When are the effects of prone ended?
Here is a situation:
Initiative 15 - Monk attacks orc causing the orc receive the "prone" condition.
Initiative 13 - Orc stands up, ending the prone condition, and attacks the monk without disadvantage.
If a barbarian attacks the orc at Initiative 14, he has advantage. If the barbarian attacks at Initiative 12, he does not have advantage.
Reading Player's Handbook on prone (p. 190, 292) I don't see any effects of the prone condition lasting after the target stands.
Is this a correct interpretation of the prone condition and how standing cancels it?
dnd-5e prone
add a comment |
Here is a situation:
Initiative 15 - Monk attacks orc causing the orc receive the "prone" condition.
Initiative 13 - Orc stands up, ending the prone condition, and attacks the monk without disadvantage.
If a barbarian attacks the orc at Initiative 14, he has advantage. If the barbarian attacks at Initiative 12, he does not have advantage.
Reading Player's Handbook on prone (p. 190, 292) I don't see any effects of the prone condition lasting after the target stands.
Is this a correct interpretation of the prone condition and how standing cancels it?
dnd-5e prone
Related: rpg.stackexchange.com/questions/48371/…
– fabian
Dec 9 at 16:20
add a comment |
Here is a situation:
Initiative 15 - Monk attacks orc causing the orc receive the "prone" condition.
Initiative 13 - Orc stands up, ending the prone condition, and attacks the monk without disadvantage.
If a barbarian attacks the orc at Initiative 14, he has advantage. If the barbarian attacks at Initiative 12, he does not have advantage.
Reading Player's Handbook on prone (p. 190, 292) I don't see any effects of the prone condition lasting after the target stands.
Is this a correct interpretation of the prone condition and how standing cancels it?
dnd-5e prone
Here is a situation:
Initiative 15 - Monk attacks orc causing the orc receive the "prone" condition.
Initiative 13 - Orc stands up, ending the prone condition, and attacks the monk without disadvantage.
If a barbarian attacks the orc at Initiative 14, he has advantage. If the barbarian attacks at Initiative 12, he does not have advantage.
Reading Player's Handbook on prone (p. 190, 292) I don't see any effects of the prone condition lasting after the target stands.
Is this a correct interpretation of the prone condition and how standing cancels it?
dnd-5e prone
dnd-5e prone
edited Dec 9 at 18:20
SevenSidedDie♦
205k30657933
205k30657933
asked Dec 9 at 16:10
SteveED
1,0141923
1,0141923
Related: rpg.stackexchange.com/questions/48371/…
– fabian
Dec 9 at 16:20
add a comment |
Related: rpg.stackexchange.com/questions/48371/…
– fabian
Dec 9 at 16:20
Related: rpg.stackexchange.com/questions/48371/…
– fabian
Dec 9 at 16:20
Related: rpg.stackexchange.com/questions/48371/…
– fabian
Dec 9 at 16:20
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
Once a creature stands up they no longer suffer any effects from being knocked prone
Your reading is correct. A creature can get up from prone on their turn by spending half their movement, and once they're standing up again they don't suffer any further consequences from having been knocked prone. As you've observed, with an unhelpful initiative order, an enemy can recover from being knocked prone before an ally can take advantage of the effect (a common problem for any effect that an enemy can recover from or save against again on their turn).
Ready actions to get around the initiative order
Taking advantage of the Ready action is the best way, within the game's normal rules, to get around this problem. If the barbarian knows that the monk is going to try and knock down their foe, he could Ready an action to attack after the orc is knocked prone, and so the orc doesn't get a chance to get back up before the barbarian is upon them.
Readying does require that the character specify some sort of perceptible trigger - so you can't use triggers like "after the monk's turn" or "before the barbarian goes" - but you could trigger on things like "after the monk attacks", or even use verbal indicators like "attack when the monk shouts 'go'".
