I also dislike the very gamey play style promoted by attempting to get multiple short rest to have multiple Mystic Brew effects active. Honestly the brews should be something you actively drink in a situation not long lasting powers you try to stack beforehand.
I dont think its that 'gamey" for you to gain power by getting more drunk over time. (over the course of the day)
only being able to drink after rests, and drinks disapearing etc is kind of gamey, but most things in the game are tied to that very system for resources, and bonuses short rests/long rests.
If they arent using a short rest system, they would need a new, more complicated method for it to take time for the monk to get/maintain drunkeness, like counting drinks, or hours, etc. and that type of stuff everywhere else is tied to the resting system, usually
It’s the I wake up take a drink of my new brew and use a focus point to make it last for 8 hours. Now since we aren’t doing anything yet can this time count as a short rest so I can make a new brew. It would be better to have stacking effects of drinking the same brew or being able to make multiple brews per day. Also the whole you have to drink it out of combat part is silly to me. It’s a lot of loops to jump through for features that are almost all combat focused.
drinking out of combat actually makes more sense, HOWEVER the fantasy/iconic thing is to be drinking mid fight.
Waking up and taking a drink, or asking/desiring short rests to get more drunk actually makes a whole lot of sense/ and It is the iconic behavior of the drunken Master to be often lounging and drinking, and spending breaks in action getting drunk.
Stacking affects could work, but dnd 5e/2024 generally prefers to not have stacking/diminishing effects, 3.5 had a lot more stacking, (attack and damage bonuses) and they mostly got rid of it.
Within the wheelhouse that 5e prefers, its either going to be tied to short/LR, a class resource that returns on L/SR, or once per day. Also, the effects are generally going to be binary, either you have the effect, or you dont. (i think exhaustion is one of the few mechanics with levels or stacks)
drinking in combat, for a monk, if it requires action economy, would be a super tough sell, as their BA and action are potent. Also, some of these effects are as likely to happen out of comabt as in combat, heroic inspiration, and bonuses to healing.
Ideally, i think there should be less directly tied to Short rests, perhaps it just takes 10 minutes, and if they dont want you to rapidly gain two effects, maybe a time limit on making a different brew, it would also be nice if the brew didnt literally dissapear for flavor reasons of in combat drinking.
Essentially i dont fully disagree with you, but because its 5e some might say its better to use existing system design than new details/systems
Erasing the Chinese cultural aspect feels...kinda...not cool?
Like...it was called Drunken Fist because that's an IRL term, not because it's still tied to lands east of Calimshan.
I think in their attempt to make in generic w/no cultural spin(& possibly sell better to kids & parents/comply with some bizarre mandate from someone or somewhere) , they may have done a racism by erasing the IRL reference.
It feels like 4kids changing Rock Lee's usage of the Drunken Fist martial arts style to Loopy-Loop Fist in Naruto.
Everything that the 2014 Drunken Master Monk can do, except for the 11th-level feature "Drunkard's Luck" is in the playtest version of the 2024 Warrior of Intoxication.
I was looking at the drunken master in the previous century. Go back maybe another 30 years older?
I just wanted to compare the 80s version with this version.
Then that's probably something you should have specified in the initial question.
"Drunken Master" doesn't seem to be a core rules official thing until at least 3rd Edition, when it was a Prestige Class. If it's something that came up in an issue of Dragon magazine or some less popular supplement, it's probably going to fall on you to track what you remember down; neither the 2nd edition Complete Fighter's Handbook (1989) or the Complete Priest's Handbook (1990) have any drunken master-specific monk details. Nothing in the first edition Advanced Dungeons & Dragons Player's Handbook (1978) either, just a core Monk class. Nothing in Unearthed Arcana (1985).
Rollback Post to RevisionRollBack
🎵I'm on top of the world, looking down on creation, wreaking death and devastation with my mind.
As the power that I've found erupts freely from the ground, I will cackle from the top of the world.🎵
Then that's probably something you should have specified in the initial question.
