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Given the U.K. is going back into lockdown, I wondered if you could do solo adventures. Cats are my favourite animals, and a lot of my own characters (I’m a professional artist) are cat like creatures. A cat like wizard just really appealed to me! So, basically, a cat like human, around 5 feet tall, not a domestic cat.
"Cat Lord" is a well-worn trope in D&D, having appeared in some form in short stories (a group of them appear), novels, the 1st Edition Monster Manual II (the original, a male), Planescape (the second, a female), the Epic Level Handbook (a 37th-level shapeshifting rogue, male) and elsewhere on and off.
These chimeric animals are only found in the ruins of Ythryn. Ythryn is a location featured in the final chapter of the adventure Icewind Dale: Rime of the Frostmaiden. It was a Netherese flying city which had a big magical accident and fell out of the sky and into the glacier a couple thousand years ago. While exploring the ruins of the city ...
A familiar can take any action that it is capable of other than the Attack action. This includes the Cast A Spell action, Dash, Disengage, Dodge, Help, Hide, Ready, Search, and Use an Object. Since familiars are monsters, they can also take any non-Attack action included in their statblock. For example, the octopus has an ink cloud ability.
But if we discard the resistances and the hybrid form, make the human form conform to a human of equivalent level as your PC, and have its shapingchanging ability access your true cat form, with an appropriate stat block for a cat rather than a tiger, that seems about right. As written, weretiger PCs have a minimum Str of 17 - we could make ...
The more typical answer to the desire to play as a cat is to use the tibbit race from Dragon Compendium. These shapeshifters can take on the form of a housecat, and are an LA +0 race (i.e. in line with the regular races). In their regular form, they are Small, have −2 Strength but +2 Dexterity, and Darkvision out to 60 ft.
There's a Tumblr community called "DnD 5e Homebrew" that has some home-brew classes/races inspired by popular fiction. One such race is the Kitsune: If you follow the link, you'll find a three page playable race description, stylized to match official WotC 5th edition D&D literature, for the Kitsune. As far as I could tell, it matches the folklore.
41. Catnap is a shorter short rest. If a target remain unconscious for [ten minutes], that target gets the benefit of a short rest ... This is supposed to be a helpful spell not an offensive one. You use it on allies to give them the benefit of a short rest (which normally takes at least an hour) in only 10 minutes.
In D&D 5e, the rules allow your character to (attempt to) do anything you want. The chapter of the Players Handbook that covers combat lists a number of actions you can perform in combat. It then says that you can Improvise an Action, attempting to accomplish anything that you can think of that's not covered by the other actions listed (or ...
It says in the summoning spell that when you summon an animal it is a fey fiend or celestial (your choice). What does this do? Do they get any abilities or buffs from these like types?