer and more sophisticated than the falchion, and quicker and more refined than the massive godsword. In the eyes of many warriors, the greatsword is the best no-nonsense, no-frills, get the job done weapon out there.
|
Halberd
|
Name |
Cost |
Tiny Dmg |
Sm Dmg |
Med Dmg |
Large Dmg |
Crit |
Range |
Wt |
Type
|
Halberd
|
10gp |
1d6 |
1d8 |
1d10 |
2d8 |
x3 |
- |
12 lbs |
Piercing and Slashing
|
Weapon Properties: trip, brace
|
The halberd is the weapon of choice for professional military's everywhere. It can be used in general melee, is good against the charge, and can put opponents on the ground, all at a very reasonable price and while doing solid damage. There are other weapons that do some things better, but for all around utility, the halberd is hard to beat.
|
Hammer, Great
|
Name |
Cost |
Tiny Dmg |
Sm Dmg |
Med Dmg |
Large Dmg |
Crit |
Range |
Wt |
Type
|
Hammer, Great
|
40gp |
1d8 |
1d10 |
2d6 |
3d6 |
x3 |
- |
14 |
Bludgeoning
|
Weapon Properties:
|
The Great Hammer is the big brother of the Light Mace and Heavy Mace. It's not a sophisticated weapon by any stretch, having a simple head of hard, heavy material and a sturdy handle. But what it lacks in sophistication it makes up in simple rugged utility. Indeed, great hammers are very commonly seen being used as tools to break stone, drive spikes, split wood with wedges, and otherwise getting work done. In the hands of a user with skill in martial weapons, however, having a greathammer means you're always going to effective in a fight.
|
Lance
|
Name |
Cost |
Tiny Dmg |
Sm Dmg |
Med Dmg |
Large Dmg |
Crit |
Range |
Wt |
Type
|
Lance
|
10gp |
1d4 |
1d6 |
1d8 |
2d6 |
x3 |
- |
10 lbs |
Piercing
|
Weapon Properties: reach, mounted, one-handed, double charge damage
|
The lance is a real oddball among two-handed weapons. The balance of the lance is very strongly shifted back to the grip, since even as a two-handed weapon, it is meant to be used while seated, riding a mount, and in one hand. The other hand is handling a shield and holding the reins of the mount. The very light tip makes using the lance not only possible but extremely deadly. When couched properly and used in a charge, a lance does double damage or more. Compared to other two-handed weapons, the lance does not do a lot of damage, but when used in it's specialized niche, there is nothing deadlier.
|
Pickaxe
|
Name |
Cost |
Tiny Dmg |
Sm Dmg |
Med Dmg |
Large Dmg |
Crit |
Range |
Wt |
Type
|
Pickaxe
|
14gp |
1d4 |
1d6 |
1d8 |
2d6 |
x4 |
- |
12 lbs |
Piercing
|
Weapon Properties: Sunder
|
The Pickaxe is the martial, two-handed iteration of the light pick and heavy pick weapons. Pickaxes are actually quite common, although they are usually used as heavy earth and stone breaking tools. In the hands of someone skilled with martial weapons, however, the lowly tool becomes one of the most fearsome weapons available. The pickaxe does not do severe damage in good old cut-and-thrust combat, but when it lands a lucky strike, the damage is horrendous.
|
Scythe
|
Name |
Cost |
Tiny Dmg |
Sm Dmg |
Med Dmg |
Large Dmg |
Crit |
Range |
Wt |
Type
|
Scythe
|
18gp |
1d4 |
1d6 |
2d4 |
2d6 |
x4 |
- |
10 lbs |
Piercing and Slashing
|
Weapon Properties: Trip
|
The scythe is a farming implement commonly seen nearly everywhere there are unruly plants that need to be given a good thrashing. But in the hands of a user skilled with martial weapons, the weird-shaped scythe becomes a deadly weapon, more than able to hold its own against dedicated weapons such as the halberd or the greatsword
|
Sword, Bastard
|
Name |
Cost |
Tiny Dmg |
Sm Dmg |
Med Dmg |
Large Dmg |
Crit |
Range |
Wt |
Type
|
Sword, Bastard
|
35gp |
1d6 |
1d8 |
1d10 |
2d8 |
19-20 x2 |
- |
6 lbs |
Slashing/Piercing
|
Weapon Properties: -
|
A bastard sword can be used with a martial weapons proficiency feat as a two-handed weapon, or it can be used as a one-handed weapon with an Exotic Weapon Proficiency feat. Even better, if used with an exotic weapon proficiency feat, the wielder is skilled in using the point as well as the edge. This allows the weapon to do either piercing or slashing damage at the user’s discretion. Even when being used with the Exotic Weapon Proficiency Feat, a Bastard Sword can be wielded with two hands and inflicts the users Strength bonus times 1.5. The Bastard Sword belongs to the "Blades, Light" and "Blades Heavy", weapon groups.