I did not know there have been any iterations of drunken master since then. Now I do. Do you recommend the next time I ask for something I should mention a list of disclaimers such as I know nothing about the 2014 rules and universe?
Then that's probably something you should have specified in the initial question.
I did not know there have been any iterations of drunken master since then. Now I do. Do you recommend the next time I ask for something I should mention a list of disclaimers such as I know nothing about the 2014 rules and universe?
The default assumption when you are asking a question on a forum for the 5th Edition of Dungeons and Dragons is that questions that don't specify an edition are about the 5th Edition of Dungeons and Dragons, be it the 2014 or 2024 version. If you want answers about previous editions, just say that's what you want in the initial question.
Rollback Post to RevisionRollBack
🎵I'm on top of the world, looking down on creation, wreaking death and devastation with my mind.
As the power that I've found erupts freely from the ground, I will cackle from the top of the world.🎵
Then that's probably something you should have specified in the initial question.
I did not know there have been any iterations of drunken master since then. Now I do. Do you recommend the next time I ask for something I should mention a list of disclaimers such as I know nothing about the 2014 rules and universe?
The default assumption when you are asking a question on a forum for the 5th Edition of Dungeons and Dragons is that questions that don't specify an edition are about the 5th Edition of Dungeons and Dragons, be it the 2014 or 2024 version. If you want answers about previous editions, just say that's what you want in the initial question.
I disagree with that. With new people joining since the 2024 rules came out, that should be the default. I did not know there was anything about 2014 until I was on here a while. A lot of confusion for myself and as you may have noticed other new people. New rules in other table top games is always the default as with in 12-18 months of new rules coming out, the old rules are now ignored/unsupported. I have never seen old rules hang on so long as they do on this site. With other games, the old rules are always compatible to allow people to transition, but basically almost all do, but then this is the only role playing game I have ever experienced. So not sure how long people default to >10 year rules.
This is inherently flawed since it gives the monk another resource to track. My Mystic Brew probably works better on a fighter subclass. This is me just putting ideas out in the world and I didn’t even attempt to balance the the shots needed to use the drunken powers. Also a better name than powers is needed. I originally wrote drunken technique but remembered that is their first level feature. I guess I could have called it Mystic techniques. 3rd Level Drunken Technique
All an Act. You gain proficiency in Performance or Deception (your choice), and may add your Wisdom modifier to ability checks you make with the chosen skill.
Hit and Run. Whenever you use Flurry of Blows, you gain the benefit of the Disengage action, and your walking speed increases by 10 feet until the end of the current turn.
Wobble Away. When you use the Deflect Attacks you may move up to half your speed without provoking Opportunity Attacks as part of the same reaction.
6th Level Tipsy Sway
Leap to Your Feet. When you’re prone, you can stand up by spending 5 feet of movement, rather than half your speed. Additionally if you use Deflect Attacks while prone you can stand up as part of the same reaction.
Redirect Attack. Same as new UA
Revel in the Fray. You gain +1 bonus to your Unarmored Defense AC calculation for each enemy except one within 5 feet of you up to a maximum bonus equal to your proficiency bonus.
6th Level Mystic Brew
You gain proficiency with Brewer’s Supplies if you don't already have it. While holding Brewer’s Supplies and a bottle or cask you may spend 10 minutes to magically create a magical beverage. This 10 minutes can be part of a Short rest. You may expend a Focus point to shorten the 10 minutes to one action. 10 + half your monk level rounded down shots of the beverage appear in the bottle or cask. If any of the beverage remains when you complete a long rest it loses its magic and becomes a normal beverage. Once you have created a Mystic Brew you can not do so again until you complete a long rest.
Drinking the Beverage. A creature holding the container can use a bonus action to drink a single shot or an action to drink up to 4 shots. Only you gain Mystic Stacks from the beverage. You gain a Mystic Stack for each shot you drink. Some Drunken powers consume stacks. Some Stack levels increase the duration. The duration refreshes to the maximum whenever your Stack level changes up. The duration can never be longer than the duration of your current stack level (so if your stack level was 10 and you had 40 mins remaining and use Cinnamon Dragon dropping your Stack level to 9 the duration would decrease to 10 mins. If your remaining duration at 10 stacks was 5 mins it would remain at 5 mins when dropping to 9 stacks.) Other creatures that consume the beverage must make a DC 10 Con save or gain the poisoned condition for the duration. The usable/active Drunken powers depend on the number of Mystic Stacks you have.
