EricStratton
26th June 2009, 05:37 PM
Round 7 conclusion:
Finally able to stretch his legs, Jagged strolls casually towards the Hexer (O14) and smiles before whipping his axe in a great arc. The Goblin Warrior ducks under the axe (12-2(concealment) vs AC), steps toward Sagar (shift to Q13).
The axe continues its arc and passes through the Hexer (22-2(concealment) vs AC) killing it (44-17=dead).
End of Round 7
Normally, when a goblin uses Goblin Tactics (immediate reaction: shift when missed by a melee attack) the Hexer can allow the goblin to attack as well as shift. But since it's an immediate reaction, I have to let the triggering action resolve completely which means that, by the time Jagged's done swinging his axe, the Hexer is dead thus unable to allow the goblin to attack.
Is that right? So the outcome doesn't influence anyone's opinion I can tell you now that the goblin, if it were to attack Sagar, misses.
Finally able to stretch his legs, Jagged strolls casually towards the Hexer (O14) and smiles before whipping his axe in a great arc. The Goblin Warrior ducks under the axe (12-2(concealment) vs AC), steps toward Sagar (shift to Q13).
The axe continues its arc and passes through the Hexer (22-2(concealment) vs AC) killing it (44-17=dead).
End of Round 7
Normally, when a goblin uses Goblin Tactics (immediate reaction: shift when missed by a melee attack) the Hexer can allow the goblin to attack as well as shift. But since it's an immediate reaction, I have to let the triggering action resolve completely which means that, by the time Jagged's done swinging his axe, the Hexer is dead thus unable to allow the goblin to attack.
Is that right? So the outcome doesn't influence anyone's opinion I can tell you now that the goblin, if it were to attack Sagar, misses.