Yes, you can mount your Druid friend The rules for Mounts indicate that a willing creature at least one size category larger than you, with appropriate anatomy, can serve as a mount. A horse is obviously an acceptable mount, so a Druid Wildshaped into a horse is acceptable, so long as he is willing.
Can a Druid talk while Wildshaped?
1 Answer. A DM may rule that a high-level druid has some capacity for speech in beast form based on being able to perform verbal spell components with the 18th level class feature Beast Spells. Beginning at 18th level […] You can perform the somatic and verbal components of a druid spell while in a beast shape …
Can you ride a Druid DND?
The only requirement is that the mount be one size larger than the rider and have “appropriate anatomy” to accept a rider. There is no speed reduction. If you’re thinking it’s overpowered in some way, there are some costs to riding in this way. It takes the rider 1/2 movement to mount or dismount.
Is there a way to ride a druid in travel form?
Moonglade also works – one of the vendor NPCs in one of the buildings should have a bunch of druid only tomes to purchase, one of which is stag Mount form.
Can a wildshaped Druid ride a giant spider?
A willing creature that is at least one size larger than you and that has an appropriate anatomy can serve as a mount. The giant spider is Large size, and humanoids are Medium size, so the size restriction is met. The wildshaped druid is supposedly willing, so the willingness restriction is met.
What did the Druid do last night in wildshape?
Last night we had a new (for us) situation arise in the combat: The Druid, in her Human form, cast Healing Spirit. She then used Wild Shape to change into something with a bunch of HP (her normal tactic).
Can you have more than one creature on a Mount?
Anything beyond that is up to the DM. There are no rules for multiple creatures riding a single mount. The rules for Mounted Combat heavily imply a single rider per mount by omission of any rules about multiple riders, but there’s nothing that explicitly prohibits it.