Can a College of Swords bard use a Blade Flourish option on an opportunity attack provoked by their own Dissonant Whispers spell?What does upper-case-A-Attack action vs. lower-case-a-attack mean?Can I trigger an Opportunity Attack by forcing an opponent to move out of my reach?Does the Warcaster feat grant ranged spell attacks in melee range without disadvantage?Can you chain Tempestuous magic and War Caster?Can a failed opportunity attack against a character protected by the sanctuary spell retarget someone else?Can blade flourish be used with ranged attacks?Blade Flourish: can we take Attack action when not in range of enemy?Does War Caster let you cast Green-Flame Blade instead of an attack of opportunity?Can you combine Polearm Master with War Caster to cast Booming Blade as enemies approach?Is Resistance/Vulnerability applied before or after Cutting Words?If you have the War Caster feat and cast Booming Blade as a reaction, does it count as an opportunity attack for the UA Blade Mastery feat?At what point in a creature's movement does an opportunity attack take place?

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Can a College of Swords bard use a Blade Flourish option on an opportunity attack provoked by their own Dissonant Whispers spell?


What does upper-case-A-Attack action vs. lower-case-a-attack mean?Can I trigger an Opportunity Attack by forcing an opponent to move out of my reach?Does the Warcaster feat grant ranged spell attacks in melee range without disadvantage?Can you chain Tempestuous magic and War Caster?Can a failed opportunity attack against a character protected by the sanctuary spell retarget someone else?Can blade flourish be used with ranged attacks?Blade Flourish: can we take Attack action when not in range of enemy?Does War Caster let you cast Green-Flame Blade instead of an attack of opportunity?Can you combine Polearm Master with War Caster to cast Booming Blade as enemies approach?Is Resistance/Vulnerability applied before or after Cutting Words?If you have the War Caster feat and cast Booming Blade as a reaction, does it count as an opportunity attack for the UA Blade Mastery feat?At what point in a creature's movement does an opportunity attack take place?






.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;








8












$begingroup$


Consider this scenario: a College of Swords bard uses dissonant whispers on a creature within 5 feet of him while he is holding a melee weapon. The creature fails the save and has to immediately use its reaction to move away. In my understanding, this movement provokes opportunity attacks. So:



  1. Would the caster also be entitled to an opportunity attack?

  2. If so, would he be able to augment his opportunity attack with a
    blade flourish?









share|improve this question











$endgroup$







  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Related: Can I trigger an Opportunity Attack by forcing an opponent to move out of my reach?
    $endgroup$
    – Rubiksmoose
    Mar 22 at 14:16

















8












$begingroup$


Consider this scenario: a College of Swords bard uses dissonant whispers on a creature within 5 feet of him while he is holding a melee weapon. The creature fails the save and has to immediately use its reaction to move away. In my understanding, this movement provokes opportunity attacks. So:



  1. Would the caster also be entitled to an opportunity attack?

  2. If so, would he be able to augment his opportunity attack with a
    blade flourish?









share|improve this question











$endgroup$







  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Related: Can I trigger an Opportunity Attack by forcing an opponent to move out of my reach?
    $endgroup$
    – Rubiksmoose
    Mar 22 at 14:16













8












8








8





$begingroup$


Consider this scenario: a College of Swords bard uses dissonant whispers on a creature within 5 feet of him while he is holding a melee weapon. The creature fails the save and has to immediately use its reaction to move away. In my understanding, this movement provokes opportunity attacks. So:



  1. Would the caster also be entitled to an opportunity attack?

  2. If so, would he be able to augment his opportunity attack with a
    blade flourish?









share|improve this question











$endgroup$




Consider this scenario: a College of Swords bard uses dissonant whispers on a creature within 5 feet of him while he is holding a melee weapon. The creature fails the save and has to immediately use its reaction to move away. In my understanding, this movement provokes opportunity attacks. So:



  1. Would the caster also be entitled to an opportunity attack?

  2. If so, would he be able to augment his opportunity attack with a
    blade flourish?






dnd-5e spells class-feature opportunity-attack bard






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Mar 22 at 23:56









V2Blast

28.7k5103174




28.7k5103174










asked Mar 22 at 13:42









Johnny RumJohnny Rum

2139




2139







  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Related: Can I trigger an Opportunity Attack by forcing an opponent to move out of my reach?
    $endgroup$
    – Rubiksmoose
    Mar 22 at 14:16












  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Related: Can I trigger an Opportunity Attack by forcing an opponent to move out of my reach?
    $endgroup$
    – Rubiksmoose
    Mar 22 at 14:16







1




1




$begingroup$
Related: Can I trigger an Opportunity Attack by forcing an opponent to move out of my reach?
$endgroup$
– Rubiksmoose
Mar 22 at 14:16




$begingroup$
Related: Can I trigger an Opportunity Attack by forcing an opponent to move out of my reach?
$endgroup$
– Rubiksmoose
Mar 22 at 14:16










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

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16












$begingroup$

Two questions here really, but:



1) Yes.



