We’ve now completed a third rotation of the Player’s Handbook, meaning that almost every class has had every subclass from that book examined in the Class 101 series! Two classes with lots of subclasses—the cleric and wizard—will need a little extra time to cover. Starting this week, however, we’re moving away from the Player’s Handbook and taking a look at the brand-new subclasses that you’ll find in Tasha’s Cauldron of Everything!
The first new subclass from Tasha’s is also from the game’s newest class: the artificer. This subclass, the Armorer, is a favorite of both Todd Kenreck and myself, because of the way they straddle the line of fantasy and science fiction with their magical power armor.
Artificers are most common in the world of Eberron, as described in Eberron: Rising from the Last War. However, artificers of some sort can be found all throughout the D&D multiverse. You can find artificers in the Forgotten Realms on the isle of Lantan, among the gnomes of Hupperdook in Wildemount, and filling all levels of prestige within the ranks of the Izzet League on the world-city of Ravnica—just to name a few settings where artificers can be found. If you’re playing D&D in another world or in a homebrew setting, talk with your Dungeon Master about how you could integrate artificers into this world.
Check out the other guides in the Class 101 series, like the broad overview of the artificer class in Artificer 101: A Beginner’s Guide to Making Magical Marvels, or a deep dive into a specific subclass in Artificer 101: Alchemist. If you’re interested in playing other classes, check out the entire Class 101 series.
Story of the Armorer
“And that is the Mark 1 Guardian.” A half-orc dressed in oil-covered clothing whistled in awe. Her hair was pulled into a high ponytail and her biceps glistened under the light of the forge. She turned to the hobgoblin beside her, who looked on in awe at the suit of steel plate armor that hung on the wall before them both. “I’m afraid it’s for personal use only. Not for sale.”
“Your pièce de résistance?” the hobgoblin replied gruffly.
“My masterpiece,” the armorer replied proudly. “But I’m not so precious to think that it’s perfect. You can see that I haven’t bothered polishing it.” Just as she said, the armor was rough, unfinished, and unpolished. By its appearance, it hardly befitted the title of masterpiece.
“My warriors care little for polish,” the hobgoblin said guilelessly. “We are interested in strength and durability. You can provide both?”
The half-orc armorer laughed. “In spades, my friend. My apprentices and I can supply you with armor that will suit your mercenary company’s needs, but you deserve something better, don’t you? Would you care for a demonstration? I can’t promise you something quite as good as the Mark 1, but you’ll see that my armor is made of more than just steel.”
The hobgoblin barked out a jagged laugh. “A claim I’ve heard a hundred times. Go on, armorer, prove the worth of your steel!”
A smile crossed the armorer’s face, just wide enough for one of her stubby tusks to pop out from behind her lips. She strode across the room and placed her hand on the chest piece of her Mark 1 Guardian. Its plates shuddered at her touch, then sprung to life and rolled down her arm like an army of dully glinting beetles. In seconds, there was a click as the metal plates which had slithered over her body snapped into place. The tiny runes engraved around the edges of each plate glowed with faint white light, and her heavy gauntlets thrummed with barely restrained thunder.
The armorer reached to a weapon rack and tossed a longsword to the hobgoblin, who caught it deftly, even taken by surprise. His mouth hung slightly agape, and his eyes darted up and down the half-orc’s armored body, drinking in the details of her handiwork. She set her feet in a fighting stance and pointed her open palms at the hobgoblin, causing a faint pulse of rumbling magic to hum through the air between them.
“Is this demonstration enough, sir?” she asked cheekily. “Or would you prefer to test the Guardian’s might yourself?”
The hobgoblin laughed again, this time with complete, unchecked mirth. He set the sword down upon a bench and held his hands over his shoulders. “I yield, armorer! You are no charlatan, I trust that your steel is honest. Are you certain your Guardian is not for sale?”
The half-orc shook her head. “It’s bonded to me, sir. It wouldn’t be more than a suit of ill-fitting plate mail on the shoulders of another.”
“Then…” the hobgoblin turned to the armorer slyly. “Perhaps I can make an offer for your armor with you still in it. There are tasks too dangerous even for my mercenaries to take on—if you would be willing to leave your forge, we could use an adventurer. My pockets are deep, armorer.”
