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[[File:Scout.jpg|500px|thumb|right|Your average Scout, busy doing Scout things. Notice her remarkable inability to take the slightest of hits by being able to graciously stand on common bush]] The '''Scout''' (not to be confused with the [[Scout]]s of the [[Space Marine]]s) is a class from [[Dungeons and Dragons]] that is something of a mix between the [[Ranger]]'s archery and the [[Rogue]]'s sneakiness. While most would consider a Scout type class to be rather pointless given that its basic themes can already be handled reasonably well by the [[Ranger]] and the [[Rogue]], [[Dungeons & Dragons]] has never been shy about putting the spurs to a horse no matter how tired it is, and so there's been a few encounters with in over the editions. ==1e== In 1st edition , [[Advanced Dungeons & Dragons]], the Scout appeared as a character class on [[Dragon Magazine]] #161 (sept/1990) on the "Scouting for New Options" article by Kim Eastland. Basically a thief without pick pockets, backstabbing, set trap or read languages but with the thief-acrobat tight-rope walking and tumbling & falling plus the barbarian back protection and an exclusive illusion detection ability. ==2e== In 2nd edition, [[Advanced Dungeons & Dragons]], the Scout appeared as one of the [[Kits]] in the Complete Thieves' Handbook, and was literally nothing more than a "wilderness rogue"; a rogue who gained a boost to mobility-related thieving skills in wilderness environments, and had a better chance of launching ambushes, but who suffered a penalty to all their thieving skills in urban environments. ==3.5e== In 3rd edition the Scout was designed around moving fast while shooting at the enemy with deadly aim. It was a complete class in its own right released in the Complete Adventurer, alongside the [[Ninja]] and the [[Spellthief]]. Think of them as 60% [[Rogue]], 30% [[Ranger]], and filled out with equal parts [[Druid]], [[Barbarian]] and [[Monk]]. Though they only have 15/10/5 BAB, one good save (REF), a limited [[D8]] HD and not too wide a weapon selection, they possess a staggering 8+[[INT]] skills and can be used as competent melee fighters as well. The Scout's main class feature is Skirmish: if they move at least 10ft they get a bonus to both their AC and get an extra [[d6]] Precision Damage. These abilities grow as the character levels up: every odd numbered level the damage or the AC go up by 1, taking turns until they max out at 5d6 and +5 AC at level 19. This makes moving around very important in order to deal lots of damage. Remember: the more damage you deal, the quicker a fight will be over and the less damage will be dealt to you. Note that Skirmish is not limited to ranged attacks and that your melee attacks also get the bonus if you can close the distance. The fun thing about Skirmish is that while it deals precision damage (and as such can only be triggered once on a creature per turn), it is not limited by on how many creatures per turn it can be used. Take Greater Manyshot and with a good roll you can deal your precision damage against multiple enemies in one shot. The Scout also gets a large number of class features pilfered from a variety of core classes: Trapfinding, Battle Fortitude, Uncanny Dodge, Fast Movement, Trackless Step, Evasion, Flawless Stride, Camouflage, Blindesense (Blindsight at 20) and Hide In Plain Sight. They also get a permanent Free Movement effect at level 18 and get a bonus feat (from a limited list) every 4 levels. What should be noted is that many of the Scout's class features are limited by their encumbrance: if they hit a medium load they immediately lose a good chunk of them including the excellent Skirmish. Various races can play an effective Scout: [[Human]]s work as always, as do [[Elf|Elves]]. [[Halfling]]s can pull it off too: while their smaller weapons deal less damage, Skirmish does not scale to size and manages to deal enough damage to make up for the lost damage. The [[Xeph]] from the Expanded Psionics Handbook make for an interesting addition as well: they get a bonus to DEX, have a racial ability that speeds them up even more (allowing for 80' movement per turn at level 12 in combination with Fast Movement) and they are psionic to allow for things like Speed of Thought and Up the Walls. [[Warforged#Scout|Warforged Scout]] is probably the funniest race to combine with this class, because then you're a "Warforged Scout Scout". This also combines extremely well with the Mithral Body racial feat, which provides most of the benefits of medium armor while only counting as light armor and therefore permitting the use of scout abilities. Scouts have a notable list of [[skills]] taken from a mix of the Ranger and Rogue lists: they have plenty of stealth and nature skills alongside movement skills and a few odd ones like Sense Motive (perfect for spying) and Disable Device (added via Errata: note that a Scout cannot disable magical traps). Hide, Move Silently, Tumble are the most important ones: Disable Device, Spot, Listen and Search make for good others. Investing in Use Magic Device as a cross-class skill is very useful: not only does it allow interaction with magical items it also allows for using the Sparring Dummy of the Master to turn the Scout's 5' step into a 10' step, making it even easier to trigger Skirmish. When dealing with magic items, things that increase your Dexterity take the priority, followed by things that increase your mobility, items that allow you to deal more damage, items that increase your skills like Hide and Move Silently and items that protect you against magic. While you can take the class for a full 20 levels, there is a sweet multiclass feat with [[Ranger]] called Swift Hunter that makes a pretty neat build. Its big draw is that you will always apply Skirmish damage