Even though opportunity attacks do not occur for forced movement, the rule for this actually says:




You do not provoke an opportunity attack when you teleport or when
something moves you without using your movement, action or reaction.




Dissonant Whispers however is a bit of an oddball, as it forces the target to: "use its reaction, if available, to move".



So the target is using its own reaction to move and is thus eligible for opportunity attacks.



2) No



You use a blade flourish on your turn as part of the Attack action. An opportunity provides you with an attack (lower-case 'a'), but it is not your Attack action (upper-case 'A').






share|improve this answer









$endgroup$








  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Support for first part in this sage advice
    $endgroup$
    – Sdjz
    Mar 22 at 13:57










  • $begingroup$
    Are the rules consistent about capitalizing "Attack" when it is the action as opposed to any old swing of a sword? I have said this myself and seen it said too but am actually unsure.
    $endgroup$
    – Captain Man
    Mar 22 at 15:40










  • $begingroup$
    @CaptainMan See What does upper-case-A-Attack action vs. lower-case-a-attack mean? for more information on those questions. (tl;dr, yes they are consistent)
    $endgroup$
    – Rubiksmoose
    Mar 22 at 15:46











  • $begingroup$
    @Captain Man. They do seem consistent here. E.g, The basic rules of "Actions in Combat" (PHB, pg192) says "The most common action to take in combat is the Attack action, ...<snip>. With this action you make one melee or ranged attack...."
    $endgroup$
    – PJRZ
    Mar 22 at 15:46







  • 2




    $begingroup$
    @CaptainMan The rules generally use the phrase "the Attack action" when that's what's meant. For example, a 5th-level fighter's Extra Attack applies "whenever you take the Attack action on your turn". The capitalization is less reliable.
    $endgroup$
    – Mark Wells
    Mar 22 at 15:53


















11












$begingroup$

1. Yes, the caster gets an Opportunity Attack



Since the creature is using its reaction to move away, that movement provokes an Opportunity Attack from an creature whose reach it leaves.




You do not provoke an opportunity attack when you teleport or when
something moves you without using your movement, action or reaction.




In case there was any doubt, Crawford has unofficially supported this ruling in a tweet.



If it leaves the caster's then they provoke from them as well and they can use a reaction to take the attack against them.



You can see Can I trigger an Opportunity Attack by forcing an opponent to move out of my reach? for more examples and discussion about forced movement provoking OAs.



2. No, you cannot use Blade flourish on the Opportunity Attack



Blade Flourish (XGtE, p. 15) only works when you take the Attack action:




Whenever you take the Attack action on your turn [...]




The bard did not take the Attack action this round, they took the Cast a Spell action instead. An opportunity attack is an attack, but it is made outside of an Attack action, so it will not trigger the Blade Flourish ability.



See What does upper-case-A-Attack action vs. lower-case-a-attack mean? for more information on the distinction between the two.






share|improve this answer











$endgroup$




















    6












    $begingroup$

    Two parter...



    1. Yes, you get an Opportunity Attack



    Assuming you have not already used your Reaction in this round. Normally, you do not when a creature is forced to move (via shove, thunderer wave, force wave, etx.), but Dissonant Whispers is different in that the movement is by the creature's Reaction; mandatory, but under the creature's control.



    2. No, you didn't use an Attack action for your turn.



    Per the feature, "Whenever you take the Attack action on your turn..." You did not take the Attack (big A) action this turn, you took the "Cast a spell" action this turn so Blade Flourish doesn't come into play.






    share|improve this answer









    $endgroup$













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      3 Answers
      3






      active

      oldest

      votes








      3 Answers
      3






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      16












      $begingroup$

      Two questions here really, but:



      1) Yes.



