Our party: lvl 2 rogue (me), lvl 2 artificer, lvl 2 druid, and a lvl 2 bard. With the exception of our artificer our party is mostly inexperienced. We are in Chult heading toward tomb of annihilation and we took a quest from our guide Azaka Stormfang so she wouldn't charge us. Before we get there the GM advised after our next session starts we will be facing fire bats. Any tips/stratgies would be appreciated for this fight everyone I have spoken with thinks fire bats are a pain in the butt at low levels.
It may be pulled from an edition older than 5th edition or somewhere else I'll have to ask when GM is back from vacation. All I know so far is firebat: elemental creature latches onto you with a sucessful attack does 1d4 fire and 1d4 cold (the second attack heals it) and if 25% of them are defeated they fly away. Thank you for checking!
Our party: lvl 2 rogue (me), lvl 2 artificer, lvl 2 druid, and a lvl 2 bard. With the exception of our artificer our party is mostly inexperienced. We are in Chult heading toward tomb of annihilation and we took a quest from our guide Azaka Stormfang so she wouldn't charge us. Before we get there the GM advised after our next session starts we will be facing fire bats. Any tips/stratgies would be appreciated for this fight everyone I have spoken with thinks fire bats are a pain in the butt at low levels.
I would love to help, but I have never heard of fire bats, can't find a reference to them, and don't think they are real.
It may be pulled from an edition older than 5th edition or somewhere else I'll have to ask when GM is back from vacation. All I know so far is firebat: elemental creature latches onto you with a sucessful attack does 1d4 fire and 1d4 cold (the second attack heals it) and if 25% of them are defeated they fly away. Thank you for checking!
Lots of water. Skins full of water you can squirt on them. Be careful it isn’t wine it might start on fire
What sort of flammable wine are you drinking?!
The rule of thumb is that alcoholic beverages need to be at least 80 proof (40% alcohol) to be flammable. Most wines range between 20 and 40 proof.