


This subclass's animal spirit can gain supportive abilities to heal and give temporary hit points to your allies, and they gain more supportive features at higher levels. The Shaman has the following two subclasses: They can summon spirit animals as a companion with certain features and abilities. This is a very accurate implementation of shamanic powers from other fantasy or cultures into D&D. This Shaman class by Reddit user u/Pattycakeee on the other hand draws their powers from spirits. Druids get their powers from nature, and clerics are blessed by divine powers. There are great Wisdom-based spell casters in D&D. Llanowar Visionary by Cristi Balanescu, from Magic: The Gathering In addition to their combat abilities, Pugilists have great features that make them a valuable pick in urban settings. With various fighting styles based on the subclass, Pugilists make for great tanks and melee fighters. RELATED: Tips For Building The Perfect Pugilist They can block incoming melee attacks and counter, and even knock enemies out with a single attack at higher levels. This subclass focuses on fighting smart rather than using just brute force. This subclass significantly improves the Pugilist's ability to grapple and pin down their enemies, and even use the grappled target as a shield against other attacks. This subclass focuses on insults and dirty tricks to distract and weaken the enemies. Similar to the Beast Master subclass for the Ranger, this subclass gives the Pugilist a canine animal companion who can help them in combat and exploration. This detective-style subclass improves the character's attention to detail, giving benefits to perception and investigation, and using the opponent's weaknesses to get the upper hand. This subclass relies more on charisma and creating a WWE-style fighting persona, complete with crowd-rousing and signature moves that can stun the target. The Pugilist has the following six subclasses: The pugilist uses unarmed strikes and simple and improvised weapons, can add their Constitution modifier instead of Dexterity to their armor class, and fuels their abilities with moxie points. But this traditional martial artist might not necessarily be what you're looking for, in which case the Strength-based street fighter, Pugilist by Benjamin Huffman, is the class for you. When it comes to unarmed fighting, monks are the only viable class in D&D. The addition of an Intelligence-based class that does not rely on magic is a welcome change to the typical smart characters of D&D. The Scholar class is very versatile with three pursuits that range from a supportive healer to a powerful and smart master tactician, tons of maneuvers, and discoveries that can change your play style. This subclass offers more strategic approaches to combat with additional maneuvers and powerful features that affect their fighting capabilities more than the other pursuits. This subclass relies more on the charisma of the character, improving their capabilities in social encounters, and using their force of personality to influence enemies or allies in combat. While not the best healer, in low magic campaigns this subclass can be very useful. This subclass improves the supportive capabilities of the class with extra maneuvers that can heal your allies or disable your enemies.

The Scholar has the three following subclasses: The Scholar fills the supportive martial fighter role in combat, as well as a knowledgeable individual in role-play situations with features such as Maneuvers similar to fighter's Battle Master subclass, Critical Analysis which allows them to use Intelligence modifier instead of Strength or Dexterity for their weapon attacks, and Discoveries that can improve their capabilities both in combat and non-combat scenarios. Black introduces a new flavor to the game with this Intelligence-based martial class.
