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What are the main differences in the druid class between 5th edition and 3.5 edition?
For seasoned 3.X players and DMs, what is the “what's new” summary for 5e?What are the differences between D&D 3.5 and D&D 4th edition?What are the mechanical differences between Star Wars Revised Edition and Star Wars Saga Edition?What are the major differences between AD&D 1st Edition & AD&D 2nd EditionDifferences between 5th Edition D&D and Pathfinder?What are the major differences between D&D 3.0 and D&D 3.5?What are the differences between 1st and 2nd edition FATE?Differences Between 3.5 and 5e Bard?What are the main differences between the first and second editions of Monsterhearts?What are the main differences between Vampire: The Requiem, Vampire 20th Anniversary, and Vampire 5th Edition?
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What are the main differences between the Druid class in 5th edition vs. the Druid class in 3.5?
dnd-5e dnd-3.5e druid edition-comparison
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add a comment |
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What are the main differences between the Druid class in 5th edition vs. the Druid class in 3.5?
dnd-5e dnd-3.5e druid edition-comparison
New contributor
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1
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Roger, I went ahead and rolled back your edit to the question to your original text. I think the answer you have shows that this question is reasonable in scope. Voters are welcome to disagree, but let's give it a shot and see now that people can see what an answer might look like here. Sorry for the chaos, not every question is like this! And thanks for being patient. I hope we get you information that is useful to solving your problem :)
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– Rubiksmoose♦
13 hours ago
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Comments are not for extended discussion; discussion about the broadness of this question has been moved to chat.
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– Rubiksmoose♦
13 hours ago
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Welcome to RPG.SE! Take the tour if you haven't already, and check out the help center for more guidance.
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– V2Blast♦
5 mins ago
add a comment |
$begingroup$
What are the main differences between the Druid class in 5th edition vs. the Druid class in 3.5?
dnd-5e dnd-3.5e druid edition-comparison
New contributor
$endgroup$
What are the main differences between the Druid class in 5th edition vs. the Druid class in 3.5?
dnd-5e dnd-3.5e druid edition-comparison
dnd-5e dnd-3.5e druid edition-comparison
New contributor
New contributor
edited 9 mins ago
V2Blast♦
34.2k5 gold badges123 silver badges213 bronze badges
34.2k5 gold badges123 silver badges213 bronze badges
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asked 19 hours ago
Roger MungoRoger Mungo
614 bronze badges
614 bronze badges
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Roger, I went ahead and rolled back your edit to the question to your original text. I think the answer you have shows that this question is reasonable in scope. Voters are welcome to disagree, but let's give it a shot and see now that people can see what an answer might look like here. Sorry for the chaos, not every question is like this! And thanks for being patient. I hope we get you information that is useful to solving your problem :)
$endgroup$
– Rubiksmoose♦
13 hours ago
$begingroup$
Comments are not for extended discussion; discussion about the broadness of this question has been moved to chat.
$endgroup$
– Rubiksmoose♦
13 hours ago
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Welcome to RPG.SE! Take the tour if you haven't already, and check out the help center for more guidance.
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– V2Blast♦
5 mins ago
add a comment |
1
$begingroup$
Roger, I went ahead and rolled back your edit to the question to your original text. I think the answer you have shows that this question is reasonable in scope. Voters are welcome to disagree, but let's give it a shot and see now that people can see what an answer might look like here. Sorry for the chaos, not every question is like this! And thanks for being patient. I hope we get you information that is useful to solving your problem :)
$endgroup$
– Rubiksmoose♦
13 hours ago
$begingroup$
Comments are not for extended discussion; discussion about the broadness of this question has been moved to chat.
$endgroup$
– Rubiksmoose♦
13 hours ago
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Welcome to RPG.SE! Take the tour if you haven't already, and check out the help center for more guidance.
