Equipment
ARMOR
ARMOR QUALITIES
To wear heavier armor effectively, a character can select the
Armor Proficiency feats, but most classes are automatically
proficient with the armors that work best for them.
Armor and shields can take damage from some types of attacks.
Here is the format for armor entries (given as column headings on
Table: Armor and Shields, below).
Cost: The cost of the armor for Small or Medium humanoid
creatures. See Armor for Unusual Creatures, below, for armor
prices for other creatures.
Armor/Shield Bonus: Each armor grants an armor bonus to AC,
while shields grant a shield bonus to AC. The armor bonus from a
suit of armor doesn’t stack with other effects or items that
grant an armor bonus. Similarly, the shield bonus from a shield
doesn’t stack with other effects that grant a shield bonus.
Maximum Dex Bonus: This number is the maximum Dexterity
bonus to AC that this type of armor allows. Heavier armors limit
mobility, reducing the wearer’s ability to dodge blows. This
restriction doesn’t affect any other Dexterity-related
abilities.
Even if a character’s Dexterity bonus to AC drops to 0
because of armor, this situation does not count as losing a
Dexterity bonus to AC.
Your character�s encumbrance (the amount of gear he or she
carries) may also restrict the maximum Dexterity bonus that can be
applied to his or her Armor Class.
Shields: Shields do not affect a character’s maximum
Dexterity bonus.
Armor Check Penalty: Any armor heavier than leather hurts a
character’s ability to use some skills. An armor check
penalty number is the penalty that applies to Balance, Climb,
Escape Artist, Hide, Jump, Move Silently, Sleight of Hand, and
Tumble checks by a character wearing a certain kind of armor.
Double the normal armor check penalty is applied to Swim checks. A
character’s encumbrance (the amount of gear carried,
including armor) may also apply an armor check penalty.
Shields: If a character is wearing armor and using a
shield, both armor check penalties apply.
Nonproficient with Armor Worn: A character who wears armor
and/or uses a shield with which he or she is not proficient takes
the armor’s (and/or shield’s) armor check penalty on
attack rolls and on all Strength-based and Dexterity-based ability
and skill checks. The penalty for nonproficiency with armor stacks
with the penalty for nonproficiency with shields.
Sleeping in Armor: A character who sleeps in medium or
heavy armor is automatically fatigued the next day. He or she
takes a –2 penalty on Strength and Dexterity and can’t
charge or run. Sleeping in light armor does not cause fatigue.
Arcane Spell Failure: Armor interferes with the gestures
that a spellcaster must make to cast an arcane spell that has a
somatic component. Arcane spellcasters face the possibility of
arcane spell failure if they’re wearing armor. Bards can
wear light armor without incurring any arcane spell failure chance
for their bard spells.
Casting an Arcane Spell in Armor: A character who casts an
arcane spell while wearing armor must usually make an arcane spell
failure roll. The number in the Arcane Spell Failure Chance column
on Table: Armor and Shields is the chance that the spell fails and
is ruined. If the spell lacks a somatic component, however, it can
be cast with no chance of arcane spell failure.
Shields: If a character is wearing armor and using a
shield, add the two numbers together to get a single arcane spell
failure chance.
Speed: Medium or heavy armor slows the wearer down. The
number on Table: Armor and Shields is the character’s speed
while wearing the armor. Humans, elves, half-elves, and half-orcs
have an unencumbered speed of 30 feet. They use the first column.
Dwarves, gnomes, and halflings have an unencumbered speed of 20
feet. They use the second column. Remember, however, that a
dwarf’s land speed remains 20 feet even in medium or heavy
armor or when carrying a medium or heavy load.
Shields: Shields do not affect a character’s speed.
Weight: This column gives the weight of the armor sized for
a Medium wearer. Armor fitted for Small characters weighs half as
much, and armor for Large characters weighs twice as much.
