D&D 5E - Magic Bow + Mundane Arrow = Magic Attack?
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MNblockhead
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If a character shoots mundane arrows with a magic bows and they hit a creature that is immune or resistant to non-magical attacks, do you treat the arrow hit as a magic attack or now?I treat it as a magic attack. The magic energy from the bow transfers to the arrow in some way to increase its chance of hitting, making it a magic attack.
Do any of your rule the opposite? That the bow increases accuracy, but it is the arrow that causes the damage and, therefore, the attack is considered non-magical for purposes of applying resistance and immunity.
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I would rule the opposite way in AD&D, but 5E's PHB is pretty clear that an arrow is merely "ammunition" and not a weapon. Requiring magical ammunition for a magical bow to damage a werewolf would not be idiomatic in a 5E game.
I still don't know. We rule you need nagic ammunition.
Either way, I know I handle it as being if either the weapon or the ammo are magical, the attack is considered magical.
I would do as Aaron. . . except this hasn't ever actually come up yet. That's so weird.
I let it count as magical.
On one hand, I can see a case where the arrow isn't magical. In a way it is the logical solution, however, on the other hand in terms of balance I don't see any reason to penalise archers over and above melee types.
Since the arrow, and thus the attack, is being delivered by a magical bow (a magic item), it is a magical attack.
I asked this question in 2014, not sure if it ever got answered. If magical ammunition exists I suspect you need that. If it doesn't magic bow= magic ammunition IMHO.
"The attacks made by a magical ranged weapon are magical, even if the ammunition isn’t magical. This point was clarified in the errata for the Dungeon Master’s Guide."
They clarified that the ammunition doesn't need to be magical if the weapon is. I forget if it was in Crawford's tweets, or Sage Advice, or both.
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