      Even though opportunity attacks do not occur for forced movement, the rule for this actually says:




      You do not provoke an opportunity attack when you teleport or when
      something moves you without using your movement, action or reaction.




      Dissonant Whispers however is a bit of an oddball, as it forces the target to: "use its reaction, if available, to move".



      So the target is using its own reaction to move and is thus eligible for opportunity attacks.



      2) No



      You use a blade flourish on your turn as part of the Attack action. An opportunity provides you with an attack (lower-case 'a'), but it is not your Attack action (upper-case 'A').






      share|improve this answer









      $endgroup$








      • 1




        $begingroup$
        Support for first part in this sage advice
        $endgroup$
        – Sdjz
        Mar 22 at 13:57










      • $begingroup$
        Are the rules consistent about capitalizing "Attack" when it is the action as opposed to any old swing of a sword? I have said this myself and seen it said too but am actually unsure.
        $endgroup$
        – Captain Man
        Mar 22 at 15:40










      • $begingroup$
        @CaptainMan See What does upper-case-A-Attack action vs. lower-case-a-attack mean? for more information on those questions. (tl;dr, yes they are consistent)
        $endgroup$
        – Rubiksmoose
        Mar 22 at 15:46











      • $begingroup$
        @Captain Man. They do seem consistent here. E.g, The basic rules of "Actions in Combat" (PHB, pg192) says "The most common action to take in combat is the Attack action, ...<snip>. With this action you make one melee or ranged attack...."
        $endgroup$
        – PJRZ
        Mar 22 at 15:46







      • 2




        $begingroup$
        @CaptainMan The rules generally use the phrase "the Attack action" when that's what's meant. For example, a 5th-level fighter's Extra Attack applies "whenever you take the Attack action on your turn". The capitalization is less reliable.
        $endgroup$
        – Mark Wells
        Mar 22 at 15:53















      16












      $begingroup$

      Two questions here really, but:



      1) Yes.



      Even though opportunity attacks do not occur for forced movement, the rule for this actually says:




      You do not provoke an opportunity attack when you teleport or when
      something moves you without using your movement, action or reaction.




      Dissonant Whispers however is a bit of an oddball, as it forces the target to: "use its reaction, if available, to move".



      So the target is using its own reaction to move and is thus eligible for opportunity attacks.



      2) No



      You use a blade flourish on your turn as part of the Attack action. An opportunity provides you with an attack (lower-case 'a'), but it is not your Attack action (upper-case 'A').






      share|improve this answer









      $endgroup$








      • 1




        $begingroup$
        Support for first part in this sage advice
        $endgroup$
        – Sdjz
        Mar 22 at 13:57










      • $begingroup$
        Are the rules consistent about capitalizing "Attack" when it is the action as opposed to any old swing of a sword? I have said this myself and seen it said too but am actually unsure.
        $endgroup$
        – Captain Man
        Mar 22 at 15:40










      • $begingroup$
        @CaptainMan See What does upper-case-A-Attack action vs. lower-case-a-attack mean? for more information on those questions. (tl;dr, yes they are consistent)
        $endgroup$
        – Rubiksmoose
        Mar 22 at 15:46











      • $begingroup$
        @Captain Man. They do seem consistent here. E.g, The basic rules of "Actions in Combat" (PHB, pg192) says "The most common action to take in combat is the Attack action, ...<snip>. With this action you make one melee or ranged attack...."
        $endgroup$
        – PJRZ
        Mar 22 at 15:46







      • 2




        $begingroup$
        @CaptainMan The rules generally use the phrase "the Attack action" when that's what's meant. For example, a 5th-level fighter's Extra Attack applies "whenever you take the Attack action on your turn". The capitalization is less reliable.
        $endgroup$
        – Mark Wells
        Mar 22 at 15:53













      16












      16








      16





      $begingroup$

      Two questions here really, but:



      1) Yes.



      Even though opportunity attacks do not occur for forced movement, the rule for this actually says:




      You do not provoke an opportunity attack when you teleport or when
      something moves you without using your movement, action or reaction.




      Dissonant Whispers however is a bit of an oddball, as it forces the target to: "use its reaction, if available, to move".



      So the target is using its own reaction to move and is thus eligible for opportunity attacks.



      2) No



      You use a blade flourish on your turn as part of the Attack action. An opportunity provides you with an attack (lower-case 'a'), but it is not your Attack action (upper-case 'A').






      share|improve this answer









      $endgroup$



      Two questions here really, but:



      1) Yes.



