So, yeah. Haste ending means you can’t take an action or bonus action.
Can you Multiattack with haste?
As the Multiattack action is a separate type of action (see the listing on page 11 of the Monster Manual, noting it is separated from ordinary ranged or weapon attacks), you cannot use it via the extra action granted by haste.
Does Multiattack work with held action?
A creature is meant to use Multiattack only on its turn, not on someone else’s. A creature cannot make more than one attack as part of a readied attack: it can use multiattack only on its own turn.
When do you get a sneak attack with haste?
As Atomic_Robo points out Haste is “gains an additional action on each of its turns”. So it’s still the Rogue’s Turn inside the same Round so you would only get Sneak Attack if your first attack misses. Haste only grants an additional action on your turn, not an additional attack for Reaction (on anyone’s turn.)
What happens on the turn after haste ends?
On the turn after Haste ends, can you use a reaction? The description of the Haste spell concludes with: When the spell ends, the target can’t move or take actions until after its next turn, as a wave of lethargy sweeps over it.
What happens when you ready an action in Fortnite?
When you ready an action, you store your action for later use (using your reaction). You still perform your move, bonus, and free actions on your turn. This means you would be able to move to the lever that opens the trap door on your turn, then ready an action to pull the lever when the cultists steps on the trap door.
How does the readied action work in DND?
It takes up your reaction, so you can’t perform the readied action and an opportunity attack in the same combat round. The readied action happens when the trigger occurs, but any movement has to be done on your turn—unless your reaction is to move.