$endgroup$
– V2Blast♦
5 mins ago
1
1
$begingroup$
Roger, I went ahead and rolled back your edit to the question to your original text. I think the answer you have shows that this question is reasonable in scope. Voters are welcome to disagree, but let's give it a shot and see now that people can see what an answer might look like here. Sorry for the chaos, not every question is like this! And thanks for being patient. I hope we get you information that is useful to solving your problem :)
$endgroup$
– Rubiksmoose♦
13 hours ago
$begingroup$
Roger, I went ahead and rolled back your edit to the question to your original text. I think the answer you have shows that this question is reasonable in scope. Voters are welcome to disagree, but let's give it a shot and see now that people can see what an answer might look like here. Sorry for the chaos, not every question is like this! And thanks for being patient. I hope we get you information that is useful to solving your problem :)
$endgroup$
– Rubiksmoose♦
13 hours ago
$begingroup$
Comments are not for extended discussion; discussion about the broadness of this question has been moved to chat.
$endgroup$
– Rubiksmoose♦
13 hours ago
$begingroup$
Comments are not for extended discussion; discussion about the broadness of this question has been moved to chat.
$endgroup$
– Rubiksmoose♦
13 hours ago
$begingroup$
Welcome to RPG.SE! Take the tour if you haven't already, and check out the help center for more guidance.
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– V2Blast♦
5 mins ago
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Welcome to RPG.SE! Take the tour if you haven't already, and check out the help center for more guidance.
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– V2Blast♦
5 mins ago
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1 Answer
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First, make sure you’re familiar with all of the general differences between 3.5e and 5e, as all of that is going to apply to a druid as much as it applies to everyone else.
Animal Companion
The 5e Druid doesn’t get an animal companion, at all. That is the exclusive ability of a Beastmaster Ranger. You could take the Ritual Caster feat and cast find familiar, but familiars are a pretty poor replacement for the animal companion.
Spells
Like all 5e spellcasters, the 5e Druid is much more limited at high levels; they get very few high-level spell slots, and do not get more for having a high Wisdom score the way 3.5e druids do. This is part of the broader changes of 5e relative to 3.5e, but is well worth mentioning. Take care also to note the limiting factor that the 5e Concentration mechanic provides: since you can only concentrate on one spell at a time, your spells have to be chosen carefully with an eye towards making sure you have other useful spells to cast while maintaining concentration on one of them (5e Concentration does not require an action like it does in 3.5e).
Also, Druids no longer have the ability to spontaneously swap spells for summon nature’s ally spells—they have to prepare summoning spells if they want to cast them. The changes to 5e preparation mechanics makes this much less painful, however.
Wild Shape
The 5e Druid still has Wild Shape, and it’s fairly similar in terms of what it does, but the details vary significantly. In particular, you get it at 2nd level, but by default, you can only shape into fairly-weak creatures, and the ability does not scale very much as you level up. By 8th level, a base Druid is limited to CR-1 creatures, and you never get anything better than that, nor ever get any plant or elemental forms. As a result, by default, by high levels Druids are using Wild Shape mostly for scouting and stealth, not for combat. See the Circle of the Moon below, however, for the Druids that do get better Wild Shape.
The other thing about 5e Wild Shape is that it recovers after a “short rest,” which didn’t exist in 3.5e. That means that instead of spending 8 hours resting to get your wild shape uses per day back, you get your Wild Shape uses back after just 1 hour. Until 20th level, though, the 5e Druid gets fewer uses of it.
Natural Spell
This was a 3.5e feat, not a druid class feature, but it should still be mentioned since Natural Spell was nigh-mandatory for a druid’s 6th-level feat: 5e does not have such a feat. Instead, there is the Beast Spells feature at 18th level.
Subclasses
Numerous features of the 3.5e druid are not available to all Druids. Instead, Druids must join a Circle, and those features are offered to only those Druids who join the appropriate Circle.
Circle of the Land
Druids who join the Circle of the Land gain abilities similar to the woodland stride, trackless step, resist nature’s lure, and wild empathy abilities of the 3.5e druid. They also gain extra spell slots and bonus spells that they don’t have to prepare.
Circle of the Moon
Moon Druids gain powerful improvements to Wild Shape, making it more of the combat powerhouse that it was in 3.5e. They are also the only Druids to be able to Wild Shape into elemental forms.
