![]() Which is an oversimplification and exaggeration. Halve that, reach up, 1.5 reach (which is added to your jump for how high you can reach with a leap). However, given that it requires a slew of concentration spells and actions from allies and 40ft of open air space this seems completely balanced.īased off the "standard" human proportions, your "wingspan" (arms outstretched, fingertip-to-fingertip) is about the same as your height. Coupled with the fact the Barbarian is actively slamming them and gets enlarged boost you can ruled it as a bare minimum 1d4+16d6+str mod. Triple weighted PC adding to the impact of the fall for +12d6. ![]() Standard fall for a PC is 4d6 from 40ft (goliath doesn't take fall damage from its own jumps) but the enemy in question isn't just falling 40ft it's got a 900lb enlarged goliath landing on it. ![]() With jump spell they can get the target ~40ft airbourne (1.5x height from being enlarged holding the enemy up and then triple the base jump height from jump spell). Goliath is large from spell and counts as 1 size larger for lift/carry/drag (does this count for grappled targets? Ask your DM, odds are if you double down with bear totem at level 6 even if the variant encumbrance rules kick in they make your medium sized opponent a rag doll).ħft Goliath is now 14ft tall and goes from weighing 300lbs to 900. If a target is 2 sizes smaller you no longer incur a movement penalty from grappling the target. I don't trust my own understanding of the rules enough to come to a conclusion.Īlso, what does your opponent categorize as during this interaction, an object?ĭoes an 8' tall Goliath with the ability to lift ridiculous amounts of weight above their head 1.5x their height require a standing jump in order to accomplish this, or does their height alone allow for the foe to be in excess of the 10' required for the 1d6 fall that results in a prone status?ĭove.I see where you're going with this and I have done the build and had the appropriate boosts. The intention is for this to result in a fall/drop of the still-grappled opponent which causes them to suffer the prone condition and take 1d6 falling damage.Įxplain how this is possible a little further if you're a book savvy sort. I've read that, as per raw, any creature over 6'9" can use their movement while grappling to lift a creature over their head as part of their movement.
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