Table: Armor and Shields
Armor |
Cost |
Armor/Shield
Bonus
|
Maximum
Dex Bonus
|
Armor
Check Penalty
|
Arcane Spell
Failure Chance
|
Speed |
(30 ft.) |
(20 ft.) |
Weight1 |
Light armor |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Padded |
5 gp |
+1 |
8 |
0 |
5% |
30 ft. |
20 ft. |
10 lb. |
Leather |
10 gp |
+2 |
6 |
0 |
10% |
30 ft. |
20 ft. |
15 lb. |
Studded leather |
25 gp |
+3 |
5 |
–1 |
15% |
30 ft. |
20 ft. |
20 lb. |
Chain shirt |
100 gp |
+4 |
4 |
–2 |
20% |
30 ft. |
20 ft. |
25 lb. |
Medium armor |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Hide |
15 gp |
+3 |
4 |
–3 |
20% |
20 ft. |
15 ft. |
25 lb. |
Scale mail |
50 gp |
+4 |
3 |
–4 |
25% |
20 ft. |
15 ft. |
30 lb. |
Chainmail |
150 gp |
+5 |
2 |
–5 |
30% |
20 ft. |
15 ft. |
40 lb. |
Breastplate |
200 gp |
+5 |
3 |
–4 |
25% |
20 ft. |
15 ft. |
30 lb. |
Heavy armor |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Splint mail |
200 gp |
+6 |
0 |
–7 |
40% |
20 ft.2 |
15 ft.2 |
45 lb. |
Banded mail |
250 gp |
+6 |
1 |
–6 |
35% |
20 ft.2 |
15 ft.2 |
35 lb. |
Half-plate |
600 gp |
+7 |
0 |
–7 |
40% |
20 ft.2 |
15 ft.2 |
50 lb. |
Full plate |
1,500 gp |
+8 |
1 |
–6 |
35% |
20 ft.2 |
15 ft.2 |
50 lb. |
Shields |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Buckler |
15 gp |
+1 |
— |
–1 |
5% |
— |
— |
5 lb. |
Shield, light wooden |
3 gp |
+1 |
— |
–1 |
5% |
— |
— |
5 lb. |
Shield, light steel |
9 gp |
+1 |
— |
–1 |
5% |
— |
— |
6 lb. |
Shield, heavy wooden |
7 gp |
+2 |
— |
–2 |
15% |
— |
— |
10 lb. |
Shield, heavy steel |
20 gp |
+2 |
— |
–2 |
15% |
— |
— |
15 lb. |
Shield, tower |
30 gp |
+43 |
+2 |
–10 |
50% |
— |
— |
45 lb. |
Extras |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Armor spikes |
+50 gp |
— |
— |
— |
— |
— |
— |
+10 lb. |
Gauntlet, locked |
8 gp |
— |
— |
Special |
4 |
— |
— |
+5 lb. |
Shield spikes
|
+10 gp |
— |
— |
— |
— |
— |
— |
+5 lb. |
1
Weight figures are for armor sized to fit Medium
characters. Armor fitted for Small characters weighs half
as much, and armor fitted for Large characters weighs
twice as much.
|
2
When running in heavy armor, you move only triple your
speed, not quadruple.
|
3
A tower shield can instead grant you cover. See the
description.
|
4 Hand not free to cast spells. |
ARMOR DESCRIPTIONS
Any special benefits or accessories to the types of armor found on
Table: Armor and Shields are described below.
Armor Spikes: You can have spikes added to your armor,
which allow you to deal extra piercing damage (see Table: Weapons)
on a successful grapple attack. The spikes count as a martial
weapon. If you are not proficient with them, you take a –4
penalty on grapple checks when you try to use them. You can also
make a regular melee attack (or off-hand attack) with the spikes,
and they count as a light weapon in this case. (You can’t
also make an attack with armor spikes if you have already made an
attack with another off-hand weapon, and vice versa.)
An enhancement bonus to a suit of armor does not improve the
spikes’ effectiveness, but the spikes can be made into magic
weapons in their own right.
Banded Mail: This armor is made of overlapping strips of
metal sewn to a backing of leather and chainmail. The strips cover
vulnerable areas, while the chain and leather protect the joints
and provide freedom of movement. Straps and buckles distribute the
weight evenly. The suit includes gauntlets.
Breastplate: A breastplate covers your front and your back.
It comes with a helmet and greaves (plates to cover your lower
legs). A light suit or skirt of studded leather beneath the
breastplate protects your limbs without restricting movement much.
Buckler: This small metal shield is worn strapped to your
forearm. You can use a bow or crossbow without penalty while
carrying it. You can also use your shield arm to wield a weapon
(whether you are using an off-hand weapon or using your off hand
to help wield a two-handed weapon), but you take a –1
penalty on attack rolls while doing so. This penalty stacks with
those that may apply for fighting with your off hand and for
fighting with two weapons. In any case, if you use a weapon in
your off hand, you don’t get the buckler’s AC bonus
for the rest of the round.
