There are no weapon size differences in 5e. Weapon damage is determined by the weapon itself and unless otherwise noted those are listed in the PHB/Players Basic weapons section in chapter 5 (p46 of Players Basic).
How is weapon damage calculated in eso?
Damage per Second (DPS) is not always the best or most accurate to measure your damage in ESO. DPS is calculated (mostly with AddOns) by timing a fight (from entering combat to the end of the fight) and also measuring how much damage was dealt in that time and dividing it by the number of seconds.
Does stamina increase weapon damage eso?
Stamina increases your resource pool for using Stamina based abilities, and also, similar to Weapon Damage, it increases the damage that your Stamina based attacks hit for. In general, every 1 point of Weapon Damage is worth 10.5 points of Stamina when determining damage increases.
Can a large creature wield a medium size weapon?
Large-sized creatures can use Large-sized weapons (DMG p. 278). This significantly increases damage output, and might be considered disruptively overpowered for a player character.When using Medium-sized weapons, use the following rules for weapon properties: Large creatures can’t wield Hidden and Undersized weapons.
Can a creature with a natural attack use a weapon?
Creatures with natural attacks and attacks made with weapons can use both as part of a full attack action (although a creature must forgo one natural attack, be it a claw, slam, or tentacle attack, for each weapon clutched in a limb that would otherwise make a natural attack).
How big can a reach weapon get in RuneScape?
A typical Large character wielding a reach weapon of the appropriate size can attack a creature 15 or 20 feet away, but not adjacent creatures or creatures up to 10 feet away. Note: Small and Medium creatures wielding reach weapons threaten all squares 10 feet (2 squares) away, even diagonally.
How does the size of a weapon affect its size?
Every weapon has a size category. This designation indicates the size of the creature for which the weapon was designed. A weapon’s size category isn’t the same as its size as an object. Instead, a weapon’s size category is keyed to the size of the intended wielder.