It's important to note that though it can be situationally useful the Ready action is mechanically expensive - it requires the use of your reaction plus it denies you the use of any ability which you can only use on your turn (like Extra Attack or Martial Arts), so it's often not worth it (especially for higher level characters). If your barbarian can normally make two attacks in an action, it's generally superior for them to get to take two normal attacks against an enemy than give up their reaction and make one attack with advantage. The only case I can think of where Readying actions in this way would be consistently useful is for a Rogue waiting for allies to move into position to grant them sneak attack - since a rogue will usually only be able to make one attack a round anyway and their bonus action abilities don't depend on doing something with their action.
House ruling
In 3rd edition, getting up from prone was an action that provoked attacks of opportunity, so a target knocked down would be forced to risk taking attacks as it tried to get back up. If it bothers you that a quirk of the initiative can mean that the monk could knock down a target but they immediately stand back up before any ally can take advantage, you could rule that getting up from prone provokes opportunity attacks just like moving out of reach does; this obviously makes any ability that can knock people prone more powerful, though.
5
It should be noted that you need to specify a proper trigger for the readied attack. You cannot e.g. specify "after the goblin's turn" as a trigger, since that's nothing a char could percieve. You could instruct your party member to verbally inform you (s)he's about to attack though and use this as a trigger.
– fabian
Dec 9 at 16:33
1
Your answer is correct, but the bit at the end about "giving up any abilities they'd normally use on their turn" sort of papers over that this is an extraordinarily bad option for a monk. Anyone can forgo an attack to Shove for a knockdown, but that's a Strength check while most monks are Dex-based. The primary way a monk knocks folks down is with the Open Hand Technique, which tags along on their Flurry, which is also a bonus action after an attack, and consequently can't go out of turn.
– Darth Pseudonym
Dec 9 at 18:28
@DarthPseudonym true. I wasn't quite satisfied with my first draft at the answer but I had to take care of something. It is indeed a very bad option for a monk, but to be honest the Ready action is rarely worth it for any character if it means giving up attacks.
– Carcer
Dec 9 at 19:21
thank you very much! I think you also pegged the reason why we got confused. we were vaguely remembering the 3ed rules and getting them all mixed up.
– SteveED
Dec 10 at 0:59
1
+1 Maybe add a note that recovering from prone typically consumes half one's movement.
– Lexible
Dec 10 at 5:08
|
show 3 more comments
You're playing the rule correctly.
Unfortunately, there's not a lot you can do to fix this situation. I'm reading between the lines a bit and assuming that a monk knocking people down is doing so using the Open Hand Technique as part of a Flurry of Blows.
While you could ready an Attack action against the Orc, attacking outside your turn means you don't have a bonus action to spend on a Flurry of Blows, so you won't be able to trigger the Open Hand knockdown. You could give up one of your attack rolls to attempt a Shove (Player's Handbook p.195), but that Shove would then be based on your Athletics check rather than your Dexterity or Wisdom scores, and anyway you'd be giving up damage to do so, so that probably isn't what you intended either.
In this particular case, you probably can't use your knockdown for much of anything useful. It's an unfortunate consequence of the initiative system and 5th edition's insistence that you don't change initiative order after it's been rolled. If it's a big problem, you might ask the DM to consider alternative initiative methods, such as Side Initiative (Dungeon Master's Guide p.270), or your DM might be willing to allow a Delay that permanently moves you down in the order.
add a comment |
Yes. Prone condition ends when the character stands up.
If if the monk wants the prone condition to last through everyone's turn, he can use ready action to attack after the orc has ended his turn.
add a comment |
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3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Once a creature stands up they no longer suffer any effects from being knocked prone
Your reading is correct. A creature can get up from prone on their turn by spending half their movement, and once they're standing up again they don't suffer any further consequences from having been knocked prone. As you've observed, with an unhelpful initiative order, an enemy can recover from being knocked prone before an ally can take advantage of the effect (a common problem for any effect that an enemy can recover from or save against again on their turn).
Ready actions to get around the initiative order
Taking advantage of the Ready action is the best way, within the game's normal rules, to get around this problem. If the barbarian knows that the monk is going to try and knock down their foe, he could Ready an action to attack after the orc is knocked prone, and so the orc doesn't get a chance to get back up before the barbarian is upon them.
