Firearms (5e Variant Rule)

A collection of variant rules useful for modern and futuristic firearms.

Armor Piercing

Armor Piercing

Attacks with weapons or ammunition with the armor piercing trait are quite effective against armor, by either burning straight through it or passing through unsealed areas.

  • Armor Piercing (-1). Targets with natural armor or worn armor and an AC of 14 or better take a -1 penalty to AC.
  • Armor Piercing (-2). Targets with natural armor or worn armor and an AC of 16 or better take a -2 penalty to AC, in addition to the benefits of armor piercing (-1).
  • Armor Piercing (-3). Targets with natural armor or worn armor and an AC of 18 or better take a -3 penalty to AC, in addition to the benefits of armor piercing (-1) and (-2).
  • Armor Piercing (-4). Targets with natural armor or worn armor and an AC of 20 or better take a -4 penalty to AC, in addition to the benefits of armor piercing (-1), (-2), and (-3).
  • Armor Piercing (-5). Targets with natural armor or worn armor and an AC of 22 or better take a -5 penalty to AC, in addition to the benefits of armor piercing (-1), (-2), (-3), and (-4).

The AC penalties do not stack together.

Burst Fire Nonproficiency

The DC of Dexterity saving throws made against firearms using burst fire (DMG p. 267) is 10 (not 15) if the attacker does not have proficiency with the weapon.

Burst Fire Proficiency

The DC of Dexterity saving throws made against firearms using burst fire (DMG p. 267) is 13 + the attacker's proficiency bonus (not 15) if the attacker has proficiency with the weapon. You may use this rule in conjunction with the Burst Fire Nonproficiency rule, above.

Hearing Distance

Firearms are very noisy! The following table gauges how difficult it is to hear a gunshot or explosion, by the size of a weapon. There are four brackets, each of which determine the DC of a hearing-based Perception check to hear a gun being fired. The first bracket ("Automatic") is the maximum distance within which a weapon is so loud, it's impossible not to hear it unless you are deafened. Within that radius, you do not have to make a Perception check to hear it; it is automatically audible. Further away, it is increasingly less certain; the next three columns give a DC which must be passed to hear the sound of a firearm.

Weapon TypeAutomaticDC 10DC 15DC 20
Suppressed or "Silent" Firearm60 feet120 feet240 feet480 feet
Light Pistol, Musket200 feet400 feet800 feet1,600 feet
Grenade Launcher1, Heavy Pistol400 feet800 feet1,600 feet3,200 feet
Rifle, Shotgun, Submachine Gun800 feet1,600 feet3,200 feet10.5 ¼ miles
Machine Gun, Stun (Nonlethal) Grenade1,600 feet3,200 feet10.5 ¼ miles20.5 ½ miles
Anti-Personnel Explosion, Grenade3,200 feet10.5 ¼ miles20.5 ½ miles5 miles
Anti-Vehicle Explosion, Tank Cannon10.5 ¼ miles20.5 ½ miles5 miles10 miles

1This is the sound of a grenade launcher firing, not the sound of an exploding grenade, which is much louder (see further below on the table).

The DC of the Perception check assumes that the firearm is being used in a typical, relatively clear outdoors environment; the DC may be slightly lower when you are surrounded by stone or concrete (since those materials reflect sound, making it louder), or even lower in an enclosed space such as inside a building. On the other hand, the DC may be slightly higher in an environment such as a dense forest where there are many obstacles to diffuse the noise. Use common sense; it may be difficult to hear the sound of a pistol going off, even within the normally "automatic" distance (necessitating a Perception check), if there is a very loud background noise, such as heavy machinery or fireworks.

Short Burst

Firearms with the short burst trait can, fire a number of rounds of ammunition with a single pull of the trigger. This is typically a three-round burst but could be anywhere between two and five.

When you make an attack with a firearm with this trait, you can choose to expend a single round of ammunition as normal, or fire a short burst and expend additional rounds of ammunition as indicated in the parenthesis. If you fire a short burst and successfully hit, you can re-roll a number of the damage die, as indicated in the parenthesis, accepting the new results.

For example, a bolter has short burst (2), so when you attack you expend three rounds of ammunition and re-roll two of the damage die if you successfully hit.

Scope

Firearms with the scope trait have a scope which facilitates extreme long-range engagements.

If you have not moved since the end of your last turn, you can use an action to aim down the scope of a firearm that has this trait at a specific target. Once you do so, you are incapacitated and your speed becomes 0 until the start of your next turn. However, the first attack you make against the target at the start of your next turn is made as if the firearm has a different range value (listed in parentheses), with no long range at which attacking imposes disadvantage on your attack roll.


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gollark: How does one apply changes to a merged PR?
gollark: Fiix it yourself.
gollark: #include <stdio.h>printf("abcd\n");return 42;
gollark: !exe why
gollark: !interpret why
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