You cannot use two-weapon fighting, martial arts, or a flurry of blows on the same turn since they use the same bonus action. The monk weapons and unarmed strikes would be considered magical once you reach 6th level as a monk.
Who can dual wield 5E?
Two weapon fighting requires that both the weapons are “light melee” weapons, such as shortswords or daggers. This should make sense, as it would be hard to heft a pair of lances or swing with a longsword in each hand! But yes, anyone and everyone can dual wield, you just have to make sure you’re using light weapons.
Can monks use off-hand?
Like druids and rogues, monks use leather armor and can’t use shields, but can use off-hand items. Monks can use the following weapons: fist weapons, one-handed axes, one-handed maces, one-handed swords, polearms, and staves.
Can you punch twice 5E?
1- You only need to have both hands on a weapon for the instant you attack with it. Grabbing and letting go with one hand takes no type of action/interaction. So you could attack two handed then punch. 2- Unarmed Strikes can be kicks, elbows, etc.
Does flurry of blows stack with two-weapon fighting Pathfinder?
Furthermore, under Pathfinder rules, Flurry of Blows is Two-Weapon Fighting (except it doesn’t actually require you to use two weapons). As such, the idea is you cannot use it and Two-Weapon Fighting at the same time.
Can a monk use a dagger?
Monks can use daggers as monk weapons, that part makes sense and is clear. But as daggers benefits from the specific martial arts bonus rule (You can use Dexterity instead of Strength for the attack and damage rolls of your unarmed strikes and monk weapons.)
Can a monk gain the benefit of the dual wielder?
The upshot is that you get the +1 to AC as stated above. Any character can attack with two unarmed attacks provided the second attack is the bonus action. What a monk gets is to add their ability modifier bonus to damage with the second attack. No other player gets that. But, Dual Wielder is redundant and unneeded.
Can a monk dual wield a quarterstaff in DND?
However, since nothing in the monk page states that monks aren’t allowed to dual wield weapons there is nothing stopping you from just dual wielding quarterstaffs and getting the bonus anyway. Yes. An unarmed strike is a one handed, simple, melee weapon, as such it counts as a weapon for TWF. So for both of your cases, it would be valid.
How does the dual wielder feat interact with weapons?
The Dual Wielder feat removes the light limitation on your weapons. It also gives you an extra object interaction (might not be needed, but gripping the long sword might be considered an object interaction by some DM’s). You gain a +1 bonus to AC while you are wielding a separate melee weapon in each hand.
Do you need two hands to use dual wielder?
This explicitly states the need to use both hands to make a two-handed attack and use the bigger weapon dice, thus disqualifying this use case from the Dual Wielder requirement (one-handed melee weapons).