Can a Beast Master ranger have its beast chase down and attack enemies?Can my Ranger's pet continue to attack if I am knocked out?Would the Ranger be overpowered if their Animal Companion kept attacking once ordered?Can my Ranger's pet continue to attack if I am knocked out?Does a Ranger's replacement beast companion have size and CR limits?Can I let my mounted Animal Companion act independently or do I have to use Beast Master's command to control it?Can I use the Revised Ranger in Adventurers League?In what situation is the “come” trick necessary or useful for an animal companion?Can my wolf attack when I’m riding her?Can a Beast Master ranger's Animal Companion do extra damage from the Hunter's Mark spell?How does the Beast Master Ranger's Extra Attack work?Do any of the books contain (magic) items for animal companions?How can I improve the survivability of the Beast Master's animal companion?

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Can a Beast Master ranger have its beast chase down and attack enemies?


Can my Ranger's pet continue to attack if I am knocked out?Would the Ranger be overpowered if their Animal Companion kept attacking once ordered?Can my Ranger's pet continue to attack if I am knocked out?Does a Ranger's replacement beast companion have size and CR limits?Can I let my mounted Animal Companion act independently or do I have to use Beast Master's command to control it?Can I use the Revised Ranger in Adventurers League?In what situation is the “come” trick necessary or useful for an animal companion?Can my wolf attack when I’m riding her?Can a Beast Master ranger's Animal Companion do extra damage from the Hunter's Mark spell?How does the Beast Master Ranger's Extra Attack work?Do any of the books contain (magic) items for animal companions?How can I improve the survivability of the Beast Master's animal companion?






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6












$begingroup$


I have two related questions. I'm looking for RAW answers, as I play in Adventurers League.



Say you are outside:



  1. Can a Beast Master Ranger command their pet to chase down enemies? Like having a Mastiff chase down a thief?


  2. Can a Beast Master Ranger in turn command that animal to attack repeatedly?


Say the Mastiff catches up to the thief after a 450-ft. chase. You're no longer in line of sight or close enough. Can the Mastiff attack the thief? Can the Mastiff continue to attack the thief?










share|improve this question











$endgroup$











  • $begingroup$
    Related to question #2: Can my Ranger's pet continue to attack if I am knocked out?, Would the Ranger be overpowered if their Animal Companion kept attacking once ordered?
    $endgroup$
    – V2Blast
    2 hours ago


















6












$begingroup$


I have two related questions. I'm looking for RAW answers, as I play in Adventurers League.



Say you are outside:



  1. Can a Beast Master Ranger command their pet to chase down enemies? Like having a Mastiff chase down a thief?


  2. Can a Beast Master Ranger in turn command that animal to attack repeatedly?


Say the Mastiff catches up to the thief after a 450-ft. chase. You're no longer in line of sight or close enough. Can the Mastiff attack the thief? Can the Mastiff continue to attack the thief?










share|improve this question











$endgroup$











  • $begingroup$
    Related to question #2: Can my Ranger's pet continue to attack if I am knocked out?, Would the Ranger be overpowered if their Animal Companion kept attacking once ordered?
    $endgroup$
    – V2Blast
    2 hours ago














6












6








6





$begingroup$


I have two related questions. I'm looking for RAW answers, as I play in Adventurers League.



Say you are outside:



  1. Can a Beast Master Ranger command their pet to chase down enemies? Like having a Mastiff chase down a thief?


  2. Can a Beast Master Ranger in turn command that animal to attack repeatedly?


Say the Mastiff catches up to the thief after a 450-ft. chase. You're no longer in line of sight or close enough. Can the Mastiff attack the thief? Can the Mastiff continue to attack the thief?










share|improve this question











$endgroup$




I have two related questions. I'm looking for RAW answers, as I play in Adventurers League.



Say you are outside:



  1. Can a Beast Master Ranger command their pet to chase down enemies? Like having a Mastiff chase down a thief?


  2. Can a Beast Master Ranger in turn command that animal to attack repeatedly?


Say the Mastiff catches up to the thief after a 450-ft. chase. You're no longer in line of sight or close enough. Can the Mastiff attack the thief? Can the Mastiff continue to attack the thief?







dnd-5e attack ranger animal-companions dnd-adventurers-league






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 2 hours ago









V2Blast

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32.3k5 gold badges117 silver badges198 bronze badges










asked 8 hours ago









RyanFromGDSERyanFromGDSE

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  • $begingroup$
    Related to question #2: Can my Ranger's pet continue to attack if I am knocked out?, Would the Ranger be overpowered if their Animal Companion kept attacking once ordered?
    $endgroup$
    – V2Blast
    2 hours ago

















  • $begingroup$
    Related to question #2: Can my Ranger's pet continue to attack if I am knocked out?, Would the Ranger be overpowered if their Animal Companion kept attacking once ordered?
    $endgroup$
    – V2Blast
    2 hours ago
















$begingroup$
Related to question #2: Can my Ranger's pet continue to attack if I am knocked out?, Would the Ranger be overpowered if their Animal Companion kept attacking once ordered?
$endgroup$
– V2Blast
2 hours ago





$begingroup$
Related to question #2: Can my Ranger's pet continue to attack if I am knocked out?, Would the Ranger be overpowered if their Animal Companion kept attacking once ordered?
$endgroup$
– V2Blast
2 hours ago











1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















12












$begingroup$

By the rules as written, no.



