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Switch to Forum Live View Does falling count as movement?
4 months ago  ::  Jan 29, 2013 - 12:22PM #1
SwampDog
Date Joined: Jan 2, 2011
Posts: 405
My character has a safewing amulet:  reduce falling damage by 10 feet and always land on your feet.

So:  my character is standing on a 10-foot high ledge, 2 squares away from the edge.  He has a movement of 6.

Can he move 2 squares, fall, then move the other 4 squares as part of the same move action?   Or does falling automatically halt movement, even if no damage is taken?
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4 months ago  ::  Jan 29, 2013 - 12:28PM #2
mvincent
Date Joined: Jun 15, 2004
Posts: 8,291

Jan 29, 2013 -- 12:22PM, SwampDog wrote:

Can he move 2 squares, fall, then move the other 4 squares as part of the same move action?


I don't see why not. The only time I see the rules specifying that your move ends from the fall is when long jumping (PHB p.182) "If you end up over a pit or a chasm, you fall and lose the rest of your move action."

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4 months ago  ::  Jan 29, 2013 - 3:01PM #3
Plaguescarred
Date Joined: May 12, 2009
Posts: 16,568
Nothing says you can't continue moving after you fall so you should be able to if you still can.
Yan
Montréal, Canada
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4 months ago  ::  Jan 29, 2013 - 3:02PM #4
SwampDog
Date Joined: Jan 2, 2011
Posts: 405
Thanks to both.
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4 months ago  ::  Jan 29, 2013 - 7:08PM #5
RisingZan
Date Joined: Aug 20, 2003
Posts: 700
It's a weird quirk of the falling rules done for simplification, but falling is effectively instantaneous, unless you're falling more than 500 feet.  Then you only fall 500 feet on the first turn of falling (whether its your turn or someone else's). If you're still falling at the start of your next turn, you get your normal actions, and if none of your actions stop the fall, you fall another 500 feet at the end of your turn, repeat as needed.

 
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4 months ago  ::  Feb 09, 2013 - 3:41PM #6
peteincary
Date Joined: Jan 26, 2013
Posts: 69
To clarify the answer to the original question:

First, I assume when you say you are 2 squares away from the ledge, that you are in the square that is adjacent to "the square that has the ledge as one of its sides"... correct?

You would spend 1 movement point to move into the square that has the ledge. You would then spend 1 point to move into the square "over the ledge" thus making you fall 10 feet. Because of your amulet, your 10 foot fall causes no damage, and you land on your feet, with 4 movement points remaining.

If you did not have the amulet, you would instead use the hop down ability described in the Acrobatics section in the Compendium. If you succeed on the DC15 skill check, you hop down the 10 feet, land on your feet, and still have 4 movement points remaining. If you fail your skill check, you are then instead falling the 10 feet, causing you to land prone and take 1d10 damage due to the fall. Of course, you can also make an Acrobatics check as you fall, to reduce the damage you take when you hit the ground, and if you end up taking no damage, you actually land on your feet anyways, with 4 movement points remaining.
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4 months ago  ::  Feb 09, 2013 - 6:03PM #7
Noctaem
Date Joined: Mar 28, 2010
Posts: 1,813

Feb 9, 2013 -- 3:41PM, peteincary wrote:

To clarify the answer to the original question:

First, I assume when you say you are 2 squares away from the ledge, that you are in the square that is adjacent to "the square that has the ledge as one of its sides"... correct?

You would spend 1 movement point to move into the square that has the ledge. You would then spend 1 point to move into the square "over the ledge" thus making you fall 10 feet. Because of your amulet, your 10 foot fall causes no damage, and you land on your feet, with 4 movement points remaining.

If you did not have the amulet, you would instead use the hop down ability described in the Acrobatics section in the Compendium. If you succeed on the DC15 skill check, you hop down the 10 feet, land on your feet, and still have 4 movement points remaining. If you fail your skill check, you are then instead falling the 10 feet, causing you to land prone and take 1d10 damage due to the fall. Of course, you can also make an Acrobatics check as you fall, to reduce the damage you take when you hit the ground, and if you end up taking no damage, you actually land on your feet anyways, with 4 movement points remaining.




there's no reason to do thread necromancy.  This thread has been answered and even extrapolated upon.  Please refrain from doing this...

"Non nobis Domine
Sed nomini tuo da gloriam"

"I wish for death not because I want to die, but because I seek the war eternal"

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4 months ago  ::  Feb 09, 2013 - 6:33PM #8
peteincary
Date Joined: Jan 26, 2013
Posts: 69

Feb 9, 2013 -- 6:03PM, Noctaem wrote:


there's no reason to do thread necromancy.  This thread has been answered and even extrapolated upon.  Please refrain from doing this...


Sorry new to boards. The original post was only 10 days ago. Is that really thread necromancy??? 

This thread was the closest which came to answering the question I had about falling and counting movement. But it did not cover falling without the amulet. (The title of this thread is "Does falling count as movement?") So I did the additional research myself and added the further extrapolation here, since it seems a logical place for someone else looking for this information to look.

Noctaem, do people here prefer not to have any further discussion on a thread after the original question has been answered?

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4 months ago  ::  Feb 09, 2013 - 8:19PM #9
RisingZan
Date Joined: Aug 20, 2003
Posts: 700
if you have a new related question or there has been a recent rules change which requires an update, than I don't think people mind a thread being brought back, but when the thread is already effectively "closed" I think its just seen as unnecessary.

 We had a few thread last month resurrected from years ago, so its not a serious issue as long as its limited and appropriate.
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4 months ago  ::  Feb 10, 2013 - 1:44PM #10
peteincary
Date Joined: Jan 26, 2013
Posts: 69
RisingZan, thanks for explaining. I actually did have a related question, but then answered it on my own and posted the additional information thinking others might have similar question. Didn't realize I would be called out for doing so. I'll refrain from posting on old threads unless it is to ask a related question or answer someone else's question.
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