Oreni Tactics
Oreni has a lot of options, which can be a bit paralyzing when it gets to his turn and there is no obvious best choice. Keep some of the following in mind if you get stuck. Also, when reading this, don't forget that you now have a staff of necromancy that can do some of this without using spell slots.
“First, take care of head”
Although built to attack, Oreni has some defensive abilities. As one of the frailest of the Unlikely Six, he should use these when he can.
If the fight looks serious, the very first thing Oreni should ask on the first turn is "do I have displacement running?". If not, cast it. A 50% miss chance is almost the same as doubling your hit points.
Next, three-dimensional movement is a huge tactical advantage. When trying to be effective while keeping out of harms way, being ten feet over someone's head is a lot different than being ten feet in front of them. It won't always be useful, but seriously consider casting fly on yourself. Its duration is measured in minutes, so you might be able to cast it before combat even starts.
Oreni learned reduce person to mess with opponents, but its actually not a terrible spell to invoke on himself. Oreni's combat abilities are based on Dexterity, not Strength. So, while this spell reduces combat potency for most targets, it actually makes Oreni better (gives -2 Strength, +2 Dex). This makes him a) better at ranged attacking and b) harder to hit (with the Dex bonus and a size adjustment bonus, his AC goes up by two). It also lasts for minutes, so not a horrible use of a first level spell. The drawback is that there are probably better uses for an action. Still, if you can plan ahead, or have an emergency, it can help.
Another "cast before charging into combat spell" is resist energy. One nice thing about this spell is that it scales in several ways with level: at Oreni's level, it lasts for nearly two hours and negates 30 points of elemental damage per attack.
“Blast ’em all!”
Oreni was built for doing elemental damage (with a heavy side emphasis on necromancy), and has a number of spells that deal damage to anyone in the area of effect, no matter how many of them there are. So Oreni's next question on his turn is "can I blast a lot of the enemy at once"?
Something to mention: that +1/per damage die added to electrical attacks really adds up. For a lightning bolt, for example, it averages out to gaining an additional 3d6 damage. So blast with electricity unless you know that's a bad idea.
Oreni has a lot of choices when blasting (maybe too many). If you look at the numbers, there are some weak choices that should never be used, some go to moves that should be the first choices, and other choices that provide good alternates for special situations (e.g. target immune to electricity or vulnerable to cold). Numbers work out like this at your current level (the tradeoffs will change as you increase in level):
Blast | Spell level | Damage roll | Damage average | Range | Action | Defense | SR |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Burning hands | 1 | 5d4 | 12.5 | 15 foot cone | standard | Reflex (DC 18) halves | yes |
Magic missile | 1 | 5d4+5 | 17.5 | 220 feet | standard | None | yes |
Intensified magic missile | 2 | 6d4+6 | 21 | 220 feet | full | None | yes |
Vampiric touch | 3 | 6d6 | 21 | 30 feet | standard | Touch AC | yes |
Shocking grasp | 1 | 5d6+5 | 22.5 | 30 feet | standard | Touch AC | yes |
Intensified burning hands | 2 | 10d4 | 25 | 15 foot cone | full | Reflex (DC 18) halves | yes |
Scorching ray | 2 | 12d6 | 42 | 55 feet | standard | Touch AC | yes |
Dragon’s breath | 4 | 12d6 | 42 | varies | standard | Reflex (DC 21) halves | yes |
Cone of cold | 5 | 12d6 | 42 | 60 foot cone | standard | Reflex (DC 22) halves | yes |
Breath weapon | - | 12d6 | 42 | 60 foot line | standard | Reflex (DC 23) halves | no |
Intensified shocking grasp | 2 | 10d6+10 | 45 | 30 feet | full | Touch AC | yes |
Lightning bolt | 3 | 10d6+10 | 45 | 120 foot line | standard | Reflex (DC 20) halves | yes |
Intensified lightning bolt | 4 | 12d6+12 | 54 | 120 foot line | full | Reflex (DC 20) halves | yes |
Dragon’s breath (electric) | 4 | 12d6+12 | 54 | varies | standard | Reflex (DC 21) halves | yes |
Chain lightning | 6 | 12d6+12 | 54 | 900 foot (branching) | standard | Reflex (DC 23) halves | yes |
Some comments:
- intensified shocking grasp is pretty much the reason Oreni took the Intensify Spell feat; however, it only effects a single target.
- if you ever go to sleep having not used your breath weapon, you probably did something wrong. It is a better choice than lightning bolt, even though it does slightly less damage and has less range, because it has a higher save DC and doesn't cost you a spell.
- As you approach 15th level, intensified lightning bolt will go from a weak choice to an awesome one.
- Because you have dragon's breath and Intensify Spell, you might be better off exchanging cone of cold for something else. At current levels, they do the same damage, yet dragon's breath is much more versatile, though cone of cold has twice the range. Though dragon's breath caps out at 12th level, with Intensify Spell it grows just like cone of cold until 17th level, while using the same spell slot. Something like telekinesis, teleport or baleful polymorph might be more broadly useful.
“Screw ’em all!”
Oreni isn't as good at "battlefield control" as Naerai is, but does have some choices for messing with a large number of enemies at once. In some cases, this might be a better idea than blasting them, because the problems will last longer for them than damage (on the other hand, the damage might kill them outright). So, the next question is "Can I neutralize many enemies at once?"
The main choice here is wall of stone, but fear, circle of death (from staff), waves of fatigue (from staff), dimension door, halt undead and dispel magic can be situationally useful.
“Screw that guy”
If facing more singular enemies, Oreni should first think "should I blast this guy with intensified shocking grasp?" If the answer is no, turn to necromancy instead. Either magic jar or enervation are very solid choices, particularly since Spell Focus (Necromancy) makes them harder to resist. Second choices (mainly because their save DCs are a lot lower, and require some knowledge about the target) would be touch of idiocy, ghoul touch, command undead, ray of enfeeblement and chill touch.
“Poke it with a stick”
When in close quarters, Oreni usually better off using his rapier than casting spells, especially if the rapier still has a spell stored in it. In the first place, the rapier has a really good change of scoring a critical, which does quite a bit of extra damage. Second, a stored vampiric touch or intensified shocking grasp going off in an enemy's face is like getting an extra spell for the day.
Oreni doesn't have as good a chance to hit with this as others of the Six, but does have some tricks. First, the once per day bonus from his Shoaldream ability can be quite useful applied to a sword strike. Second, he has a wand of true strike which can boost a strike on the next round.
Last resorts
If none of these applies, Oerni is probably best served by holding his spells. Try one of the following instead:
- Move to a better position
- Discharge an instance of an ongoing effect (e.g. chill touch).
- Drink a potion
- Cast grease from a wand
- Store a spell in the rapier