Armorer Features
Armorers are artificers who have specialized in the craft of armor smithing. Like any good artificer, they don’t simply make armor, they make miracles. The artificer gains four subclass features at 3rd, 5th, 9th, and 15th level. You can read all of the Alchemist specialty features in Tasha’s Cauldron of Everything. In summary, your subclass features allow you to:
- Become proficient with smith’s tools
- Learn new spells thematically appropriate for an armorer
- Create a suit of arcane armor that only you can wear, gaining special powers if it’s in its Guardian or Infiltrator form
- Attack more than once per turn, making you a more dangerous fighter
- Infuse the individual components of your Arcane Armor with magic
- Perfect your Guardian and Infiltrator armor models
Benefits of the Armorer
The Armorer subclass lets the artificer take on a surprising role in combat: the role of tank! No one would expect the artificer, a class that is by all accounts a fantasy scientist, to be able to step out onto the battlefield, hollering for all blades to be turned upon them, yet this is exactly what the Armorer artificer is able to do with the Guardian model of their Arcane Armor. Better yet, they aren’t pigeonholed into the tank role. After a short rest, the Armorer can retool their Arcane Armor into the sleek and stealthy Infiltrator model, allowing them to slink quickly through the shadows.
Notably, both armor models let you do something that few other classes can do. The Guardian model’s Thunder Gauntlets allow you to “taunt” foes when you hit them, encouraging them to attack you by imposing disadvantage on that creature’s attacks against other foes. To improve your survivability, it also allows you to gain a surge of temporary hit points to mitigate incoming damage.
All of the Armorer’s class features either synergize with both armor models, or specifically improve one of them. For instance, the Extra Attack feature is useful for striking multiple targets with the Guardian model’s Thunder Gauntlets, thus “taunting” more foes. While it’s less useful on the Infiltrator model, having another attack makes it more likely for you to hit at least once with your Lightning Launcher, which gets bonus damage once per turn.
Taken together, this bevy of powerful and versatile features transform you into a terror on the battlefield, while still wielding an artificer’s spells and the ability to infuse your allies’ items with magic to support them in whatever dangerous situations you might face.
Drawbacks of the Armorer
The Armorer is a powerful subclass, but that power comes at a price. The most significant price is the price of paperwork. The Armorer’s 9th-level feature, Armor Modifications, lets you enchant your Arcane Armor in an incredibly granular way. This feature separates your armor into segments, each of which can be infused separately. This is a substantial boost to your power, and D&D Beyond’s digital character sheets will help you keep track of all your features, but you still have to do the work of deciding how to allocate your infusions—and more importantly, re-allocate your infusions whenever you want to change up which infused items you have available to you.
This leads to the most significant drawback of the Armorer subclass: a tradeoff between personal power and team support. The Armorer is one of the most self-sufficient artificer subclasses in the game. However, a hallmark feature of the artificer is their ability to infuse items with magic, not just for their own use, but for their allies’ use. Similarly, other subclasses have a number of spells and class features that encourage artificers to support their allies, rather than becoming the center of attention themselves. The Armorer subclass isn’t without these features—the Guardian model Arcane Armor is one of the best tanking tools in D&D—but it vastly minimizes party support in favor of personal power. If you want to play a support character, this isn’t the subclass for you.
Suggested Build
As an artificer, you choose what kind of Artificer Specialist you want to be at 3rd level. This gives you time to figure out what sort of role you want to fill in the party. If you decide that you want be a flexible character who can tank blows for their allies one encounter and slip unseen into the shadows the next, Armorer is custom-fitted for your needs. To learn about the other roles the artificer class can fill, check out Artificer 101: A Beginner’s Guide to Making Magical Marvels.
All artificers need a keen intellect in order to be effective. As such, prioritize making your Intelligence score as high as possible. Even though you’ll often be striking foes with your fists, your magical Thunder Gauntlets allows you to add your Intelligence modifier, rather than your Strength modifier, to attack and damage rolls. Beyond that, it’s useful to improve your Dexterity and Constitution scores to improve your somewhat meager hit points, and to improve your AC if you decide to wear medium armor rather than heavy armor.
An Armorer should place their highest ability score in Intelligence and their second-highest in either Dexterity or Constitution, depending on whether you think stealth or tanking is more important to you. Thanks to the new “Customizing Your Origin” section in Tasha’s Cauldron of Everything, you don’t have to let your character’s race dictate their ability scores; you can reassign your racial ability score bonuses to any score you see fit. If you’re playing without these rules, the rock gnome and high elf races grant useful bonuses to Intelligence and other useful abilities, plus other mechanical bonuses. However, the best way to create a character is to choose the race suits your character best, and build outward from there.