The Circle of the Moon also offers an ability called Thousand Forms, which is the same as the 3.5e druid’s a thousand faces ability.
Other Circles
The Circles of the Land and the Moon were the two options in the 5e Player’s Handbook, but other Circles have been printed since then. These have features different from what the 3.5e druid got.
Timeless Body
Both 3.5e druids and 5e Druids get Timeless body, though the 5e version comes at a later level and makes the druid age slower, rather than eliminating penalties (which don’t really exist in 5e).
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
This is a really good answer but misses one point that makes Wild Shape significantly better in 5e. Your Wild Shape forms use an entirely separate hp pool in 5e and you revert at 0 rather than using your own hp.
$endgroup$
– linksassin
11 mins ago
$begingroup$
On the topic of animal companions, it might be worth mentioning that the closest they'll get without multiclassing/feats in 5e is one of the conjure spells. (Shepherd druids get a slight buff to these summons.)
$endgroup$
– V2Blast♦
6 mins ago
$begingroup$
On the animal companion point, it might be worth mentioning that they can still have animals as companions, just like anyone can, those animals just aren't class features. Also Animal Friendship, much like in 3e (not 3.5), means that Druids should probably always be encounted with at least one animal who is also a companion.
$endgroup$
– the dark wanderer
3 mins ago
add a comment |
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$begingroup$
First, make sure you’re familiar with all of the general differences between 3.5e and 5e, as all of that is going to apply to a druid as much as it applies to everyone else.
Animal Companion
The 5e Druid doesn’t get an animal companion, at all. That is the exclusive ability of a Beastmaster Ranger. You could take the Ritual Caster feat and cast find familiar, but familiars are a pretty poor replacement for the animal companion.
Spells
Like all 5e spellcasters, the 5e Druid is much more limited at high levels; they get very few high-level spell slots, and do not get more for having a high Wisdom score the way 3.5e druids do. This is part of the broader changes of 5e relative to 3.5e, but is well worth mentioning. Take care also to note the limiting factor that the 5e Concentration mechanic provides: since you can only concentrate on one spell at a time, your spells have to be chosen carefully with an eye towards making sure you have other useful spells to cast while maintaining concentration on one of them (5e Concentration does not require an action like it does in 3.5e).
Also, Druids no longer have the ability to spontaneously swap spells for summon nature’s ally spells—they have to prepare summoning spells if they want to cast them. The changes to 5e preparation mechanics makes this much less painful, however.
Wild Shape
The 5e Druid still has Wild Shape, and it’s fairly similar in terms of what it does, but the details vary significantly. In particular, you get it at 2nd level, but by default, you can only shape into fairly-weak creatures, and the ability does not scale very much as you level up. By 8th level, a base Druid is limited to CR-1 creatures, and you never get anything better than that, nor ever get any plant or elemental forms. As a result, by default, by high levels Druids are using Wild Shape mostly for scouting and stealth, not for combat. See the Circle of the Moon below, however, for the Druids that do get better Wild Shape.
The other thing about 5e Wild Shape is that it recovers after a “short rest,” which didn’t exist in 3.5e. That means that instead of spending 8 hours resting to get your wild shape uses per day back, you get your Wild Shape uses back after just 1 hour. Until 20th level, though, the 5e Druid gets fewer uses of it.
Natural Spell
This was a 3.5e feat, not a druid class feature, but it should still be mentioned since Natural Spell was nigh-mandatory for a druid’s 6th-level feat: 5e does not have such a feat. Instead, there is the Beast Spells feature at 18th level.
Subclasses
Numerous features of the 3.5e druid are not available to all Druids. Instead, Druids must join a Circle, and those features are offered to only those Druids who join the appropriate Circle.
Circle of the Land
Druids who join the Circle of the Land gain abilities similar to the woodland stride, trackless step, resist nature’s lure, and wild empathy abilities of the 3.5e druid. They also gain extra spell slots and bonus spells that they don’t have to prepare.