|
Exotic Two-Hand Melee Weapons
Cruciate Maul
|
Name |
Cost |
Tiny Dmg |
Sm Dmg |
Med Dmg |
Large Dmg |
Crit |
Range |
Wt |
Type
|
Cruciate Maul
|
30gp |
1d8 |
1d10 |
1d12 |
3d6 |
19-20 x2 |
- |
15 lbs |
Piercing/Bludgeoning
|
Weapon Properties: Brutal
|
The Cruciate Maul is a solid metal (or similar material) bludgeoning weapon of tremendous weight and size. It is forged into an “X” cross section keeping it barely light enough to wield. The business end is liberally equipped with small sawteeth so the damage type can be either piercing or bludgeoning at the choice of the user. The small teeth mean that the weapon does some extra damage on a critical, and the weight and narrow aspect of the weapon allow it to deal significant damage consistently. Any damage dice rolled for hits by this weapon that show a 1 or 2 result may be re-rolled until something other than a 1 or 2 is rolled. The unusual shape and balance of the Cruciate Maul make it an exotic weapon. The Cruciate Maul belongs to the "Blades, Light" and "Hammers", weapon groups.
|
Dorn Dergar
|
Name |
Cost |
Tiny Dmg |
Sm Dmg |
Med Dmg |
Large Dmg |
Crit |
Range |
Wt |
Type
|
Dorn Dergar
|
50gp |
1d6 |
1d8 |
1d10 |
2d8 |
x3 |
- |
15 |
Bludgeoning
|
Weapon Properties: adaptive reach
|
This exotic weapon is a 10-foot-long, heavy metal chain weighted at the end by a round ball of solid iron about the size of a large fist. Though fallen into disuse over the spanning centuries, the dwarven dorn dergar is still sometimes employed by dwarves who cling to the old ways. Despite it's current rarity, the Dorn Dergar is a capable weapon if you have the skill to use it to it's potential.
|
Dread Maul
|
Name |
Cost |
Tiny Dmg |
Sm Dmg |
Med Dmg |
Large Dmg |
Crit |
Range |
Wt |
Type
|
Dread Maul
|
80gp |
1d10 |
2d6 |
2d8 |
3d8 |
x3 |
- |
35 lbs |
Bludgeoning
|
Weapon Properties: Massive
|
While the Cruciate weapons are marvels of the weapon-makers art, the dread maul is a paragon of simplicity. Take a mass of metal the size of a small child, attach a sturdy stick to it, and then smash things with it. Despite the simplicity of the design, the dread maul requires a minimum Strength score of 18 and an exotic weapon proficiency to wield effectively. It is said that any fool can swing a Dread Maul, but it can take a lifetime to learn to use it well. The Dread Maul belongs to the "Hammers", weapon group.
|
Fauchard
|
Name |
Cost |
Tiny Dmg |
Sm Dmg |
Med Dmg |
Large Dmg |
Crit |
Range |
Wt |
Type
|
Fauchard
|
44gp |
1d6 |
1d8 |
1d10 |
2d8 |
18-20x2 |
- |
10 lbs |
Slashing
|
Weapon Properties: Reach, trip, brace, disarm
|
Among pole arms, the fauchard (also known as 'The Devil's Fork') is the hardest one to use well. In the hands of a user without an exotic weapons proficiency, a fauchard will be next to useless. But once you learn how to wield it, it is deadly. A fauchard is similar to a glaive in that it grants reach. In addition, the back-hook has been turned into a forward facing prong, creating a 'fork' effect on the back of the weapon. To a skilled user, that fork allows bonuses to disarming attempts and can be used for bonuses on trip attempts. A fouchard is better made than most pole arms, with good steel and selected wooden parts so it can be swung faster and harder than most pole arms. A fouchard does good damage and is much more maneuverable than you would expect, since a twist of the wrists can present either of the two tips for an attack. As a result it is much easier to score a dangerous strike with a fouchard than you might expect.
