Fortress Armor (5e Equipment)

Fortress Armor

Heavy Armor
Cost Armor Class (AC) Strength Stealth Weight
2,000 gp19Str 17Disadvantage100 lb.

Fortress armor is exactly what it sounds like: an incredibly massive suit of armor that protects the wearer with it's sheer bulkiness. Unlike plate armor which seeks to protect the wearer by providing all-around coverage, fortress armor protects the wearer by placing a veritable bulwark of protection between the outside world and the wearer's vital organs. As a result, the armor is unwieldy and basically negates any chance of dexterous or stealthy movement while worn.

A knight clad in fortress armor detaches the built-in shield and attacks with a lance.
Gif of a knight from the Gameboy Fire Emblem Games (Copyright Nintendo)
Cumbersome

Donning fortress armor takes 30 minutes, and doffing it takes 10 minutes.

Inserted Shield

This armor comes with a specially built shield which is normally carried on the breastplate. As a bonus action, you can remove and carry this shield. While the shield is removed, the armor's AC is reduced to 17, but you gain the +2 bonus of carrying a shield if you are not otherwise carrying one.

While carrying this shield, you can place it back into the armor as a bonus action.

Unwieldy

While wearing this armor, you have disadvantage on initiative checks. While you are wearing this armor and the built-in shield is inserted, you have disadvantage on all other ability checks, attack rolls, and saving throws based on Dexterity.



Back to Main Page 5e Homebrew Equipment Armor

This page may resemble content endorsed by, sponsored by, and/or affiliated with the Fire Emblem franchise, and/or include content directly affiliated with and/or owned by Nintendo. D&D Wiki neither claims nor implies any rights to Fire Emblem copyrights, trademarks, or logos, nor any owned by Nintendo. This site is for non profit use only. Furthermore, the following content is a derivative work that falls under, and the use of which is protected by, the Fair Use designation of US Copyright and Trademark Law. We ask you to please add the {{needsadmin}} template if there is a violation to this disclaimer within this page.
gollark: Labelnet is more of a tech demo than anything practical. But I was going to use it for potatOS debugging.
gollark: Labels are 32 characters. Only 187 characters are allowed but with some finicky encoding this works out as ~30 bytes.
gollark: Computers can read the labels of networked computers.
gollark: This is between adjacent devices. For wireless just use modems.
gollark: You're just not thinking with insanity enough.
This article is issued from Dandwiki. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.