Circle of the Moon
Moon Druids gain powerful improvements to Wild Shape, making it more of the combat powerhouse that it was in 3.5e. They are also the only Druids to be able to Wild Shape into elemental forms.
The Circle of the Moon also offers an ability called Thousand Forms, which is the same as the 3.5e druid’s a thousand faces ability.
Other Circles
The Circles of the Land and the Moon were the two options in the 5e Player’s Handbook, but other Circles have been printed since then. These have features different from what the 3.5e druid got.
Timeless Body
Both 3.5e druids and 5e Druids get Timeless body, though the 5e version comes at a later level and makes the druid age slower, rather than eliminating penalties (which don’t really exist in 5e).
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
This is a really good answer but misses one point that makes Wild Shape significantly better in 5e. Your Wild Shape forms use an entirely separate hp pool in 5e and you revert at 0 rather than using your own hp.
$endgroup$
– linksassin
11 mins ago
$begingroup$
On the topic of animal companions, it might be worth mentioning that the closest they'll get without multiclassing/feats in 5e is one of the conjure spells. (Shepherd druids get a slight buff to these summons.)
$endgroup$
– V2Blast♦
6 mins ago
$begingroup$
On the animal companion point, it might be worth mentioning that they can still have animals as companions, just like anyone can, those animals just aren't class features. Also Animal Friendship, much like in 3e (not 3.5), means that Druids should probably always be encounted with at least one animal who is also a companion.
$endgroup$
– the dark wanderer
3 mins ago
add a comment |
$begingroup$
First, make sure you’re familiar with all of the general differences between 3.5e and 5e, as all of that is going to apply to a druid as much as it applies to everyone else.
Animal Companion
The 5e Druid doesn’t get an animal companion, at all. That is the exclusive ability of a Beastmaster Ranger. You could take the Ritual Caster feat and cast find familiar, but familiars are a pretty poor replacement for the animal companion.
Spells
Like all 5e spellcasters, the 5e Druid is much more limited at high levels; they get very few high-level spell slots, and do not get more for having a high Wisdom score the way 3.5e druids do. This is part of the broader changes of 5e relative to 3.5e, but is well worth mentioning. Take care also to note the limiting factor that the 5e Concentration mechanic provides: since you can only concentrate on one spell at a time, your spells have to be chosen carefully with an eye towards making sure you have other useful spells to cast while maintaining concentration on one of them (5e Concentration does not require an action like it does in 3.5e).
Also, Druids no longer have the ability to spontaneously swap spells for summon nature’s ally spells—they have to prepare summoning spells if they want to cast them. The changes to 5e preparation mechanics makes this much less painful, however.
Wild Shape
The 5e Druid still has Wild Shape, and it’s fairly similar in terms of what it does, but the details vary significantly. In particular, you get it at 2nd level, but by default, you can only shape into fairly-weak creatures, and the ability does not scale very much as you level up. By 8th level, a base Druid is limited to CR-1 creatures, and you never get anything better than that, nor ever get any plant or elemental forms. As a result, by default, by high levels Druids are using Wild Shape mostly for scouting and stealth, not for combat. See the Circle of the Moon below, however, for the Druids that do get better Wild Shape.
The other thing about 5e Wild Shape is that it recovers after a “short rest,” which didn’t exist in 3.5e. That means that instead of spending 8 hours resting to get your wild shape uses per day back, you get your Wild Shape uses back after just 1 hour. Until 20th level, though, the 5e Druid gets fewer uses of it.
Natural Spell
This was a 3.5e feat, not a druid class feature, but it should still be mentioned since Natural Spell was nigh-mandatory for a druid’s 6th-level feat: 5e does not have such a feat. Instead, there is the Beast Spells feature at 18th level.
Subclasses
Numerous features of the 3.5e druid are not available to all Druids. Instead, Druids must join a Circle, and those features are offered to only those Druids who join the appropriate Circle.
Circle of the Land
Druids who join the Circle of the Land gain abilities similar to the woodland stride, trackless step, resist nature’s lure, and wild empathy abilities of the 3.5e druid. They also gain extra spell slots and bonus spells that they don’t have to prepare.