Normally, in any given turn a beast master ranger's animal companion only does what it is told by its master on that turn, and there is no provision within the rules for the companion following one instruction over multiple turns, like say chasing down a foe or continuing to attack a specific target. If, on a given turn, you do not use your action to command the companion, it simply takes the Dodge action instead, regardless of any previous commands it may have been given.



As the Beast Master description states:




The beast obeys your commands as best as it can. It takes its turn on your initiative. On your turn, you can verbally command the beast where to move (no action required by you). You can use your action to verbally command it to take the Attack, Dash, Disengage, or Help action. If you don't issue a command, the beast takes the Dodge action. Once you have the Extra Attack feature, you can make one weapon attack yourself when you command the beast to take the Attack action.




Since it was originally the case that if the master was incapacitated the beast would, by RAW, simply sit in place and take the dodge action for the rest of time, errata to the PHB did add a paragraph about how the companion behaves if its master is incapacitated or absent:




If you are incapacitated or absent, the beast acts on its own, focusing on protecting you and itself. The beast never requires your command to use its reaction, such as when making an opportunity attack.




So if you are not able to command the beast - either because you are yourself incapacitated or because you are simply not there - the companion will revert to defensive behaviour to protect you and itself. It will attack things that threaten it or you, and if you aren't a concern it might even run away from danger to protect itself, but it won't take initiative to chase after or attack non-threatening targets.



If the companion has moved so far that it can no longer receive orders from you, it will only act to defend itself, and I would likely rule that it turns around and tries to find you again; but this is a very unlikely situation, since the beast even only moves when instructed to on a given turn, so it won't chase after an enemy for multiple turns without you being near enough to instruct it to keep doing so on each turn.



Yes, this is somewhat underwhelming. There is a reason the Ranger was identified by the D&D team as being an unsatisfying and weak character option.






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    1 Answer
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    active

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    active

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    12












    $begingroup$

    By the rules as written, no.



    Normally, in any given turn a beast master ranger's animal companion only does what it is told by its master on that turn, and there is no provision within the rules for the companion following one instruction over multiple turns, like say chasing down a foe or continuing to attack a specific target. If, on a given turn, you do not use your action to command the companion, it simply takes the Dodge action instead, regardless of any previous commands it may have been given.



    As the Beast Master description states:




    The beast obeys your commands as best as it can. It takes its turn on your initiative. On your turn, you can verbally command the beast where to move (no action required by you). You can use your action to verbally command it to take the Attack, Dash, Disengage, or Help action. If you don't issue a command, the beast takes the Dodge action. Once you have the Extra Attack feature, you can make one weapon attack yourself when you command the beast to take the Attack action.




    Since it was originally the case that if the master was incapacitated the beast would, by RAW, simply sit in place and take the dodge action for the rest of time, errata to the PHB did add a paragraph about how the companion behaves if its master is incapacitated or absent:




    If you are incapacitated or absent, the beast acts on its own, focusing on protecting you and itself. The beast never requires your command to use its reaction, such as when making an opportunity attack.




    So if you are not able to command the beast - either because you are yourself incapacitated or because you are simply not there - the companion will revert to defensive behaviour to protect you and itself. It will attack things that threaten it or you, and if you aren't a concern it might even run away from danger to protect itself, but it won't take initiative to chase after or attack non-threatening targets.



    If the companion has moved so far that it can no longer receive orders from you, it will only act to defend itself, and I would likely rule that it turns around and tries to find you again; but this is a very unlikely situation, since the beast even only moves when instructed to on a given turn, so it won't chase after an enemy for multiple turns without you being near enough to instruct it to keep doing so on each turn.



    Yes, this is somewhat underwhelming. There is a reason the Ranger was identified by the D&D team as being an unsatisfying and weak character option.






    share|improve this answer











    $endgroup$

















      12












      $begingroup$

      By the rules as written, no.



      Normally, in any given turn a beast master ranger's animal companion only does what it is told by its master on that turn, and there is no provision within the rules for the companion following one instruction over multiple turns, like say chasing down a foe or continuing to attack a specific target. If, on a given turn, you do not use your action to command the companion, it simply takes the Dodge action instead, regardless of any previous commands it may have been given.



      As the Beast Master description states:




      The beast obeys your commands as best as it can. It takes its turn on your initiative. On your turn, you can verbally command the beast where to move (no action required by you). You can use your action to verbally command it to take the Attack, Dash, Disengage, or Help action. If you don't issue a command, the beast takes the Dodge action. Once you have the Extra Attack feature, you can make one weapon attack yourself when you command the beast to take the Attack action.