      Even though opportunity attacks do not occur for forced movement, the rule for this actually says:




      You do not provoke an opportunity attack when you teleport or when
      something moves you without using your movement, action or reaction.




      Dissonant Whispers however is a bit of an oddball, as it forces the target to: "use its reaction, if available, to move".



      So the target is using its own reaction to move and is thus eligible for opportunity attacks.



      2) No



      You use a blade flourish on your turn as part of the Attack action. An opportunity provides you with an attack (lower-case 'a'), but it is not your Attack action (upper-case 'A').







      share|improve this answer












      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer










      answered Mar 22 at 13:56









      PJRZPJRZ

      13.1k14061




      13.1k14061







      • 1




        $begingroup$
        Support for first part in this sage advice
        $endgroup$
        – Sdjz
        Mar 22 at 13:57










      • $begingroup$
        Are the rules consistent about capitalizing "Attack" when it is the action as opposed to any old swing of a sword? I have said this myself and seen it said too but am actually unsure.
        $endgroup$
        – Captain Man
        Mar 22 at 15:40










      • $begingroup$
        @CaptainMan See What does upper-case-A-Attack action vs. lower-case-a-attack mean? for more information on those questions. (tl;dr, yes they are consistent)
        $endgroup$
        – Rubiksmoose
        Mar 22 at 15:46











      • $begingroup$
        @Captain Man. They do seem consistent here. E.g, The basic rules of "Actions in Combat" (PHB, pg192) says "The most common action to take in combat is the Attack action, ...<snip>. With this action you make one melee or ranged attack...."
        $endgroup$
        – PJRZ
        Mar 22 at 15:46







      • 2




        $begingroup$
        @CaptainMan The rules generally use the phrase "the Attack action" when that's what's meant. For example, a 5th-level fighter's Extra Attack applies "whenever you take the Attack action on your turn". The capitalization is less reliable.
        $endgroup$
        – Mark Wells
        Mar 22 at 15:53












      • 1




        $begingroup$
        Support for first part in this sage advice
        $endgroup$
        – Sdjz
        Mar 22 at 13:57










      • $begingroup$
        Are the rules consistent about capitalizing "Attack" when it is the action as opposed to any old swing of a sword? I have said this myself and seen it said too but am actually unsure.
        $endgroup$
        – Captain Man
        Mar 22 at 15:40










      • $begingroup$
        @CaptainMan See What does upper-case-A-Attack action vs. lower-case-a-attack mean? for more information on those questions. (tl;dr, yes they are consistent)
        $endgroup$
        – Rubiksmoose
        Mar 22 at 15:46











      • $begingroup$
        @Captain Man. They do seem consistent here. E.g, The basic rules of "Actions in Combat" (PHB, pg192) says "The most common action to take in combat is the Attack action, ...<snip>. With this action you make one melee or ranged attack...."
        $endgroup$
        – PJRZ
        Mar 22 at 15:46







      • 2




        $begingroup$
        @CaptainMan The rules generally use the phrase "the Attack action" when that's what's meant. For example, a 5th-level fighter's Extra Attack applies "whenever you take the Attack action on your turn". The capitalization is less reliable.
        $endgroup$
        – Mark Wells
        Mar 22 at 15:53







      1




      1




      $begingroup$
      Support for first part in this sage advice
      $endgroup$
      – Sdjz
      Mar 22 at 13:57




      $begingroup$
      Support for first part in this sage advice
      $endgroup$
      – Sdjz
      Mar 22 at 13:57












      $begingroup$
      Are the rules consistent about capitalizing "Attack" when it is the action as opposed to any old swing of a sword? I have said this myself and seen it said too but am actually unsure.
      $endgroup$
      – Captain Man
      Mar 22 at 15:40




      $begingroup$
      Are the rules consistent about capitalizing "Attack" when it is the action as opposed to any old swing of a sword? I have said this myself and seen it said too but am actually unsure.
      $endgroup$
      – Captain Man
      Mar 22 at 15:40












      $begingroup$
      @CaptainMan See What does upper-case-A-Attack action vs. lower-case-a-attack mean? for more information on those questions. (tl;dr, yes they are consistent)
      $endgroup$
      – Rubiksmoose
      Mar 22 at 15:46