Circle of the Moon
Moon Druids gain powerful improvements to Wild Shape, making it more of the combat powerhouse that it was in 3.5e. They are also the only Druids to be able to Wild Shape into elemental forms.
The Circle of the Moon also offers an ability called Thousand Forms, which is the same as the 3.5e druid’s a thousand faces ability.
Other Circles
The Circles of the Land and the Moon were the two options in the 5e Player’s Handbook, but other Circles have been printed since then. These have features different from what the 3.5e druid got.
Timeless Body
Both 3.5e druids and 5e Druids get Timeless body, though the 5e version comes at a later level and makes the druid age slower, rather than eliminating penalties (which don’t really exist in 5e).
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
This is a really good answer but misses one point that makes Wild Shape significantly better in 5e. Your Wild Shape forms use an entirely separate hp pool in 5e and you revert at 0 rather than using your own hp.
$endgroup$
– linksassin
11 mins ago
$begingroup$
On the topic of animal companions, it might be worth mentioning that the closest they'll get without multiclassing/feats in 5e is one of the conjure spells. (Shepherd druids get a slight buff to these summons.)
$endgroup$
– V2Blast♦
6 mins ago
$begingroup$
On the animal companion point, it might be worth mentioning that they can still have animals as companions, just like anyone can, those animals just aren't class features. Also Animal Friendship, much like in 3e (not 3.5), means that Druids should probably always be encounted with at least one animal who is also a companion.
$endgroup$
– the dark wanderer
3 mins ago
add a comment |
$begingroup$
First, make sure you’re familiar with all of the general differences between 3.5e and 5e, as all of that is going to apply to a druid as much as it applies to everyone else.
Animal Companion
The 5e Druid doesn’t get an animal companion, at all. That is the exclusive ability of a Beastmaster Ranger. You could take the Ritual Caster feat and cast find familiar, but familiars are a pretty poor replacement for the animal companion.
Spells
Like all 5e spellcasters, the 5e Druid is much more limited at high levels; they get very few high-level spell slots, and do not get more for having a high Wisdom score the way 3.5e druids do. This is part of the broader changes of 5e relative to 3.5e, but is well worth mentioning. Take care also to note the limiting factor that the 5e Concentration mechanic provides: since you can only concentrate on one spell at a time, your spells have to be chosen carefully with an eye towards making sure you have other useful spells to cast while maintaining concentration on one of them (5e Concentration does not require an action like it does in 3.5e).
Also, Druids no longer have the ability to spontaneously swap spells for summon nature’s ally spells—they have to prepare summoning spells if they want to cast them. The changes to 5e preparation mechanics makes this much less painful, however.
Wild Shape
The 5e Druid still has Wild Shape, and it’s fairly similar in terms of what it does, but the details vary significantly. In particular, you get it at 2nd level, but by default, you can only shape into fairly-weak creatures, and the ability does not scale very much as you level up. By 8th level, a base Druid is limited to CR-1 creatures, and you never get anything better than that, nor ever get any plant or elemental forms. As a result, by default, by high levels Druids are using Wild Shape mostly for scouting and stealth, not for combat. See the Circle of the Moon below, however, for the Druids that do get better Wild Shape.
The other thing about 5e Wild Shape is that it recovers after a “short rest,” which didn’t exist in 3.5e. That means that instead of spending 8 hours resting to get your wild shape uses per day back, you get your Wild Shape uses back after just 1 hour. Until 20th level, though, the 5e Druid gets fewer uses of it.
Natural Spell
This was a 3.5e feat, not a druid class feature, but it should still be mentioned since Natural Spell was nigh-mandatory for a druid’s 6th-level feat: 5e does not have such a feat. Instead, there is the Beast Spells feature at 18th level.
Subclasses
Numerous features of the 3.5e druid are not available to all Druids. Instead, Druids must join a Circle, and those features are offered to only those Druids who join the appropriate Circle.
Circle of the Land
Druids who join the Circle of the Land gain abilities similar to the woodland stride, trackless step, resist nature’s lure, and wild empathy abilities of the 3.5e druid. They also gain extra spell slots and bonus spells that they don’t have to prepare.