Readying does require that the character specify some sort of perceptible trigger - so you can't use triggers like "after the monk's turn" or "before the barbarian goes" - but you could trigger on things like "after the monk attacks", or even use verbal indicators like "attack when the monk shouts 'go'".
It's important to note that though it can be situationally useful the Ready action is mechanically expensive - it requires the use of your reaction plus it denies you the use of any ability which you can only use on your turn (like Extra Attack or Martial Arts), so it's often not worth it (especially for higher level characters). If your barbarian can normally make two attacks in an action, it's generally superior for them to get to take two normal attacks against an enemy than give up their reaction and make one attack with advantage. The only case I can think of where Readying actions in this way would be consistently useful is for a Rogue waiting for allies to move into position to grant them sneak attack - since a rogue will usually only be able to make one attack a round anyway and their bonus action abilities don't depend on doing something with their action.
House ruling
In 3rd edition, getting up from prone was an action that provoked attacks of opportunity, so a target knocked down would be forced to risk taking attacks as it tried to get back up. If it bothers you that a quirk of the initiative can mean that the monk could knock down a target but they immediately stand back up before any ally can take advantage, you could rule that getting up from prone provokes opportunity attacks just like moving out of reach does; this obviously makes any ability that can knock people prone more powerful, though.
5
It should be noted that you need to specify a proper trigger for the readied attack. You cannot e.g. specify "after the goblin's turn" as a trigger, since that's nothing a char could percieve. You could instruct your party member to verbally inform you (s)he's about to attack though and use this as a trigger.
– fabian
Dec 9 at 16:33
1
Your answer is correct, but the bit at the end about "giving up any abilities they'd normally use on their turn" sort of papers over that this is an extraordinarily bad option for a monk. Anyone can forgo an attack to Shove for a knockdown, but that's a Strength check while most monks are Dex-based. The primary way a monk knocks folks down is with the Open Hand Technique, which tags along on their Flurry, which is also a bonus action after an attack, and consequently can't go out of turn.
– Darth Pseudonym
Dec 9 at 18:28
@DarthPseudonym true. I wasn't quite satisfied with my first draft at the answer but I had to take care of something. It is indeed a very bad option for a monk, but to be honest the Ready action is rarely worth it for any character if it means giving up attacks.
– Carcer
Dec 9 at 19:21
thank you very much! I think you also pegged the reason why we got confused. we were vaguely remembering the 3ed rules and getting them all mixed up.
– SteveED
Dec 10 at 0:59
1
+1 Maybe add a note that recovering from prone typically consumes half one's movement.
– Lexible
Dec 10 at 5:08
|
show 3 more comments
Once a creature stands up they no longer suffer any effects from being knocked prone
Your reading is correct. A creature can get up from prone on their turn by spending half their movement, and once they're standing up again they don't suffer any further consequences from having been knocked prone. As you've observed, with an unhelpful initiative order, an enemy can recover from being knocked prone before an ally can take advantage of the effect (a common problem for any effect that an enemy can recover from or save against again on their turn).
Ready actions to get around the initiative order
Taking advantage of the Ready action is the best way, within the game's normal rules, to get around this problem. If the barbarian knows that the monk is going to try and knock down their foe, he could Ready an action to attack after the orc is knocked prone, and so the orc doesn't get a chance to get back up before the barbarian is upon them.
Readying does require that the character specify some sort of perceptible trigger - so you can't use triggers like "after the monk's turn" or "before the barbarian goes" - but you could trigger on things like "after the monk attacks", or even use verbal indicators like "attack when the monk shouts 'go'".
It's important to note that though it can be situationally useful the Ready action is mechanically expensive - it requires the use of your reaction plus it denies you the use of any ability which you can only use on your turn (like Extra Attack or Martial Arts), so it's often not worth it (especially for higher level characters). If your barbarian can normally make two attacks in an action, it's generally superior for them to get to take two normal attacks against an enemy than give up their reaction and make one attack with advantage. The only case I can think of where Readying actions in this way would be consistently useful is for a Rogue waiting for allies to move into position to grant them sneak attack - since a rogue will usually only be able to make one attack a round anyway and their bonus action abilities don't depend on doing something with their action.
