Difference between revisions of "Way of Mercy (5A)"

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=== Flurry of Healing and Harm ===
 
=== Flurry of Healing and Harm ===
Starting at 11th level, you can now mete out a flurry of comfort and hurt. When you use Flurry of Blows, you can now replace each of the unarmed strikes with a use of your Hands of Healing. <span style="text-decoration: line-through;background-color:coral">without spending ki points for the healing.</span>
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Starting at 11th level, you can now mete out a flurry of comfort and hurt.  
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<span style="text-decoration: line-through;background-color:coral">When you use Flurry of Blows</span>
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You can now replace each of the unarmed strikes  
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<span style="background-color:yellow">you do on your turn</span>
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with a use of your Hands of Healing without spending ki points for the healing.
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<span style="background-color:yellow">This only counts as one use of Hands of healing against your daily limit.
  
In addition, when you make an unarmed strike with Flurry of Blows, you can use Hand of Harm with that strike without spending the ki point for Hands of Harm. You can still use Hands of Harm only once per turn.
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''Yes, this means mercy monks can take the attack action out of combat in order to heal more.''
  
 
=== Hand of Ultimate Mercy ===
 
=== Hand of Ultimate Mercy ===
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== Designer's Notes ==
 
== Designer's Notes ==
It is a bit sad to go in and nerf a monk subclass.
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It is a bit sad to go in and nerf Hands of Healing.
But considering how much the base monk has improved, I felt I had to cut the Way of Mercy down a bit to make it comparable to other subclasses.
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But considering that ki is no longer a daily resource, I felt I had to cut the Way of Mercy down a bit to make it comparable to other subclasses. They regain some of this with the increased healing of Flurry of Healing and Hurt.

Latest revision as of 12:02, 8 March 2022

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This is a Monk monastic tradition for 5A.

Monks of the Way of Mercy learn to manipulate the life force of others to bring aid to those in need. They are wandering physicians to the poor and hurt. However, to those beyond their help, they bring a swift end as an act of mercy.

Those who follow the Way of Mercy might be members of a religious order, administering to the needy and making grim choices rooted in reality rather than idealism. Some might be gentle-voiced healers, beloved by their communities, while others might be masked bringers of macabre mercies.

The walkers of this way usually don robes with deep cowls, and they often conceal their faces with masks, presenting themselves as the faceless bringers of life and death.

Greyhawk: Individual monks choose this path to distance themselves from violence. Strong in Zindria and the far south, individual mercy monks walk the roads all over the world.

Source: Tasha's Cauldron of Everything

Monastic Tradition Abilities

Implements of Mercy

When you choose this tradition at 3rd level, you gain proficiency in the Insight and Medicine skills, and you gain proficiency with the herbalism kit.

You also gain a special mask, which you often wear when using the features of this subclass. You determine its appearance, or generate it randomly by rolling on the Merciful Mask table.

Merciful Mask
d6 Mask Appearance
1 Raven
2 Blank and white
3 Crying visage
4 Laughing visage
5 Skull
6 Butterfly

Hands of Healing

At 3rd level, your mystical touch can mend wounds. As an action, you can spend 1 ki point to touch a creature and restore a number of hit points equal to a roll of your Martial Arts die + your Wisdom modifier. You can do this a number of times equal to your proficiency bonus, regaining all uses at the end of a long rest.

When you use your Flurry of Blows, you can replace one of the unarmed strikes with a use of this feature without spending a ki point for the healing.

Hands of Harm

At 3rd level, you use your ki to inflict wounds. When you hit a creature with an unarmed strike, you can spend 1 ki point to deal extra necrotic damage equal to one roll of your Martial Arts die + your Wisdom modifier. You can use this feature only once per turn.

Physician's Touch

Starting at 6th level, you can administer even greater cures with a touch, and if you feel it's necessary, you can use your knowledge to cause harm.

When you use Hands of Healing on a creature, you can also end one disease or one of the following conditions affecting the creature: blinded, deafened, paralyzed, poisoned, or stunned.

When you use Hands of Harm on a creature, you can spend one point of ki to subject that creature to the poisoned condition until the end of your next turn.

Flurry of Healing and Harm

Starting at 11th level, you can now mete out a flurry of comfort and hurt. When you use Flurry of Blows You can now replace each of the unarmed strikes you do on your turn with a use of your Hands of Healing without spending ki points for the healing. This only counts as one use of Hands of healing against your daily limit.

Yes, this means mercy monks can take the attack action out of combat in order to heal more.

Hand of Ultimate Mercy

By 17th level, Your mastery of life energy opens the door to the ultimate mercy. As an action, you can touch the corpse of a creature that died within the past 24 hours and expend 5 ki points. The creature then returns to life, regaining a number of hit points equal to 4d10 + your Wisdom modifier. If the creature died while subject to any of the following conditions, it revives with them removed: blinded, deafened, paralyzed, poisoned, and stunned.

Once you use this feature, you can't use it again until you finish a long rest.

Designer's Notes

It is a bit sad to go in and nerf Hands of Healing. But considering that ki is no longer a daily resource, I felt I had to cut the Way of Mercy down a bit to make it comparable to other subclasses. They regain some of this with the increased healing of Flurry of Healing and Hurt.