Duration:
1-3 Stacks 1 min
4-9 Stacks 10 mins
10+ Stacks 1 hour
Drunken Techniques:
Blue Lightning. Same as UA just available earlier. Active at 8 Stacks
Cinnamon Dragon. Same as UA. Usable at 1 Stack, Consumes at 1 Stack each activation.
Dancing Devil. When you use Deflect Attacks or Redirect Attacks you can move half your speed as part of the same reaction. Active at 5 stacks.
Heavenly Spirit. Same as UA. Usable at 3 stacks. Consumes 1 stack to activate persist for the duration of Mystic Stacks
Refreshing Dip. Same as UA. Usable at 3 stacks. Consumes 1 stack to activate persist for the duration of Mystic Stacks
Sour Hag. As a Magic Action you exhale a 5 feet wide 30 feet long line of necrotic gas. Every creature in the line must make a Con save or take 4 MA die + Wis necrotic damage and be slowed on a failure or only take half the damage a success. Usable at 2 stacks, consumes 1 stack each activation.
Sparkling Troll Blood. As a bonus action you may expend a hit die and roll it and regain hit points equal to the roll + your wisdom modifier. Usable at 10 stacks
Toasty Tempest. You have resistance to cold damage and when you hit with an attack from flurry of blows you deal additional fire damage equal to your Wisdom modifier. Usable at 10 stacks, consumes 2 stakes to activate, persists for the duration of Mystic Stacks.
11th Level Drunkard’s Luck
When you make an attack roll, or a saving throw and have disadvantage on the roll, you can expend 1 Focus point to cancel the disadvantage for that roll. While you have Stacks from a Mystic Brew you may use this feature once without expending a Focus point. You regain the ability to use this feature without expending a Focus point when you drink a shot of Mystic Brew. Additionally when you use an action to drink 4 shots of your Mystic Brew you also gain Heroic Inspiration.
17th Level Intoxicated Frenzy
Drinks All Around. When you use your Flurry of Blows, you can make up to three additional attacks with it (up to a total of six Flurry of Blows attacks), provided that each Flurry of Blows attack targets a different creature this turn.
Hard Shot of Something. When you use your Flurry of Blows, you can target one creature or object with all of the attacks so rapidly they become one. Roll all three Flurry of Blows attack rolls and choose one result and apply it to all 3 attacks. Then roll all three damage rolls and choose one result after adding modifiers, the target takes that damage for each hit.
Rollback Post to RevisionRollBack
To post a comment, please login or register a new account.
drinking out of combat actually makes more sense, HOWEVER the fantasy/iconic thing is to be drinking mid fight.
Waking up and taking a drink, or asking/desiring short rests to get more drunk actually makes a whole lot of sense/ and It is the iconic behavior of the drunken Master to be often lounging and drinking, and spending breaks in action getting drunk.
Stacking affects could work, but dnd 5e/2024 generally prefers to not have stacking/diminishing effects, 3.5 had a lot more stacking, (attack and damage bonuses) and they mostly got rid of it.
Within the wheelhouse that 5e prefers, its either going to be tied to short/LR, a class resource that returns on L/SR, or once per day. Also, the effects are generally going to be binary, either you have the effect, or you dont. (i think exhaustion is one of the few mechanics with levels or stacks)
drinking in combat, for a monk, if it requires action economy, would be a super tough sell, as their BA and action are potent. Also, some of these effects are as likely to happen out of comabt as in combat, heroic inspiration, and bonuses to healing.
Ideally, i think there should be less directly tied to Short rests, perhaps it just takes 10 minutes, and if they dont want you to rapidly gain two effects, maybe a time limit on making a different brew, it would also be nice if the brew didnt literally dissapear for flavor reasons of in combat drinking.