House ruling
In 3rd edition, getting up from prone was an action that provoked attacks of opportunity, so a target knocked down would be forced to risk taking attacks as it tried to get back up. If it bothers you that a quirk of the initiative can mean that the monk could knock down a target but they immediately stand back up before any ally can take advantage, you could rule that getting up from prone provokes opportunity attacks just like moving out of reach does; this obviously makes any ability that can knock people prone more powerful, though.
5
It should be noted that you need to specify a proper trigger for the readied attack. You cannot e.g. specify "after the goblin's turn" as a trigger, since that's nothing a char could percieve. You could instruct your party member to verbally inform you (s)he's about to attack though and use this as a trigger.
– fabian
Dec 9 at 16:33
1
Your answer is correct, but the bit at the end about "giving up any abilities they'd normally use on their turn" sort of papers over that this is an extraordinarily bad option for a monk. Anyone can forgo an attack to Shove for a knockdown, but that's a Strength check while most monks are Dex-based. The primary way a monk knocks folks down is with the Open Hand Technique, which tags along on their Flurry, which is also a bonus action after an attack, and consequently can't go out of turn.
– Darth Pseudonym
Dec 9 at 18:28
@DarthPseudonym true. I wasn't quite satisfied with my first draft at the answer but I had to take care of something. It is indeed a very bad option for a monk, but to be honest the Ready action is rarely worth it for any character if it means giving up attacks.
– Carcer
Dec 9 at 19:21
thank you very much! I think you also pegged the reason why we got confused. we were vaguely remembering the 3ed rules and getting them all mixed up.
– SteveED
Dec 10 at 0:59
1
+1 Maybe add a note that recovering from prone typically consumes half one's movement.
– Lexible
Dec 10 at 5:08
|
show 3 more comments
Once a creature stands up they no longer suffer any effects from being knocked prone
Your reading is correct. A creature can get up from prone on their turn by spending half their movement, and once they're standing up again they don't suffer any further consequences from having been knocked prone. As you've observed, with an unhelpful initiative order, an enemy can recover from being knocked prone before an ally can take advantage of the effect (a common problem for any effect that an enemy can recover from or save against again on their turn).
Ready actions to get around the initiative order
Taking advantage of the Ready action is the best way, within the game's normal rules, to get around this problem. If the barbarian knows that the monk is going to try and knock down their foe, he could Ready an action to attack after the orc is knocked prone, and so the orc doesn't get a chance to get back up before the barbarian is upon them.
Readying does require that the character specify some sort of perceptible trigger - so you can't use triggers like "after the monk's turn" or "before the barbarian goes" - but you could trigger on things like "after the monk attacks", or even use verbal indicators like "attack when the monk shouts 'go'".
It's important to note that though it can be situationally useful the Ready action is mechanically expensive - it requires the use of your reaction plus it denies you the use of any ability which you can only use on your turn (like Extra Attack or Martial Arts), so it's often not worth it (especially for higher level characters). If your barbarian can normally make two attacks in an action, it's generally superior for them to get to take two normal attacks against an enemy than give up their reaction and make one attack with advantage. The only case I can think of where Readying actions in this way would be consistently useful is for a Rogue waiting for allies to move into position to grant them sneak attack - since a rogue will usually only be able to make one attack a round anyway and their bonus action abilities don't depend on doing something with their action.
House ruling
In 3rd edition, getting up from prone was an action that provoked attacks of opportunity, so a target knocked down would be forced to risk taking attacks as it tried to get back up. If it bothers you that a quirk of the initiative can mean that the monk could knock down a target but they immediately stand back up before any ally can take advantage, you could rule that getting up from prone provokes opportunity attacks just like moving out of reach does; this obviously makes any ability that can knock people prone more powerful, though.