      $begingroup$
      @CaptainMan See What does upper-case-A-Attack action vs. lower-case-a-attack mean? for more information on those questions. (tl;dr, yes they are consistent)
      $endgroup$
      – Rubiksmoose
      Mar 22 at 15:46













      $begingroup$
      @Captain Man. They do seem consistent here. E.g, The basic rules of "Actions in Combat" (PHB, pg192) says "The most common action to take in combat is the Attack action, ...<snip>. With this action you make one melee or ranged attack...."
      $endgroup$
      – PJRZ
      Mar 22 at 15:46





      $begingroup$
      @Captain Man. They do seem consistent here. E.g, The basic rules of "Actions in Combat" (PHB, pg192) says "The most common action to take in combat is the Attack action, ...<snip>. With this action you make one melee or ranged attack...."
      $endgroup$
      – PJRZ
      Mar 22 at 15:46





      2




      2




      $begingroup$
      @CaptainMan The rules generally use the phrase "the Attack action" when that's what's meant. For example, a 5th-level fighter's Extra Attack applies "whenever you take the Attack action on your turn". The capitalization is less reliable.
      $endgroup$
      – Mark Wells
      Mar 22 at 15:53




      $begingroup$
      @CaptainMan The rules generally use the phrase "the Attack action" when that's what's meant. For example, a 5th-level fighter's Extra Attack applies "whenever you take the Attack action on your turn". The capitalization is less reliable.
      $endgroup$
      – Mark Wells
      Mar 22 at 15:53













      11












      $begingroup$

      1. Yes, the caster gets an Opportunity Attack



      Since the creature is using its reaction to move away, that movement provokes an Opportunity Attack from an creature whose reach it leaves.




      You do not provoke an opportunity attack when you teleport or when
      something moves you without using your movement, action or reaction.




      In case there was any doubt, Crawford has unofficially supported this ruling in a tweet.



      If it leaves the caster's then they provoke from them as well and they can use a reaction to take the attack against them.



      You can see Can I trigger an Opportunity Attack by forcing an opponent to move out of my reach? for more examples and discussion about forced movement provoking OAs.



      2. No, you cannot use Blade flourish on the Opportunity Attack



      Blade Flourish (XGtE, p. 15) only works when you take the Attack action:




      Whenever you take the Attack action on your turn [...]




      The bard did not take the Attack action this round, they took the Cast a Spell action instead. An opportunity attack is an attack, but it is made outside of an Attack action, so it will not trigger the Blade Flourish ability.



      See What does upper-case-A-Attack action vs. lower-case-a-attack mean? for more information on the distinction between the two.






      share|improve this answer











      $endgroup$

















        11












        $begingroup$

        1. Yes, the caster gets an Opportunity Attack



        Since the creature is using its reaction to move away, that movement provokes an Opportunity Attack from an creature whose reach it leaves.




        You do not provoke an opportunity attack when you teleport or when
        something moves you without using your movement, action or reaction.




        In case there was any doubt, Crawford has unofficially supported this ruling in a tweet.



        If it leaves the caster's then they provoke from them as well and they can use a reaction to take the attack against them.



        You can see Can I trigger an Opportunity Attack by forcing an opponent to move out of my reach? for more examples and discussion about forced movement provoking OAs.



        2. No, you cannot use Blade flourish on the Opportunity Attack



        Blade Flourish (XGtE, p. 15) only works when you take the Attack action:




        Whenever you take the Attack action on your turn [...]




        The bard did not take the Attack action this round, they took the Cast a Spell action instead. An opportunity attack is an attack, but it is made outside of an Attack action, so it will not trigger the Blade Flourish ability.



        See What does upper-case-A-Attack action vs. lower-case-a-attack mean? for more information on the distinction between the two.






        share|improve this answer











        $endgroup$















          11












          11








          11





          $begingroup$

          1. Yes, the caster gets an Opportunity Attack



          Since the creature is using its reaction to move away, that movement provokes an Opportunity Attack from an creature whose reach it leaves.




          You do not provoke an opportunity attack when you teleport or when
          something moves you without using your movement, action or reaction.




          In case there was any doubt, Crawford has unofficially supported this ruling in a tweet.



          If it leaves the caster's then they provoke from them as well and they can use a reaction to take the attack against them.



          You can see Can I trigger an Opportunity Attack by forcing an opponent to move out of my reach? for more examples and discussion about forced movement provoking OAs.