Choose EQUIPMENT instead of GOLD at the end of character creation. Your two simple weapons can be anything that you think fits your character’s aesthetic. You still have to grow from 1st to 3rd level before you choose your Armorer subclass, so your starting equipment doesn’t have to perfectly match what you want your character to wear when they master the craft of armoring. Choose scale mail for a solid defense—one that you can turn into your Arcane Armor later if you don’t find anything better on your adventures in the interim. Choosing a set of thieves’ tools will make infiltrating locations with your Infiltrator model armor much easier!
Spells
You prepare your spells, just like a cleric or druid. At the end of every long rest, you can prepare a number of spells from the artificer spell list, and can use your spell slots to cast these prepared spells in any combination. When you prepare spells, you can choose a number of artificer spells equal to your Intelligence modifier + half your artificer level, rounded down (minimum of one spell). You also start play with two cantrips, also chosen from the artificer spell list. These cantrips are 0-level spells that you can cast an unlimited number of times per day.
As an Armorer, you’ll want at least two spells marked DEFENSE, one spell marked OFFENSE, and one spell marked either SUPPORT, SOCIAL or UTILITY, depending on how you want to play your character.
- Absorb elements (DEFENSE/OFFENSE)
- Catapult (OFFENSE)
- Cure wounds (SUPPORT)
- Detect magic (UTILITY)
- Disguise self (SOCIAL)
- Faerie fire (SUPPORT)
- Feather fall (UTILITY)
- Grease (DEFENSE)
- Sanctuary (DEFENSE/SUPPORT)
Infusions
Starting at 2nd level, you’ll be able to infuse items with magical power, turning them into something greater than what they were before. At 2nd level, you know four different infusions, and can have two of them active at a time. The infusions you pick should be largely based not on your build, but the composition of your party. What infusions do they need to be more powerful? Every time a party member does something awesome with an infused item you’ve given them, that’s a win for both of you.
You learn four infusions at 2nd level, and can replace any infusion you know with another one whenever you gain a level. The infusions available to you at 2nd level are:
Enhanced Arcane Focus. For parties with spellcasters in it. Even though you usually use your artificer's tools as a spellcasting focus, you can benefit from this infusion as well—since any item you create can be used as a spellcasting focus!
Enhanced Defense. For parties with heavily armored allies. You can use this one yourself, if enemies have been focusing you down lately!
Enhanced Weapon. A broadly useful infusion for parties with damage-dealing powerhouses in it.
Homunculus Servant. For the artificer who needs a little helping hand, you create a tiny creature that can deal a little bit of damage in combat, but is mostly useful for helping you as a conduit for your spells.
Repeating Shot. For parties with ranged attackers. You can empower a ranged weapon with a magical bonus to attack and damage, and grant it the ability to conjure and load its own ammunition!
Feats
Once you’ve improved your Intelligence score to 18 or 20, you can increase your power with a few useful feats. The following feats are good picks for Armorer artificers, and will improve your reliability in your own desired area of expertise:
Eldritch Adept. Using this new feat from Tasha’s Cauldron of Everything, you can infuse your artificer with a bit of a warlock’s unsettling magic. Choosing the invocations like Mask of Many Faces and Devil's Sight makes you a more potent infiltrator. The only question is…where does this power come from?
Heavy Armor Master. If you plan on tanking in heavy armor, this damage-reducing feat is a useful one for you, especially due to your relatively low hit points.
Mobile. Tanks like to rush into combat and attract the attention of many foes at once. Sneaks like to move quickly and quietly. Since you have the power of both these roles, Mobile is almost always going to be useful for you!
Sentinel. There simply isn’t a better feat for a tank to take. Be sure to take this if you plan on tanking a lot for your party.
Shadow Touched. This new feat from Tasha’s Cauldron of Everything tinges your artificer with the gloom of the Shadowfell—a useful gift to have for anyone who wants to make excellent use of their Infiltrator model armor.
Tough. Plan on taking lots of damage to spare your party from being hurt? Then it would be smart to pick up a few extra hit points.
If you want more advice for building an artificer, check out Artificer 101. Have you ever played an Armorer artificer? What advice would you give to players that want to play this subclass? Join us next week as we dive deep into the contents of Tasha's Cauldron of Everything with Barbarian 101: Path of the Beast!