Essentially i dont fully disagree with you, but because its 5e some might say its better to use existing system design than new details/systems
Erasing the Chinese cultural aspect feels...kinda...not cool?
Like...it was called Drunken Fist because that's an IRL term, not because it's still tied to lands east of Calimshan.
I think in their attempt to make in generic w/no cultural spin(& possibly sell better to kids & parents/comply with some bizarre mandate from someone or somewhere) , they may have done a racism by erasing the IRL reference.
It feels like 4kids changing Rock Lee's usage of the Drunken Fist martial arts style to Loopy-Loop Fist in Naruto.
DM, player & homebrewer(Current homebrew project is an unofficial conversion of SBURB/SGRUB from Homestuck into DND 5e)
Once made Maxwell's Silver Hammer come down upon Strahd's head to make sure he was dead.
Always study & sharpen philosophical razors. They save a lot of trouble.
Then that's probably something you should have specified in the initial question.
"Drunken Master" doesn't seem to be a core rules official thing until at least 3rd Edition, when it was a Prestige Class. If it's something that came up in an issue of Dragon magazine or some less popular supplement, it's probably going to fall on you to track what you remember down; neither the 2nd edition Complete Fighter's Handbook (1989) or the Complete Priest's Handbook (1990) have any drunken master-specific monk details. Nothing in the first edition Advanced Dungeons & Dragons Player's Handbook (1978) either, just a core Monk class. Nothing in Unearthed Arcana (1985).
🎵I'm on top of the world, looking down on creation, wreaking death and devastation with my mind.
As the power that I've found erupts freely from the ground, I will cackle from the top of the world.🎵
Charisma Saving Throw: DC 18, Failure: 20d6 Psychic Damage, Success: Half damage
I did not know there have been any iterations of drunken master since then. Now I do. Do you recommend the next time I ask for something I should mention a list of disclaimers such as I know nothing about the 2014 rules and universe?
The default assumption when you are asking a question on a forum for the 5th Edition of Dungeons and Dragons is that questions that don't specify an edition are about the 5th Edition of Dungeons and Dragons, be it the 2014 or 2024 version. If you want answers about previous editions, just say that's what you want in the initial question.
🎵I'm on top of the world, looking down on creation, wreaking death and devastation with my mind.
As the power that I've found erupts freely from the ground, I will cackle from the top of the world.🎵
Charisma Saving Throw: DC 18, Failure: 20d6 Psychic Damage, Success: Half damage
I disagree with that. With new people joining since the 2024 rules came out, that should be the default. I did not know there was anything about 2014 until I was on here a while. A lot of confusion for myself and as you may have noticed other new people. New rules in other table top games is always the default as with in 12-18 months of new rules coming out, the old rules are now ignored/unsupported. I have never seen old rules hang on so long as they do on this site. With other games, the old rules are always compatible to allow people to transition, but basically almost all do, but then this is the only role playing game I have ever experienced. So not sure how long people default to >10 year rules.
This is inherently flawed since it gives the monk another resource to track. My Mystic Brew probably works better on a fighter subclass. This is me just putting ideas out in the world and I didn’t even attempt to balance the the shots needed to use the drunken powers. Also a better name than powers is needed. I originally wrote drunken technique but remembered that is their first level feature. I guess I could have called it Mystic techniques.
3rd Level Drunken Technique
All an Act. You gain proficiency in Performance or Deception (your choice), and may add your Wisdom modifier to ability checks you make with the chosen skill.
Hit and Run. Whenever you use Flurry of Blows, you gain the benefit of the Disengage action, and your walking speed increases by 10 feet until the end of the current turn.
Wobble Away. When you use the Deflect Attacks you may move up to half your speed without provoking Opportunity Attacks as part of the same reaction.
6th Level Tipsy Sway
Leap to Your Feet. When you’re prone, you can stand up by spending 5 feet of movement, rather than half your speed. Additionally if you use Deflect Attacks while prone you can stand up as part of the same reaction.