|
Flail, Dire
|
Name |
Cost |
Tiny Dmg |
Sm Dmg |
Med Dmg |
Large Dmg |
Crit |
Range |
Wt |
Type
|
Flail, Dire
|
90gp |
1d4 |
1d6 |
1d8 |
2d6 |
x2 |
- |
10 lbs |
Bludgeoning
|
Weapon Properties: disarm, double, trip
|
A dire flail is a terrifying thing to witness in action in the hands of a skilled user. But in the hands of an unskilled user, it's comedy gold. Using a dire flail is an art, and the sheer number of attacks and the unpredictability of it all makes the dire flail much more dangerous than it seems like it should be.
|
Flambard
|
Name |
Cost |
Tiny Dmg |
Sm Dmg |
Med Dmg |
Large Dmg |
Crit |
Range |
Wt |
Type
|
Flambard
|
50gp |
1d6 |
1d8 |
1d10 |
2d8 |
x2 |
- |
6 lbs |
Slashing
|
Weapon Properties: wooden sunders
|
The flambard is a bastard sword with a special wavy blade. You can't use the tip of a flambard very well, but it has all the benefits of the sunder property, and in addition gains a +4 bonus on sunder attempts against wooden weapons.
|
Flickerspike
|
Name |
Cost |
Tiny Dmg |
Sm Dmg |
Med Dmg |
Large Dmg |
Crit |
Range |
Wt |
Type
|
Flickerspike
|
150gp |
1d4 |
1d6 |
1d8 |
2d6 |
18-20 x2 |
- |
4 lbs |
Piercing
|
Weapon Properties: Finesse, Adaptive Reach, Blocking
|
The Flickerspike, sometimes called the Four-handed Sword or the Doubled-Hilted Sword, is the Needlesword's much larger and deadlier cousin. The Flickerspike has a blade about the same size as a bastard sword but has a very long, light hilt, usually at least twenty inches long, to provide increased leverage to the blade. The Flickerspike is a masterpiece of the swordmakers art, a two-handed weapon of unsurpassed lightness and speed. A Flickerspike is so light and finely made, it can even be used with the Weapon Finesse Feat. Due to the extreme length of the Flickerspike, it can be used to attack foes ten feet away with a swift action by adjusting your grip. When used this way, the Flickerspike threatens squares ten feet away, but does not threaten adjacent squares. Another swift action can be used to return to the regular grip, losing the reach but threatening adjacent squares. If used while fighting defensively, the Flickerspike's length, leverage, and speed adds a +1 shield bonus to AC during the maneuver. A Flickerspike does not do huge amounts of damage for a two-handed weapon, but it makes up for this with many dangerous critical attacks. The unusual size, weight, and balance of the Flickerspike makes it an exotic weapon. The Flickerspike belongs to the "Blades, Light" and "Polearms", weapon groups.
|
Garrote
|
Name |
Cost |
Tiny Dmg |
Sm Dmg |
Med Dmg |
Large Dmg |
Crit |
Range |
Wt |
Type
|
Garrote
|
20gp |
1d10 |
1d10 |
1d10 |
1d10 |
x2 |
- |
1/2 lb |
Slashing
|
Weapon Properties: unaware, grapple, choke, light in grapple
|
A garrote is a vicious weapon that requires a clear shot at a vulnerable point. Concealment does not stop the use of a garrote. In order for you to use a garrote, your opponent must be helpless or unaware of you. You must make a grapple check (though you avoid the –4 penalty for not having two hands free) to successfully begin garroting your opponent. Despite being a two-handed weapon (and granting 1.5 times your Str to its damage) the garrote is treated as a light weapon and may be used to make attacks during a grapple. Precision damage (not even sneak attack, sorry rogues) does not apply to a garrote.