          2. No, you cannot use Blade flourish on the Opportunity Attack



          Blade Flourish (XGtE, p. 15) only works when you take the Attack action:




          Whenever you take the Attack action on your turn [...]




          The bard did not take the Attack action this round, they took the Cast a Spell action instead. An opportunity attack is an attack, but it is made outside of an Attack action, so it will not trigger the Blade Flourish ability.



          See What does upper-case-A-Attack action vs. lower-case-a-attack mean? for more information on the distinction between the two.






          share|improve this answer











          $endgroup$



          1. Yes, the caster gets an Opportunity Attack



          Since the creature is using its reaction to move away, that movement provokes an Opportunity Attack from an creature whose reach it leaves.




          You do not provoke an opportunity attack when you teleport or when
          something moves you without using your movement, action or reaction.




          In case there was any doubt, Crawford has unofficially supported this ruling in a tweet.



          If it leaves the caster's then they provoke from them as well and they can use a reaction to take the attack against them.



          You can see Can I trigger an Opportunity Attack by forcing an opponent to move out of my reach? for more examples and discussion about forced movement provoking OAs.



          2. No, you cannot use Blade flourish on the Opportunity Attack



          Blade Flourish (XGtE, p. 15) only works when you take the Attack action:




          Whenever you take the Attack action on your turn [...]




          The bard did not take the Attack action this round, they took the Cast a Spell action instead. An opportunity attack is an attack, but it is made outside of an Attack action, so it will not trigger the Blade Flourish ability.



          See What does upper-case-A-Attack action vs. lower-case-a-attack mean? for more information on the distinction between the two.







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          edited Mar 22 at 23:58









          V2Blast

          28.7k5103174




          28.7k5103174










          answered Mar 22 at 14:00









          RubiksmooseRubiksmoose

          63.7k10306466




          63.7k10306466





















              6












              $begingroup$

              Two parter...



              1. Yes, you get an Opportunity Attack



              Assuming you have not already used your Reaction in this round. Normally, you do not when a creature is forced to move (via shove, thunderer wave, force wave, etx.), but Dissonant Whispers is different in that the movement is by the creature's Reaction; mandatory, but under the creature's control.



              2. No, you didn't use an Attack action for your turn.



              Per the feature, "Whenever you take the Attack action on your turn..." You did not take the Attack (big A) action this turn, you took the "Cast a spell" action this turn so Blade Flourish doesn't come into play.






              share|improve this answer









              $endgroup$

















                6












                $begingroup$

                Two parter...



                1. Yes, you get an Opportunity Attack



                Assuming you have not already used your Reaction in this round. Normally, you do not when a creature is forced to move (via shove, thunderer wave, force wave, etx.), but Dissonant Whispers is different in that the movement is by the creature's Reaction; mandatory, but under the creature's control.



                2. No, you didn't use an Attack action for your turn.



                Per the feature, "Whenever you take the Attack action on your turn..." You did not take the Attack (big A) action this turn, you took the "Cast a spell" action this turn so Blade Flourish doesn't come into play.






                share|improve this answer









                $endgroup$















                  6












                  6








                  6





                  $begingroup$

                  Two parter...



                  1. Yes, you get an Opportunity Attack



                  Assuming you have not already used your Reaction in this round. Normally, you do not when a creature is forced to move (via shove, thunderer wave, force wave, etx.), but Dissonant Whispers is different in that the movement is by the creature's Reaction; mandatory, but under the creature's control.



                  2. No, you didn't use an Attack action for your turn.



                  Per the feature, "Whenever you take the Attack action on your turn..." You did not take the Attack (big A) action this turn, you took the "Cast a spell" action this turn so Blade Flourish doesn't come into play.






                  share|improve this answer









                  $endgroup$



                  Two parter...



                  1. Yes, you get an Opportunity Attack



                  Assuming you have not already used your Reaction in this round. Normally, you do not when a creature is forced to move (via shove, thunderer wave, force wave, etx.), but Dissonant Whispers is different in that the movement is by the creature's Reaction; mandatory, but under the creature's control.



                  2. No, you didn't use an Attack action for your turn.



                  Per the feature, "Whenever you take the Attack action on your turn..." You did not take the Attack (big A) action this turn, you took the "Cast a spell" action this turn so Blade Flourish doesn't come into play.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered Mar 22 at 14:05









                  MivaScottMivaScott

                  7,30711749




                  7,30711749



























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