to Favored Enemies, so pick undead and/or construct to slap them with that delicious bonus damage. Like the Rogue it's largely based on, Scout is a [[Tier System|Tier 4]] class. It's capable of doing a broad number of things, but none particularly spectacularly and it suffers from how some of the most common monsters are immune to their main class feature. As a multi-class build, even though it's officially supported, Swift Hunter isn't really considered for tiering often. Working out a way to move and full attack consistently would give it the spectacular in a single area part needed of a tier 3 via very solid damage, but it would still be pretty low in power there. ==Pathfinder== [[Pathfinder]] made them a rogue archetype, with the ability to always trigger sneak attack on a charge replacing Uncanny Dodge and the ability to always trigger sneak attack if they move more than 10 feet replacing improved uncanny dodge. Essentially, this means that the AC bonus is gone, but the scout now gets full Sneak Attack progression, but can't make Sneak Attacks at once. {{D&D3-Classes}} {{Pathfinder-Classes}} ==Pathfinder 2nd== A mix of Ranger and Rouge. An archetype that any class can take. Helpful when moving on the map and prevent ambushes, while you can jump out of the bushes to distract the enemy then vanish back into them. [[List of Archetypes in Pathfinder Second Edition#Acrobat|see more]] {{Pathfinder-2nd-Edition-Archetypes}} ==4e== {{dnd-stub}} The 4e Scout is one of the two Essentials [[Variant Class]]es for the [[Ranger]], introduced in "Heroes of the Forgotten Kingdoms" as a "simplified" take on the [[Ranger]], built entirely from the Two-Weapon Fighting archetype/subclass of the ranger. Its counterpart was the Archery-based [[Hunter (D&D)|Hunter]]. Ironically, many would argue that as the 4e Ranger was built by entirely discarding the magical aspects of the class and instead focusing on its themes as a lightly armored skirmishing warrior focused on mobility, overwhelming offense in melee and ranged combat, the 4e ranger was ''already'' more of a Scout than a Ranger, but hey, the distinction between the two has always been pretty arbitrary! Like all of the "core Essentials" Classes, the Essentials Scout relies heavily on class features that accumulate as it levels up, instead of the 1st level array of features supplemented by modular powers of the [[AEDU System]] classes. These are most heavily loaded at 1st level, of course: * Two Weapon Style: Pick either Flashing Blade Mastery (+1 to attack rolls when off-handing a Light Blade) or Spinning Axe Mastery (+2 to damage rolls when off-handing an Axe). * Dual Weapon Attack: At-Will Attack power; when you hit with a basic melee attack, you can make a second basic melee attack with your off-hand as a Free Action. * Attack Finess: Melee Basic Attacks can use Dexterity modifier instead of Strength modifier for attack & damage rolls. * Power Strike: Encounter Attack power; boost the damage of a melee basic attack by +1[W] damage per tier. * Aspects of the Wild: Pick two at-will utility powers that grant access to useful combat stances named after various animals; Cunning Fox, Charging Ram, Dancing Serpent, Hungry Shark, Lurking Spider, Pack Wolf, Regal Lion, Soaring Hawk. * Wilderness Knacks: You gain two class features from a list of five that basically bring back old ranger "fluffy" class abilities; AMbush Expert, Beast Empathy, Mountain Guide, Watchful Rest, Wilderness Tracker. You'll pick up new Aspects of the Wild and Wilderness Knacks as you level up. You'll also get to take Scout/Ranger utility powers as you level, which compensates somewhat for the total lack of attac powers. This is the bulk of your character progression, but you do get a few other new abilities and tricks too... Level 5 gives you the bonus Encounter utility power "Reactive Shift", which... well, you can probably guess wht it does from the name - if an enemy ends their turn adjacent to you, then you can shift Wisdom modifier ssquares as an immediate reaction. Level 9 gives you Improved Dual Weapon Attack, which grants you +2 damage with Dual Weapon Attack. This further improves to +4 damage with level 15's Paragon Dual Weapon Attack. You also get a new bonus for your Two Weapon Style feature at level 15; if you picked Spinning Axe, then you get Eagle's Axe (+3 damage with Power Strike), whilst Flashing Blade gies you Serpent's Blade (can shift 3 squares after using Power Strike). To gain either style's benefit, you '''have''' to be wielding the signature weapon of that style in your off hand. It finally increases to +6 damage with level 25's Epic Dual Weapon Attack. Level 13's Improved Power Strike lets you use Power Strike twice per Encounter. Level 19's Cautious Shift lefts you shift 1 square as a free action before or after either using your second wind or taking the total defense action. Level 23's Peerless Perception lets them roll twice and pick their result when making Perception checks. {{D&D4-Classes}} ==5e== In 5e the Scout resurfaced as a new [[Fighter]] subclass, in the Unearthed Arcana article "Classics Revisited/Kits of Old", in which it was essentially a beefier, non-magic-using take on the Ranger. This incensed many Ranger fans since even with its comparative limitations, it was ''still'' a lot better at being a ranger than the actual ranger class. Post-Ranger rework, the scout was ''again'' released as a rogue archetype, that gets the ability to run away as a reaction if an enemy closes in, free proficiency *and* expertise in the Nature and Survival skills, a lot of extra speed, the ability to support your team while ambushing an enemy, and, at level 17, the ability to make an extra attack on a second target as a bonus action. '''With Sneak Attack.''' {{D&D5-Classes}}
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