Once a creature stands up they no longer suffer any effects from being knocked prone
Your reading is correct. A creature can get up from prone on their turn by spending half their movement, and once they're standing up again they don't suffer any further consequences from having been knocked prone. As you've observed, with an unhelpful initiative order, an enemy can recover from being knocked prone before an ally can take advantage of the effect (a common problem for any effect that an enemy can recover from or save against again on their turn).
Ready actions to get around the initiative order
Taking advantage of the Ready action is the best way, within the game's normal rules, to get around this problem. If the barbarian knows that the monk is going to try and knock down their foe, he could Ready an action to attack after the orc is knocked prone, and so the orc doesn't get a chance to get back up before the barbarian is upon them.
Readying does require that the character specify some sort of perceptible trigger - so you can't use triggers like "after the monk's turn" or "before the barbarian goes" - but you could trigger on things like "after the monk attacks", or even use verbal indicators like "attack when the monk shouts 'go'".
It's important to note that though it can be situationally useful the Ready action is mechanically expensive - it requires the use of your reaction plus it denies you the use of any ability which you can only use on your turn (like Extra Attack or Martial Arts), so it's often not worth it (especially for higher level characters). If your barbarian can normally make two attacks in an action, it's generally superior for them to get to take two normal attacks against an enemy than give up their reaction and make one attack with advantage. The only case I can think of where Readying actions in this way would be consistently useful is for a Rogue waiting for allies to move into position to grant them sneak attack - since a rogue will usually only be able to make one attack a round anyway and their bonus action abilities don't depend on doing something with their action.
House ruling
In 3rd edition, getting up from prone was an action that provoked attacks of opportunity, so a target knocked down would be forced to risk taking attacks as it tried to get back up. If it bothers you that a quirk of the initiative can mean that the monk could knock down a target but they immediately stand back up before any ally can take advantage, you could rule that getting up from prone provokes opportunity attacks just like moving out of reach does; this obviously makes any ability that can knock people prone more powerful, though.
edited Dec 9 at 19:22
answered Dec 9 at 16:23
Carcer
21.6k362119
21.6k362119
5
It should be noted that you need to specify a proper trigger for the readied attack. You cannot e.g. specify "after the goblin's turn" as a trigger, since that's nothing a char could percieve. You could instruct your party member to verbally inform you (s)he's about to attack though and use this as a trigger.
– fabian
Dec 9 at 16:33
1
Your answer is correct, but the bit at the end about "giving up any abilities they'd normally use on their turn" sort of papers over that this is an extraordinarily bad option for a monk. Anyone can forgo an attack to Shove for a knockdown, but that's a Strength check while most monks are Dex-based. The primary way a monk knocks folks down is with the Open Hand Technique, which tags along on their Flurry, which is also a bonus action after an attack, and consequently can't go out of turn.
– Darth Pseudonym
Dec 9 at 18:28
@DarthPseudonym true. I wasn't quite satisfied with my first draft at the answer but I had to take care of something. It is indeed a very bad option for a monk, but to be honest the Ready action is rarely worth it for any character if it means giving up attacks.
– Carcer
Dec 9 at 19:21
thank you very much! I think you also pegged the reason why we got confused. we were vaguely remembering the 3ed rules and getting them all mixed up.
– SteveED
Dec 10 at 0:59
1
+1 Maybe add a note that recovering from prone typically consumes half one's movement.
– Lexible
Dec 10 at 5:08
|
show 3 more comments
5
It should be noted that you need to specify a proper trigger for the readied attack. You cannot e.g. specify "after the goblin's turn" as a trigger, since that's nothing a char could percieve. You could instruct your party member to verbally inform you (s)he's about to attack though and use this as a trigger.
– fabian
Dec 9 at 16:33
1
Your answer is correct, but the bit at the end about "giving up any abilities they'd normally use on their turn" sort of papers over that this is an extraordinarily bad option for a monk. Anyone can forgo an attack to Shove for a knockdown, but that's a Strength check while most monks are Dex-based. The primary way a monk knocks folks down is with the Open Hand Technique, which tags along on their Flurry, which is also a bonus action after an attack, and consequently can't go out of turn.