Your garroted opponent must make a concentration check (DC 20 + your CMB + level of the spell he’s casting) to cast a spell with a verbal component, use a command word item, or use any magic requiring speech. A garroted opponent may not make any sound with his mouth, assuming the garrote is around the neck. Creatures immune to criticals or precision damage are generally still able to speak, although not cast, and they still take damage from a garrote. You may continue to grapple while using a garrote until your foe dies or wins control of the grapple. If you lose control of a grapple while using a garrote, the garrote is considered broken and is useless until repaired.
You gain the following additional option when grappling with a garrote.
Choke: You cut off your target’s air supply so he has to hold his breath (see drowning for additional information). Any round you do not maintain the choke, your opponent can take a breath and restarts when he has to begin making Constitution checks.
|
Godsword
|
Name |
Cost |
Tiny Dmg |
Sm Dmg |
Med Dmg |
Large Dmg |
Crit |
Range |
Wt |
Type
|
Godsword
|
100gp |
1d10 |
2d6 |
2d8 |
3d8 |
19-20x2 |
- |
21 lbs |
Slashing
|
Weapon Properties: Massive
|
Massive, sturdy, over six feet long and re-enforced for its entire length, the Godsword is the ultimate embodiment of power that the sword-master can create. The largest of the two-handed swords by a good margin, the Godsword is not about refinement. Somebody using a Godsword is not interested in subtlety, finesse, or negotiations. Using a Godsword is as much a declaration of philosophy as a weapon choice. The Godsword has the massive property, requires a minimum Strength score of 18 and an exotic weapon proficiency to wield effectively. The Godsword belongs to the "Blades, Heavy", weapon group.
|
Greatpick
|
Name |
Cost |
Tiny Dmg |
Sm Dmg |
Med Dmg |
Large Dmg |
Crit |
Range |
Wt |
Type
|
Greatpick
|
40gp |
1d6 |
1d8 |
1d10 |
2d8 |
19-20 x3 |
- |
9 lbs |
Piercing
|
Weapon Properties: Sunder
|
The greatpick is a heavy two-handed weapon, whose rarity and extremely top-heavy balance make it an exotic weapon. The damage it does is not large for a two handed weapon, but with every swing it has the chance to do massive critical damage on a lucky strike. If a Greatpick is used to perform a Sunder, the wielder gains +2 to their combat maneuver checks, and against unattended objects, it can ignore up to 5 points of hardness, though the object's hardness may not be reduced below 5 in this manner. The Greatpick belongs to the "Axes" and "Blades, Heavy", weapon groups.
|
Hafted War Axe
|
Name |
Cost |
Tiny Dmg |
Sm Dmg |
Med Dmg |
Large Dmg |
Crit |
Range |
Wt |
Type
|
Hafted War Axe
|
80gp |
1d8 |
1d10 |
1d12 |
3d6 |
x3 |
- |
12 lbs |
Slashing or Piercing
|
Weapon Properties: Sunder, Adaptive Reach
|
The Hafted War Axe has a square chopping axe blade on one side and a sturdy beak on the other, enabling the wielder to choose between slashing and piercing damage with each swing. In addition, the beak is sturdy enough to use as a prybar, granting the wielder +2 on combat maneuver checks when making sunder attempts, and ignoring up to 5 points of hardness when smashing unattended objects. The hardness of an item so targeted cannot be reduced below 5 by this effect. Last, the Hafted War Axe uses an overlong handle made of lightweight, magically treated wood. With a swift action, the wielder may shift his grip to use the weapon as if it has a reach of ten feet, and while being used this way the Hafted War Axe threatens squares ten feet away but does not threaten adjacent squares. The wielder may return to the regular (non-reach) grip with another swift action. The Hafted War Axe belongs to the "Axe","Blades, Heavy" and "Polearms", weapon groups.