Circle of the Moon
Moon Druids gain powerful improvements to Wild Shape, making it more of the combat powerhouse that it was in 3.5e. They are also the only Druids to be able to Wild Shape into elemental forms.
The Circle of the Moon also offers an ability called Thousand Forms, which is the same as the 3.5e druid’s a thousand faces ability.
Other Circles
The Circles of the Land and the Moon were the two options in the 5e Player’s Handbook, but other Circles have been printed since then. These have features different from what the 3.5e druid got.
Timeless Body
Both 3.5e druids and 5e Druids get Timeless body, though the 5e version comes at a later level and makes the druid age slower, rather than eliminating penalties (which don’t really exist in 5e).
$endgroup$
First, make sure you’re familiar with all of the general differences between 3.5e and 5e, as all of that is going to apply to a druid as much as it applies to everyone else.
Animal Companion
The 5e Druid doesn’t get an animal companion, at all. That is the exclusive ability of a Beastmaster Ranger. You could take the Ritual Caster feat and cast find familiar, but familiars are a pretty poor replacement for the animal companion.
Spells
Like all 5e spellcasters, the 5e Druid is much more limited at high levels; they get very few high-level spell slots, and do not get more for having a high Wisdom score the way 3.5e druids do. This is part of the broader changes of 5e relative to 3.5e, but is well worth mentioning. Take care also to note the limiting factor that the 5e Concentration mechanic provides: since you can only concentrate on one spell at a time, your spells have to be chosen carefully with an eye towards making sure you have other useful spells to cast while maintaining concentration on one of them (5e Concentration does not require an action like it does in 3.5e).
Also, Druids no longer have the ability to spontaneously swap spells for summon nature’s ally spells—they have to prepare summoning spells if they want to cast them. The changes to 5e preparation mechanics makes this much less painful, however.
Wild Shape
The 5e Druid still has Wild Shape, and it’s fairly similar in terms of what it does, but the details vary significantly. In particular, you get it at 2nd level, but by default, you can only shape into fairly-weak creatures, and the ability does not scale very much as you level up. By 8th level, a base Druid is limited to CR-1 creatures, and you never get anything better than that, nor ever get any plant or elemental forms. As a result, by default, by high levels Druids are using Wild Shape mostly for scouting and stealth, not for combat. See the Circle of the Moon below, however, for the Druids that do get better Wild Shape.
The other thing about 5e Wild Shape is that it recovers after a “short rest,” which didn’t exist in 3.5e. That means that instead of spending 8 hours resting to get your wild shape uses per day back, you get your Wild Shape uses back after just 1 hour. Until 20th level, though, the 5e Druid gets fewer uses of it.
Natural Spell
This was a 3.5e feat, not a druid class feature, but it should still be mentioned since Natural Spell was nigh-mandatory for a druid’s 6th-level feat: 5e does not have such a feat. Instead, there is the Beast Spells feature at 18th level.
Subclasses
Numerous features of the 3.5e druid are not available to all Druids. Instead, Druids must join a Circle, and those features are offered to only those Druids who join the appropriate Circle.
Circle of the Land
Druids who join the Circle of the Land gain abilities similar to the woodland stride, trackless step, resist nature’s lure, and wild empathy abilities of the 3.5e druid. They also gain extra spell slots and bonus spells that they don’t have to prepare.
Circle of the Moon
Moon Druids gain powerful improvements to Wild Shape, making it more of the combat powerhouse that it was in 3.5e. They are also the only Druids to be able to Wild Shape into elemental forms.
The Circle of the Moon also offers an ability called Thousand Forms, which is the same as the 3.5e druid’s a thousand faces ability.
Other Circles
The Circles of the Land and the Moon were the two options in the 5e Player’s Handbook, but other Circles have been printed since then. These have features different from what the 3.5e druid got.