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James Haeck is the lead writer for D&D Beyond, the co-author of Waterdeep: Dragon Heist, Baldur's Gate: Descent into Avernus, and the Critical Role Explorer's Guide to Wildemount, a member of the Guild Adepts, and a freelance writer for Wizards of the Coast, the D&D Adventurers League, and other RPG companies. He lives in Seattle, Washington with his fiancée Hannah and their animal companions Mei and Marzipan. You can find him wasting time on Twitter at @jamesjhaeck.
And you will be tired of the complaining, but what on earth can justify a n Artificer having access to Disguise Self is beyond me.
Note that it's not that I hate the Artificer concept. I actually love it, and think they ruined it.
I think ruined might be a bit far; it plays really well, and while it is a bit "instant creation" you can always work out with your DM if you're actually magically creating something or instead summoning something from your workshop, as this can rein in abuse; e.g- Artillerist needs to periodically work on their turrets to advance them or have all options available, need to have a magic item before you can use it as an infusion (like you're transferring the enchantment rather than creating it out of nowhere), that kind of thing.
Disguise Self is a little bit weird as a direct spell, it probably would have made more sense to leave for full casters as a proper spell, and maybe make it a single-use infusion option instead. One of my own main criticisms of Artificer as a whole is that there are actually still not that many infusions; it feels like WotC just gave up part way through and added the "create any magic item" infusion to fill in the gaps, but there are loads more useful things they could have had as options.
But this is really discussion of Artificers in general, it's not specific to the Armorer sub-class. I think both play really well, and some ways the breaks to theming give you more freedom in how you choose to flavour how the character's features actually work in practice (RAW they might be instantaneous, but nothing prevents you from imposing your own limits to enhance your intended theme).
You have a projector that changes the appearance of your body, or a pigment-changing set of clothes that disguise you, like a cuttlefish. It's not that hard to justify, you just have to be creative.
You seem to be in the minority on that opinion, my friend.
Flavouring the artificer spells is easilly my favourite part of the class. Some are a bit wonk but it depends on how you do it. It gets even harder if your using a infused item as a focus. The tools casting is easilly the best though. especially when you get crazy with calligraphers tools or cooking tools.
One thing I'm not sure about is using already magic, adamantine, and mithral armor for one's arcane armor and if those benefits extend to the arcane armor.
ex. Turning a +1 armor into arcane armor and using the armor infusion make it a +2 armor? Do the stealth benefits of mithral and the crit stopping ability of adamantine extend to the arcane armor?
You couldn't infuse a suit of +1 armor, since you can only infuse non-magical items.
As far as I can tell, the properties of Adamantine and Mithral armors are nonmagical so they should be valid targets for infusing.
RAW, both Mithral Armor and Adamantine Armor are Magic Items.
Yeah, they're listed in the magic items in the DMG, but it's a rather weird point given that it's a property of the metals themselves rather than a magic enchantment that's added to them. That leaves it a bit more YMMV when it comes to infusions (personally, I'd say yes).
As a DM, I would allow them to use those armors with infusions any time (IMO, it was a mistake to make them magical)), but this is unfortunately the RAW.
Technically, those properties are not conferred by the metals themselves. They are Enchanted items, but like Dragon Scale Mail requires Dragon Hide, Adamantine Armor requires Adamantine, but it is still the enchantment that does the thing. I personally agree with your interpretation, but I happen to know RAW is otherwise.
So the bracers of defense infusion mean it can be used with arcane armor?
Yes
Can you clarify your logic on this? Bracers of Defense specifically only work if you aren't wearing any armour; making part of your armour into Bracers of Defense doesn't change the fact that you're still wearing armour, so I'm not sure how this follows?
Glad to be in the minority, if the majority can't see what's wrong with having "projectors" in D&D.
What is a illusion, if not a projection?
There's nothing wrong with that. Illusions are just magical projections.
Or Mandalorian.
The Mandalorian is clearly a paladin.
"The Way" is just another name for Lawful Stupid.
Oh yeah. Mandalorians do swear a creed. But Mandalorian armor usually comes with a lot of cool gadgets. I think the Mandalorian is an Armorer multiclassed with a paladin.
Gonna massively disagree with Paladin, He's Armorer/Ranger because of his hunting and tracking.