You can’t bash someone with a buckler.
Chain Shirt: A chain shirt protects your torso while
leaving your limbs free and mobile. It includes a layer of quilted
fabric worn underneath to prevent chafing and to cushion the
impact of blows. A chain shirt comes with a steel cap.
Chainmail: This armor is made of interlocking metal rings.
It includes a layer of quilted fabric worn underneath to prevent
chafing and to cushion the impact of blows. Several layers of mail
are hung over vital areas. Most of the armor’s weight hangs from
the shoulders, making chainmail uncomfortable to wear for long
periods of time. The suit includes gauntlets.
Full Plate: This armor consists of shaped and fitted metal
plates riveted and interlocked to cover the entire body. The suit
includes gauntlets, heavy leather boots, a visored helmet, and a
thick layer of padding that is worn underneath the armor. Buckles
and straps distribute the weight over the body, so full plate
hampers movement less than splint mail even though splint is
lighter. Each suit of full plate must be individually fitted to
its owner by a master armorsmith, although a captured suit can be
resized to fit a new owner at a cost of 200 to 800 (2d4×100) gold
pieces. Full plate armor is also known as field plate.
Gauntlet, Locked: This armored gauntlet has small chains
and braces that allow the wearer to attach a weapon to the
gauntlet so that it cannot be dropped easily. It provides a +10
bonus on any roll made to keep from being disarmed in combat.
Removing a weapon from a locked gauntlet or attaching a weapon to
a locked gauntlet is a full-round action that provokes attacks of
opportunity. The price given is for a single locked gauntlet. The
weight given applies only if you’re wearing a breastplate,
light armor, or no armor. Otherwise, the locked gauntlet replaces
a gauntlet you already have as part of the armor.
While the gauntlet is locked, you can’t use the hand wearing
it for casting spells or employing skills. (You can still cast
spells with somatic components, provided that your other hand is
free.)
Like a normal gauntlet, a locked gauntlet lets you deal lethal
damage rather than nonlethal damage with an unarmed strike.
Half-Plate: This armor is a combination of chainmail with
metal plates (breastplate, epaulettes, elbow guards, gauntlets,
tasses, and greaves) covering vital areas. Buckles and straps hold
the whole suit together and distribute the weight, but the armor
still hangs more loosely than full plate. The suit includes
gauntlets.
Hide: This armor is prepared from multiple layers of
leather and animal hides. It is stiff and hard to move in. Druids,
who wear only nonmetallic armor, favor hide.
Leather: The breastplate and shoulder protectors of this
armor are made of leather that has been stiffened by boiling in
oil. The rest of the armor is made of softer and more flexible
leather.
Padded: Padded armor features quilted layers of cloth and
batting. It gets hot quickly and can become foul with sweat,
grime, lice, and fleas.
Scale Mail: This armor consists of a coat and leggings (and
perhaps a separate skirt) of leather covered with overlapping
pieces of metal, much like the scales of a fish. The suit includes
gauntlets.
Shield, Heavy, Wooden or Steel: You strap a shield to your
forearm and grip it with your hand. A heavy shield is so heavy
that you can't use your shield hand for anything else.
Wooden or Steel: Wooden and steel shields offer the same
basic protection, though they respond differently to special
attacks.
Shield Bash Attacks: You can bash an opponent with a heavy
shield, using it as an off-hand weapon. See Table: Weapons for the
damage dealt by a shield bash. Used this way, a heavy shield is a
martial bludgeoning weapon. For the purpose of penalties on attack
rolls, treat a heavy shield as a one-handed weapon. If you use
your shield as a weapon, you lose its AC bonus until your next
action (usually until the next round). An enhancement bonus on a
shield does not improve the effectiveness of a shield bash made
with it, but the shield can be made into a magic weapon in its own
right.
Shield, Light, Wooden or Steel: You strap a shield to your
forearm and grip it with your hand. A light shield’s weight
lets you carry other items in that hand, although you cannot use
weapons with it.
Wooden or Steel: Wooden and steel shields offer the same
basic protection, though they respond differently to special
attacks.
