

The first two bullets of the Sharpshooter feat (ignoring disadvantage on long-ranged weapon attacks and ignoring cover with ranged weapon attacks) The third bullet of the Sharpshooter feat (optional -5 attack roll, +10 damage when attacking with a ranged weapon)

Sneak Attack (explicit Sage Advice confirmation) This means, when hurled with a sling, Magic Stone works with things like: Here’s Sage Advice confirmation that Magic Stone works with effects that require the use of a ranged weapon (when using a sling rather than throwing), but not with effects that require a ranged weapon attack. Magic Stone is a spell attack that can be made with a ranged weapon. The rules for Magic Stone in DnD 5e are as follows: What Are the Rules for Magic Stone in 5e? The spell also ends on stones if the caster casts Magic Stone again. Regardless of whether the attack lands, the magic stone ceases to be a magic stone once its used in an attack. If the attack lands, it deals (“magical”) bludgeoning damage equal to 1d6 + the spellcaster’s spellcasting ability modifier.
#Best magic stone for flauncher mod#
Regardless of who attacks with the pebble and how they throw it, the attack roll uses the spellcaster’s spellcasting ability modifier (as opposed to the attacker’s spellcasting ability mod or regular attack mod) and the thrower’s proficiency bonus (since all characters are proficient at throwing and using slings). Hurling the stone from a sling counts as using a ranged weapon, but not as making a weapon attack (that’ll be important for a few things in the rules section below). Anyone can make a ranged spell attack with these stones by throwing them (maximum 60-foot range) or hurling it from a sling (30-foot range accurately, or up to 120-foot range with disadvantage). Magic Stone turns 1-3 pebbles you touch into magic stones (hence the name). The following classes have Magic Stone on their spell list: We’ll go over some of those applications, as well as nagging rules questions that come up all the time. If you look at Magic Stone as a pure damaging cantrip, then yea, it’s pretty “meh.” But viewed as a utility spell and paired with creative thinking, it can be much more satisfying to use. Magic Stone is a funny ol’ cantrip - many players find it severely underwhelming, while others have limitless fun building characters who excel at hurling magical pebbles at baddies.