|
Harpoon
|
Name |
Cost |
Tiny Dmg |
Sm Dmg |
Med Dmg |
Large Dmg |
Crit |
Range |
Wt |
Type
|
Harpoon
|
5gp |
1d3 |
1d4 |
1d6 |
1d8 |
x2 |
30ft |
16 lbs |
Piercing
|
Weapon Properties: expendable, entangling, bleed, recovering
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A harpoon is a two-handed melee weapon, and may be used as such with no hint at it's nasty secrets. The harpoon's true cruelty arises when it is hurled in combat. A harpoon is nasty barbed spear with fifty feet of hemp rope attached. As such, its maximum range is 50 feet. The weight listed includes the weight of the rope. If you use a harpoon without the rope, reduce the weight by ten pounds, you lose the use of the recovering property, and you may throw the harpoon further than fifty feet.
When thrown, a harpoon is treated as expendable, so they are treated as ammunition except for purposes of drawing them. They frequently have to be replaced after use. A harpoon can be recovered for use if it is reloaded with coiled rope in it's bulbous handle.
Any attack which inflicts damage to the foe (hits their AC and overcomes any DR) means the harpoon has stuck to the foe. The enemy gains the entangled condition. Even worse, the harpoon inflicts a bleed condition equal to one point per round which cannot be ended unless the harpoon is removed first. To remove a harpoon requires higher than animal intelligence and takes a full round action by either the creature struck or another creature adjacent to the creature struck. Removing a harpoon ends the entangled condition and allows a heal check or healing to end the bleed condition as well.
As long as a creature is entangled by a harpoon with rope attached, the wielder of that harpoon may expend a move action to recover the entangled foe. Recovering is a type of automatic forced movement. You may move a harpooned foe five feet for each move action expended. This is a pull movement.
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Imperial Axe
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Name |
Cost |
Tiny Dmg |
Sm Dmg |
Med Dmg |
Large Dmg |
Crit |
Range |
Wt |
Type
|
Imperial Axe
|
75gp |
1d10 |
2d6 |
2d8 |
3d8 |
x3 |
- |
30 lbs |
Slashing
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Weapon Properties: Massive
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The Imperial Axe features an axe head roughly twice as large as a Greataxe, and the haft only adds another two feet to the length. The extreme size and unusual balance of the Imperial Axe make it an exotic weapon, requiring an exotic weapon proficiency to use. The Imperial Axe is designed for close-in bloodwork, and as a result, is so unwieldy out of combat that using an Imperial Axe is a testament to the owners approach to combat. Namely, they like it. Approach with care. The Imperial Axe belongs to the "Axes" and "Blades, Heavy", weapon groups.
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Mancatcher
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Name |
Cost |
Tiny Dmg |
Sm Dmg |
Med Dmg |
Large Dmg |
Crit |
Range |
Wt |
Type
|
Mancatcher
|
15gp |
1d3 |
1d4 |
1d6 |
1d8 |
x2 |
- |
10lbs |
Piercing
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Weapon Properties: grapple, reach, size-specific, light in grapple, touch attack
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A mancatcher is built to capture a creature of a particular size category (such as Small or Medium) and doesn’t work at all on creatures of the wrong size. Make a touch attack to hit an opponent and a combat maneuver check to grapple him (without the –4 penalty for not having two hands free); success means you and the target are grappled, but you do not move into the same space. Once the target is grappled, you can perform a move or damage grapple action against him. Note that a mancatcher cannot do damage until a grapple is initiated. The mancatcher is treated as a light weapon and thus may be used in a grapple to do damage.
Mancatchers can be built with or without spikes: If built without spikes, it does non-lethal damage. Sadly, the non-lethal version of the mancatcher is not cheaper.
The mancatcher has hardness 10 and 5 hit points; it requires a DC 26 Strength check to break it. If you drop the mancatcher, the target can free himself as a standard action. If the target wins the grapple and frees himself, the mancatcher is not damaged. If the foe attempts to win control of the grapple and grapple the user of the mancatcher, the user may drop the mancatcher to end the grapple.
