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.
What are the conditions of readied actions in Pathfinder?
With Improved Deadshot, you are making one attack that denies your opponent their Dex and does, at best, +2 or 3 damage. You can probably crank that up with more Dex bonus stuff, and you might convince your GM to let you apply Focused Shot as well, but you’re still just getting one attack with a moderate bonus.
Are there conditions of readied actions in PF SRD?
The PF SRD’s section on readying an action doesn’t appear to have any FAQs, errata, or other clarifying information that would require you to name a condition more specific than “the next guy in initiative order does something.” That said, if someone abuses this, the other side of the table might devise counter-strategies, such as:
How does the ready action work in RuneScape?
It does not move your turn in the initiative order Spells used for a readied action gives that spell a concentration requirement, and thus doesn’t work if you already are concentrating on a spell (or you could choose to stop concentrating on it)
How does the ready action work in role playing?
The ready action is, as you point out, an action like any other. This means that on your turn you can move and take the ready action.
How does the ready action work in chess?
The ready action is, as you point out, an action like any other. This means that on your turn you can move and take the ready action. The ready action allows you to react to a specific, ” perceivable circumstance .” To do so, you can take the Ready action on your turn so that you can act later in the round using your reaction.
Can you take the ready action on your turn?
Yes, you can. It is an action just like any other, and is taken on your turn. Secondly when the trigger goes off do you have to wait for your turn or do you in effect get a bonus turn? It’s a reaction, and happens immediately. It’s not another turn, nor do you have to wait. It happens when the trigger, well, triggers it.