Shield Bash Attacks: You can bash an opponent with a light
shield, using it as an off-hand weapon. See Table: Weapons for the
damage dealt by a shield bash. Used this way, a light shield is a
martial bludgeoning weapon. For the purpose of penalties on attack
rolls, treat a light shield as a light weapon. If you use your
shield as a weapon, you lose its AC bonus until your next action
(usually until the next round). An enhancement bonus on a shield
does not improve the effectiveness of a shield bash made with it,
but the shield can be made into a magic weapon in its own right.
Shield, Tower: This massive wooden shield is nearly as tall
as you are. In most situations, it provides the indicated shield
bonus to your AC. However, you can instead use it as total cover,
though you must give up your attacks to do so. The shield does
not, however, provide cover against targeted spells; a spellcaster
can cast a spell on you by targeting the shield you are holding.
You cannot bash with a tower shield, nor can you use your shield
hand for anything else.
When employing a tower shield in combat, you take a –2
penalty on attack rolls because of the shield’s encumbrance.
Shield Spikes: When added to your shield, these spikes turn
it into a martial piercing weapon that increases the damage dealt
by a shield bash as if the shield were designed for a creature one
size category larger than you. You can’t put spikes on a
buckler or a tower shield. Otherwise, attacking with a spiked
shield is like making a shield bash attack (see above). An
enhancement bonus on a spiked shield does not improve the
effectiveness of a shield bash made with it, but a spiked shield
can be made into a magic weapon in its own right.
Splint Mail: This armor is made of narrow vertical strips
of metal riveted to a backing of leather that is worn over cloth
padding. Flexible chainmail protects the joints. The suit includes
gauntlets.
Studded Leather: This armor is made from tough but flexible
leather (not hardened leather, as with normal leather armor)
reinforced with close-set metal rivets.
MASTERWORK ARMOR
Just as with weapons, you can purchase or craft masterwork
versions of armor or shields. Such a well-made item functions like
the normal version, except that its armor check penalty is
lessened by 1.
A masterwork suit of armor or shield costs an extra 150 gp over
and above the normal cost for that type of armor or shield.
The masterwork quality of a suit of armor or shield never provides
a bonus on attack or damage rolls, even if the armor or shield is
used as a weapon.
All magic armors and shields are automatically considered to be of
masterwork quality.
You can’t add the masterwork quality to armor or a shield
after it is created; it must be crafted as a masterwork item.
ARMOR FOR UNUSUAL CREATURES
Armor and shields for unusually big creatures, unusually little
creatures, and nonhumanoid creatures have different costs and
weights from those given on Table: Armor and Shields. Refer to the
appropriate line on the table below and apply the multipliers to
cost and weight for the armor type in question.
|
Humanoid |
Nonhumanoid |
Size |
Cost |
Weight |
Cost |
Weight |
Tiny or smaller1 |
x1/2 |
x1/10 |
x1 |
x1/10 |
Small |
x1 |
x1/2 |
x2 |
x1/2 |
Medium |
x1 |
x1 |
x2 |
x1 |
Large |
x2 |
x2 |
x4 |
x2 |
Huge |
x4 |
x5 |
x8 |
x5 |
Gargantuan |
x8 |
x8 |
x16 |
x8 |
Colossal |
x16 |
x12 |
x32 |
x12 |
1 Divide armor bonus by 2. |
GETTING INTO AND OUT OF ARMOR
The time required to don armor depends on its type; see Table:
Donning Armor.
Don: This column tells how long it takes a character to put
the armor on. (One minute is 10 rounds.) Readying (strapping on) a
shield is only a move action.
Don Hastily: This column tells how long it takes to put the
armor on in a hurry. The armor check penalty and armor bonus for
hastily donned armor are each 1 point worse than normal.
Remove: This column tells how long it takes to get the
armor off. Loosing a shield (removing it from the arm and dropping
it) is only a move action.
Table: Donning Armor
Armor Type |
Don |
Don Hastily |
Remove |
Shield (any) |
1 move action |
n/a |
1 move action |
Padded, leather, hide, studded leather, or chain shirt
|
1 minute |
5 rounds |
1 minute1 |
Breastplate, scale mail, chainmail, banded mail, or splint
mail
|
4 minutes1 |
1 minute |
1 minute1 |
Half-plate or full plate |
4 minutes2 |
4 minutes1 |
1d4+1 minutes1 |
1
If the character has some help, cut this time in half. A
single character doing nothing else can help one or two
adjacent characters. Two characters can’t help each
other don armor at the same time.
|
2
The wearer must have help to don this armor. Without
help, it can be donned only hastily.
|
|