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Ogre Hook
|
Name |
Cost |
Tiny Dmg |
Sm Dmg |
Med Dmg |
Large Dmg |
Crit |
Range |
Wt |
Type
|
Ogre Hook
|
40gp |
1d6 |
1d8 |
1d10 |
2d8 |
19-20x3 |
- |
- |
Piercing
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Weapon Properties: trip, gore
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The Ogre Hook was inspired by the crude stone and iron hooks of the ogre clans, but has developed into a deadly and sophisticated weapon. If you roll a natural 20 on an attack with an Ogre Hook, you gore your foe, which inflicts the Slowed condition on them until the start of your next round. An Ogre Hook is hard to use properly, but is hard-hitting indeed if you have the ability to pull it off. Note that genuine Ogre Hooks, made by Ogres, are usually fragile and always size Large.
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Spiked Chain
|
Name |
Cost |
Tiny Dmg |
Sm Dmg |
Med Dmg |
Large Dmg |
Crit |
Range |
Wt |
Type
|
Spiked Chain
|
25gp |
1d4 |
1d6 |
2d4 |
2d6 |
x2 |
- |
10 lbs |
Piercing
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Weapon Properties: Trip, Finesse, Inclusive Reach 10', Disarm
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The Spiked Chain does not have a traditional handle, and is instead looped and wrapped and manipulated using the entire body. The Spiked Chain belongs to the "Flails", weapon group.
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Sword, Two-Bladed
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Name |
Cost |
Tiny Dmg |
Sm Dmg |
Med Dmg |
Large Dmg |
Crit |
Range |
Wt |
Type
|
Sword, Two-Bladed
|
100gp |
1d4 |
1d6 |
1d8 |
2d6 |
19-20x2 |
- |
10 lbs |
Slashing
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Weapon Properties: double
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A Two-bladed Sword is a beautiful thing to watch in the hands of a skilled user. Take two one-handed martial swords, put them end-to-end, and you have created a two-bladed sword. They are used in a series of fast, graceful arcs and spins and sweeps as the user attacks with both ends at once to devastating effect
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Urgrosh, Dwarven
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Name |
Cost |
Tiny Dmg |
Sm Dmg |
Med Dmg |
Large Dmg |
Crit |
Range |
Wt |
Type
|
Urgrosh, Dwarven
|
50gp |
1d4/1d3 |
1d6/1d4 |
1d8/1d6 |
2d6/1d8 |
x3 |
- |
12 lbs |
Piercing or Slashing
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Weapon Properties: brace, double
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A dwarven urgrosh is a double weapon, but unlike a double sword, using an urgrosh is not a graceful balletic dance. An urgrosh is a long battle axe with a nasty spear point on the opposite end of the long haft. The urgrosh's axe head is a slashing weapon that deals 1d8 points of damage in Medium size. Its spear head is a piercing weapon that deals 1d6 points of damage in Medium size. You can use either head as the primary weapon. The other becomes the off-hand weapon. If you brace an urgrosh against a charging character, the spear head is the part of the weapon that deals damage. In typical use by a skilled user, swipes by the axe head alternate with vicious stabs by the spear, usually into the tops of the feet. An Urgrosh isn't pretty, but it works excellently.
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Whip, Great
|
Name |
Cost |
Tiny Dmg |
Sm Dmg |
Med Dmg |
Large Dmg |
Crit |
Range |
Wt |
Type
|
Whip, Great
|
125gp |
1d8 |
1d10 |
2d6 |
3d6 |
19-20 x2 |
- |
12 lbs |
Slashing/Piercing
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Weapon Properties: Reach 15', Cumbersome
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The Greatwhip deals lethal damage and has a 15 foot reach. A Greatwhip takes considerable space to wield freely, if any adjacent square is blocked the user suffers -4 to hit. A Greatwhip cannot attack or threaten adjacent squares, but otherwise threatens all squares it can reach.
The largest and by far the most dangerous of the whips, the mighty Greatwhip has a sturdy handle three feet long, with a complex woven leather and wire braid as thick as a strong man's wrist attached to it. The braid is usually nine feet long, and has a sharp blade tip as well as secondary blades woven into the leather and wire braid for the last five or six feet. The Greatwhip is surprisingly wieldy for its size, and a skilled user can use the enormous reach and power to devastating effect. A Great Whip takes quite a bit of space to use effectively, but much less than many would assume given its size. The Greatwhip belongs to the "Blades, Heavy" and "Flails", weapon groups.
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