– Darth Pseudonym
Dec 9 at 18:28
@DarthPseudonym true. I wasn't quite satisfied with my first draft at the answer but I had to take care of something. It is indeed a very bad option for a monk, but to be honest the Ready action is rarely worth it for any character if it means giving up attacks.
– Carcer
Dec 9 at 19:21
thank you very much! I think you also pegged the reason why we got confused. we were vaguely remembering the 3ed rules and getting them all mixed up.
– SteveED
Dec 10 at 0:59
1
+1 Maybe add a note that recovering from prone typically consumes half one's movement.
– Lexible
Dec 10 at 5:08
5
5
It should be noted that you need to specify a proper trigger for the readied attack. You cannot e.g. specify "after the goblin's turn" as a trigger, since that's nothing a char could percieve. You could instruct your party member to verbally inform you (s)he's about to attack though and use this as a trigger.
– fabian
Dec 9 at 16:33
It should be noted that you need to specify a proper trigger for the readied attack. You cannot e.g. specify "after the goblin's turn" as a trigger, since that's nothing a char could percieve. You could instruct your party member to verbally inform you (s)he's about to attack though and use this as a trigger.
– fabian
Dec 9 at 16:33
1
1
Your answer is correct, but the bit at the end about "giving up any abilities they'd normally use on their turn" sort of papers over that this is an extraordinarily bad option for a monk. Anyone can forgo an attack to Shove for a knockdown, but that's a Strength check while most monks are Dex-based. The primary way a monk knocks folks down is with the Open Hand Technique, which tags along on their Flurry, which is also a bonus action after an attack, and consequently can't go out of turn.
– Darth Pseudonym
Dec 9 at 18:28
Your answer is correct, but the bit at the end about "giving up any abilities they'd normally use on their turn" sort of papers over that this is an extraordinarily bad option for a monk. Anyone can forgo an attack to Shove for a knockdown, but that's a Strength check while most monks are Dex-based. The primary way a monk knocks folks down is with the Open Hand Technique, which tags along on their Flurry, which is also a bonus action after an attack, and consequently can't go out of turn.
– Darth Pseudonym
Dec 9 at 18:28
@DarthPseudonym true. I wasn't quite satisfied with my first draft at the answer but I had to take care of something. It is indeed a very bad option for a monk, but to be honest the Ready action is rarely worth it for any character if it means giving up attacks.
– Carcer
Dec 9 at 19:21
@DarthPseudonym true. I wasn't quite satisfied with my first draft at the answer but I had to take care of something. It is indeed a very bad option for a monk, but to be honest the Ready action is rarely worth it for any character if it means giving up attacks.
– Carcer
Dec 9 at 19:21
thank you very much! I think you also pegged the reason why we got confused. we were vaguely remembering the 3ed rules and getting them all mixed up.
– SteveED
Dec 10 at 0:59
thank you very much! I think you also pegged the reason why we got confused. we were vaguely remembering the 3ed rules and getting them all mixed up.
– SteveED
Dec 10 at 0:59
1
1
+1 Maybe add a note that recovering from prone typically consumes half one's movement.
– Lexible
Dec 10 at 5:08
+1 Maybe add a note that recovering from prone typically consumes half one's movement.
– Lexible
Dec 10 at 5:08
|
show 3 more comments
You're playing the rule correctly.
Unfortunately, there's not a lot you can do to fix this situation. I'm reading between the lines a bit and assuming that a monk knocking people down is doing so using the Open Hand Technique as part of a Flurry of Blows.
While you could ready an Attack action against the Orc, attacking outside your turn means you don't have a bonus action to spend on a Flurry of Blows, so you won't be able to trigger the Open Hand knockdown. You could give up one of your attack rolls to attempt a Shove (Player's Handbook p.195), but that Shove would then be based on your Athletics check rather than your Dexterity or Wisdom scores, and anyway you'd be giving up damage to do so, so that probably isn't what you intended either.
In this particular case, you probably can't use your knockdown for much of anything useful. It's an unfortunate consequence of the initiative system and 5th edition's insistence that you don't change initiative order after it's been rolled. If it's a big problem, you might ask the DM to consider alternative initiative methods, such as Side Initiative (Dungeon Master's Guide p.270), or your DM might be willing to allow a Delay that permanently moves you down in the order.
add a comment |
You're playing the rule correctly.