      Since it was originally the case that if the master was incapacitated the beast would, by RAW, simply sit in place and take the dodge action for the rest of time, errata to the PHB did add a paragraph about how the companion behaves if its master is incapacitated or absent:




      If you are incapacitated or absent, the beast acts on its own, focusing on protecting you and itself. The beast never requires your command to use its reaction, such as when making an opportunity attack.




      So if you are not able to command the beast - either because you are yourself incapacitated or because you are simply not there - the companion will revert to defensive behaviour to protect you and itself. It will attack things that threaten it or you, and if you aren't a concern it might even run away from danger to protect itself, but it won't take initiative to chase after or attack non-threatening targets.



      If the companion has moved so far that it can no longer receive orders from you, it will only act to defend itself, and I would likely rule that it turns around and tries to find you again; but this is a very unlikely situation, since the beast even only moves when instructed to on a given turn, so it won't chase after an enemy for multiple turns without you being near enough to instruct it to keep doing so on each turn.



      Yes, this is somewhat underwhelming. There is a reason the Ranger was identified by the D&D team as being an unsatisfying and weak character option.






      share|improve this answer











      $endgroup$















        12












        12








        12





        $begingroup$

        By the rules as written, no.



        Normally, in any given turn a beast master ranger's animal companion only does what it is told by its master on that turn, and there is no provision within the rules for the companion following one instruction over multiple turns, like say chasing down a foe or continuing to attack a specific target. If, on a given turn, you do not use your action to command the companion, it simply takes the Dodge action instead, regardless of any previous commands it may have been given.



        As the Beast Master description states:




        The beast obeys your commands as best as it can. It takes its turn on your initiative. On your turn, you can verbally command the beast where to move (no action required by you). You can use your action to verbally command it to take the Attack, Dash, Disengage, or Help action. If you don't issue a command, the beast takes the Dodge action. Once you have the Extra Attack feature, you can make one weapon attack yourself when you command the beast to take the Attack action.




        Since it was originally the case that if the master was incapacitated the beast would, by RAW, simply sit in place and take the dodge action for the rest of time, errata to the PHB did add a paragraph about how the companion behaves if its master is incapacitated or absent:




        If you are incapacitated or absent, the beast acts on its own, focusing on protecting you and itself. The beast never requires your command to use its reaction, such as when making an opportunity attack.




        So if you are not able to command the beast - either because you are yourself incapacitated or because you are simply not there - the companion will revert to defensive behaviour to protect you and itself. It will attack things that threaten it or you, and if you aren't a concern it might even run away from danger to protect itself, but it won't take initiative to chase after or attack non-threatening targets.



        If the companion has moved so far that it can no longer receive orders from you, it will only act to defend itself, and I would likely rule that it turns around and tries to find you again; but this is a very unlikely situation, since the beast even only moves when instructed to on a given turn, so it won't chase after an enemy for multiple turns without you being near enough to instruct it to keep doing so on each turn.



        Yes, this is somewhat underwhelming. There is a reason the Ranger was identified by the D&D team as being an unsatisfying and weak character option.






        share|improve this answer











        $endgroup$



        By the rules as written, no.



        Normally, in any given turn a beast master ranger's animal companion only does what it is told by its master on that turn, and there is no provision within the rules for the companion following one instruction over multiple turns, like say chasing down a foe or continuing to attack a specific target. If, on a given turn, you do not use your action to command the companion, it simply takes the Dodge action instead, regardless of any previous commands it may have been given.



        As the Beast Master description states:




        The beast obeys your commands as best as it can. It takes its turn on your initiative. On your turn, you can verbally command the beast where to move (no action required by you). You can use your action to verbally command it to take the Attack, Dash, Disengage, or Help action. If you don't issue a command, the beast takes the Dodge action. Once you have the Extra Attack feature, you can make one weapon attack yourself when you command the beast to take the Attack action.




        Since it was originally the case that if the master was incapacitated the beast would, by RAW, simply sit in place and take the dodge action for the rest of time, errata to the PHB did add a paragraph about how the companion behaves if its master is incapacitated or absent:




        If you are incapacitated or absent, the beast acts on its own, focusing on protecting you and itself. The beast never requires your command to use its reaction, such as when making an opportunity attack.




        So if you are not able to command the beast - either because you are yourself incapacitated or because you are simply not there - the companion will revert to defensive behaviour to protect you and itself. It will attack things that threaten it or you, and if you aren't a concern it might even run away from danger to protect itself, but it won't take initiative to chase after or attack non-threatening targets.



        If the companion has moved so far that it can no longer receive orders from you, it will only act to defend itself, and I would likely rule that it turns around and tries to find you again; but this is a very unlikely situation, since the beast even only moves when instructed to on a given turn, so it won't chase after an enemy for multiple turns without you being near enough to instruct it to keep doing so on each turn.



        Yes, this is somewhat underwhelming. There is a reason the Ranger was identified by the D&D team as being an unsatisfying and weak character option.







        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



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        edited 5 hours ago

























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        CarcerCarcer

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