Timeless Body
Both 3.5e druids and 5e Druids get Timeless body, though the 5e version comes at a later level and makes the druid age slower, rather than eliminating penalties (which don’t really exist in 5e).
edited 13 hours ago
answered 14 hours ago
KRyanKRyan
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This is a really good answer but misses one point that makes Wild Shape significantly better in 5e. Your Wild Shape forms use an entirely separate hp pool in 5e and you revert at 0 rather than using your own hp.
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– linksassin
11 mins ago
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On the topic of animal companions, it might be worth mentioning that the closest they'll get without multiclassing/feats in 5e is one of the conjure spells. (Shepherd druids get a slight buff to these summons.)
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– V2Blast♦
6 mins ago
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On the animal companion point, it might be worth mentioning that they can still have animals as companions, just like anyone can, those animals just aren't class features. Also Animal Friendship, much like in 3e (not 3.5), means that Druids should probably always be encounted with at least one animal who is also a companion.
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– the dark wanderer
3 mins ago
add a comment |
$begingroup$
This is a really good answer but misses one point that makes Wild Shape significantly better in 5e. Your Wild Shape forms use an entirely separate hp pool in 5e and you revert at 0 rather than using your own hp.
$endgroup$
– linksassin
11 mins ago
$begingroup$
On the topic of animal companions, it might be worth mentioning that the closest they'll get without multiclassing/feats in 5e is one of the conjure spells. (Shepherd druids get a slight buff to these summons.)
$endgroup$
– V2Blast♦
6 mins ago
$begingroup$
On the animal companion point, it might be worth mentioning that they can still have animals as companions, just like anyone can, those animals just aren't class features. Also Animal Friendship, much like in 3e (not 3.5), means that Druids should probably always be encounted with at least one animal who is also a companion.
$endgroup$
– the dark wanderer
3 mins ago
$begingroup$
This is a really good answer but misses one point that makes Wild Shape significantly better in 5e. Your Wild Shape forms use an entirely separate hp pool in 5e and you revert at 0 rather than using your own hp.
$endgroup$
– linksassin
11 mins ago
$begingroup$
This is a really good answer but misses one point that makes Wild Shape significantly better in 5e. Your Wild Shape forms use an entirely separate hp pool in 5e and you revert at 0 rather than using your own hp.
$endgroup$
– linksassin
11 mins ago
$begingroup$
On the topic of animal companions, it might be worth mentioning that the closest they'll get without multiclassing/feats in 5e is one of the conjure spells. (Shepherd druids get a slight buff to these summons.)
$endgroup$
– V2Blast♦
6 mins ago
$begingroup$
On the topic of animal companions, it might be worth mentioning that the closest they'll get without multiclassing/feats in 5e is one of the conjure spells. (Shepherd druids get a slight buff to these summons.)
$endgroup$
– V2Blast♦
6 mins ago
$begingroup$
On the animal companion point, it might be worth mentioning that they can still have animals as companions, just like anyone can, those animals just aren't class features. Also Animal Friendship, much like in 3e (not 3.5), means that Druids should probably always be encounted with at least one animal who is also a companion.
$endgroup$
– the dark wanderer
3 mins ago
$begingroup$
On the animal companion point, it might be worth mentioning that they can still have animals as companions, just like anyone can, those animals just aren't class features. Also Animal Friendship, much like in 3e (not 3.5), means that Druids should probably always be encounted with at least one animal who is also a companion.
$endgroup$
– the dark wanderer
3 mins ago
add a comment |
Roger Mungo is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Roger Mungo is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Roger Mungo is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Roger Mungo is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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Roger, I went ahead and rolled back your edit to the question to your original text. I think the answer you have shows that this question is reasonable in scope. Voters are welcome to disagree, but let's give it a shot and see now that people can see what an answer might look like here. Sorry for the chaos, not every question is like this! And thanks for being patient. I hope we get you information that is useful to solving your problem :)
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– Rubiksmoose♦
13 hours ago
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Comments are not for extended discussion; discussion about the broadness of this question has been moved to chat.
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– Rubiksmoose♦
13 hours ago
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Welcome to RPG.SE! Take the tour if you haven't already, and check out the help center for more guidance.
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– V2Blast♦
5 mins ago