Unfortunately, there's not a lot you can do to fix this situation. I'm reading between the lines a bit and assuming that a monk knocking people down is doing so using the Open Hand Technique as part of a Flurry of Blows.
While you could ready an Attack action against the Orc, attacking outside your turn means you don't have a bonus action to spend on a Flurry of Blows, so you won't be able to trigger the Open Hand knockdown. You could give up one of your attack rolls to attempt a Shove (Player's Handbook p.195), but that Shove would then be based on your Athletics check rather than your Dexterity or Wisdom scores, and anyway you'd be giving up damage to do so, so that probably isn't what you intended either.
In this particular case, you probably can't use your knockdown for much of anything useful. It's an unfortunate consequence of the initiative system and 5th edition's insistence that you don't change initiative order after it's been rolled. If it's a big problem, you might ask the DM to consider alternative initiative methods, such as Side Initiative (Dungeon Master's Guide p.270), or your DM might be willing to allow a Delay that permanently moves you down in the order.
add a comment |
You're playing the rule correctly.
Unfortunately, there's not a lot you can do to fix this situation. I'm reading between the lines a bit and assuming that a monk knocking people down is doing so using the Open Hand Technique as part of a Flurry of Blows.
While you could ready an Attack action against the Orc, attacking outside your turn means you don't have a bonus action to spend on a Flurry of Blows, so you won't be able to trigger the Open Hand knockdown. You could give up one of your attack rolls to attempt a Shove (Player's Handbook p.195), but that Shove would then be based on your Athletics check rather than your Dexterity or Wisdom scores, and anyway you'd be giving up damage to do so, so that probably isn't what you intended either.
In this particular case, you probably can't use your knockdown for much of anything useful. It's an unfortunate consequence of the initiative system and 5th edition's insistence that you don't change initiative order after it's been rolled. If it's a big problem, you might ask the DM to consider alternative initiative methods, such as Side Initiative (Dungeon Master's Guide p.270), or your DM might be willing to allow a Delay that permanently moves you down in the order.
You're playing the rule correctly.
Unfortunately, there's not a lot you can do to fix this situation. I'm reading between the lines a bit and assuming that a monk knocking people down is doing so using the Open Hand Technique as part of a Flurry of Blows.
While you could ready an Attack action against the Orc, attacking outside your turn means you don't have a bonus action to spend on a Flurry of Blows, so you won't be able to trigger the Open Hand knockdown. You could give up one of your attack rolls to attempt a Shove (Player's Handbook p.195), but that Shove would then be based on your Athletics check rather than your Dexterity or Wisdom scores, and anyway you'd be giving up damage to do so, so that probably isn't what you intended either.
In this particular case, you probably can't use your knockdown for much of anything useful. It's an unfortunate consequence of the initiative system and 5th edition's insistence that you don't change initiative order after it's been rolled. If it's a big problem, you might ask the DM to consider alternative initiative methods, such as Side Initiative (Dungeon Master's Guide p.270), or your DM might be willing to allow a Delay that permanently moves you down in the order.
edited Dec 10 at 17:13
answered Dec 9 at 18:52
Darth Pseudonym
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11.8k22865
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Yes. Prone condition ends when the character stands up.
If if the monk wants the prone condition to last through everyone's turn, he can use ready action to attack after the orc has ended his turn.
add a comment |
Yes. Prone condition ends when the character stands up.
If if the monk wants the prone condition to last through everyone's turn, he can use ready action to attack after the orc has ended his turn.
add a comment |
Yes. Prone condition ends when the character stands up.
If if the monk wants the prone condition to last through everyone's turn, he can use ready action to attack after the orc has ended his turn.
Yes. Prone condition ends when the character stands up.
If if the monk wants the prone condition to last through everyone's turn, he can use ready action to attack after the orc has ended his turn.
answered Dec 9 at 16:28
Myhabits
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