Shia Luck wrote...
Pstemarie wrote...
"Concealment Miss Chance: Concealment gives the subject of a sucessful attack a 20% chance that the attacker missed because of the concealment. If the attacker hits, the defender must make a miss chance percentile roll to avoid being struck. ...
I imagine the bolded part is why your post unintentionally implies that AC comes before concelament. It never gets to a case of "if the attacker hits..." , concealment is resolved before AC is considered. '>
have fun '>
Not sure where the "...unitentionally implies" comes into play. I'm pretty sure Wizards of the Coast's D&D design team, when they wrote the PHB, intentionally meant for concealment to be resolved AFTER AC is considered. That's a direct quote from the text on page 152 of the PHB - check it yourself.
What's really at issue here is how Bioware in effect misinterpreted concealment. According to Bioware's interpretation of concealment, it is resolved before AC is considered. However, this implementation method is wrong according to the D&D PHB. However, I can understand why Bioware implemented it in this manner - its a lot quicker (and more efficient) to just roll concelament first. If the attack is going to miss anyway, why bother rolling it at all.
In fact the Bioware method even makes more sense for pen-n-paper, especially when you consider the section in the PHB that talks about total concealment which states that you "...cannot attack a character with total concealment." This statement would seem to imply that concealment is checked before the attack roll occurs and is no doubt what Bioware used as the foundation for their interpretation.
@Shadow - I still maintain wikis are a bad place to get information. However, I will concede that the Krit has done a better job than most in ensuring the accuracy of his particualar wiki.
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