Redirect Attack. Same as new UA
Revel in the Fray. You gain +1 bonus to your Unarmored Defense AC calculation for each enemy except one within 5 feet of you up to a maximum bonus equal to your proficiency bonus.
6th Level Mystic Brew
You gain proficiency with Brewer’s Supplies if you don't already have it. While holding Brewer’s Supplies and a bottle or cask you may spend 10 minutes to magically create a magical beverage. This 10 minutes can be part of a Short rest. You may expend a Focus point to shorten the 10 minutes to one action. 10 + half your monk level rounded down shots of the beverage appear in the bottle or cask. If any of the beverage remains when you complete a long rest it loses its magic and becomes a normal beverage. Once you have created a Mystic Brew you can not do so again until you complete a long rest.
Drinking the Beverage. A creature holding the container can use a bonus action to drink a single shot or an action to drink up to 4 shots. Only you gain Mystic Stacks from the beverage. You gain a Mystic Stack for each shot you drink. Some Drunken powers consume stacks. Some Stack levels increase the duration. The duration refreshes to the maximum whenever your Stack level changes up. The duration can never be longer than the duration of your current stack level (so if your stack level was 10 and you had 40 mins remaining and use Cinnamon Dragon dropping your Stack level to 9 the duration would decrease to 10 mins. If your remaining duration at 10 stacks was 5 mins it would remain at 5 mins when dropping to 9 stacks.) Other creatures that consume the beverage must make a DC 10 Con save or gain the poisoned condition for the duration. The usable/active Drunken powers depend on the number of Mystic Stacks you have.
Duration:
1-3 Stacks 1 min
4-9 Stacks 10 mins
10+ Stacks 1 hour
Drunken Techniques:
Blue Lightning. Same as UA just available earlier. Active at 8 Stacks
Cinnamon Dragon. Same as UA. Usable at 1 Stack, Consumes at 1 Stack each activation.
Dancing Devil. When you use Deflect Attacks or Redirect Attacks you can move half your speed as part of the same reaction. Active at 5 stacks.
Heavenly Spirit. Same as UA. Usable at 3 stacks. Consumes 1 stack to activate persist for the duration of Mystic Stacks
Refreshing Dip. Same as UA. Usable at 3 stacks. Consumes 1 stack to activate persist for the duration of Mystic Stacks
Sour Hag. As a Magic Action you exhale a 5 feet wide 30 feet long line of necrotic gas. Every creature in the line must make a Con save or take 4 MA die + Wis necrotic damage and be slowed on a failure or only take half the damage a success. Usable at 2 stacks, consumes 1 stack each activation.
Sparkling Troll Blood. As a bonus action you may expend a hit die and roll it and regain hit points equal to the roll + your wisdom modifier. Usable at 10 stacks
Toasty Tempest. You have resistance to cold damage and when you hit with an attack from flurry of blows you deal additional fire damage equal to your Wisdom modifier. Usable at 10 stacks, consumes 2 stakes to activate, persists for the duration of Mystic Stacks.
11th Level Drunkard’s Luck
When you make an attack roll, or a saving throw and have disadvantage on the roll, you can expend 1 Focus point to cancel the disadvantage for that roll. While you have Stacks from a Mystic Brew you may use this feature once without expending a Focus point. You regain the ability to use this feature without expending a Focus point when you drink a shot of Mystic Brew. Additionally when you use an action to drink 4 shots of your Mystic Brew you also gain Heroic Inspiration.
17th Level Intoxicated Frenzy
Drinks All Around. When you use your Flurry of Blows, you can make up to three additional attacks with it (up to a total of six Flurry of Blows attacks), provided that each Flurry of Blows attack targets a different creature this turn.
Hard Shot of Something. When you use your Flurry of Blows, you can target one creature or object with all of the attacks so rapidly they become one. Roll all three Flurry of Blows attack rolls and choose one result and apply it to all 3 attacks. Then roll all three damage rolls and choose one result after adding modifiers, the target takes that damage for each hit.