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== Simple Projectile Weapons ==
== Simple Projectile Weapons ==



Revision as of 16:00, 14 August 2018

Simple Projectile Weapons

Light Crossbow 2-Hand Projectile / Simple [edit]
Light Crossbow
Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
35 gp see ammo see ammo see ammo see ammo see ammo 4 lbs Piercing (physical, common) or by ammunition
Weapon Qualities: Mighty, Non-Melee
You draw a light crossbow back by pulling a lever. Normally, operating a light crossbow requires two hands. However, you can shoot, but not load, a light crossbow with one hand at a -2 penalty on attack rolls. You can shoot a light crossbow with each hand, but you take a penalty on attack rolls as if attacking with two one-handed weapons. This penalty is cumulative with the penalty for one-handed firing. Light crossbows can be purchased in higher draw weights to match the Strength bonus of the wielder. This costs 35 gp per Strength mod plus added.

Load: Loading a light crossbow can be performed with either a move action or an attack action. The reload time can be reduced by taking the Rapid Reload (Feat).

The light crossbow belongs to the "Crossbows" weapon group.

Show / Hide Ammunition Types
Simple, effective, and deadly.
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Crossbow Bolt 1 sp each 1d6 1d8 2d6 19-20 / x2 80 ft 0.1 lbs each Piercing (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable
Crossbow bolts are thick, graceless things compared to arrows. In keeping with the simplicity of the crossbow, the bolts are not sophisticated, either. Arrows must be carefully made with just the right amount of flex, or spine, in the long, slim shafts. Bolts are far too thick and short to flex, even under the brutal firing conditions of heavy crossbows or hand onagers. Bolts have simple conical tips hammered of mild steel, massive shafts of heavy, cheap woods like greenheart, swamp oak, or sycamore, and durable fletching made of thin sections of cherry or pine. They take little to no skill to make, but they do have to be consistently made, so they are all the same size. Despite their low sophistication, nobody can argue that bolts lack in power, and they have won many, many battles.
Hurts as much coming out as going in.
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Barbed Bolt 5 gp each 1d8 1d10 2d8 19-20 / x2 40 ft 0.25 lbs each Piercing (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable
Barbed crossbow bolts are just about the nastiest things you'll ever see. They are stout, brutal devices, whose wicked barbs make the terrible wounds already inflicted by a crossbow much, much worse. Unlike normal bolts, barbed bolts are difficult to make and thus are expensive. They are typically made of the same woods as arrows, although in a thick, strong, graceless fashion, and are often fletched with thin shavings of horn or turtle shell. The massive barbed heads require considerable skill to forge and sharpen. Barbed bolts are heavier than standard bolts, and cannot be fired as far as standard bolts. Pointing a crossbow loaded with a barbed bolt at a someone is a very clear statement that you mean business.
Admit it. You were expecting a boxing glove on the end, weren't you?
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Blunt Bolt 5 cp each 1d6 1d8 2d6 19-20 / x2 40 ft 0.1 lbs each Bludgeoning (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable
Blunt crossbow bolts have the simple conical tip of mild steel replaced by a small round bit of glued-on iron that covers the end of the thick wooden shaft. This means blunt bolts can be made without a blacksmith, just punched out bits of iron. As a result, the cost of blunt crossbow bolts is half that of standard bolts. Blunt bolts weigh the same and do the same amount of damage as regular bolts, although the range is halved. In a hand onager, blunt bolts grant the weapon the Sunder quality at range, since the Hand Onager is also a Siege Weapon.
Heavy Crossbow 2-Hand Projectile / Simple [edit]
Heavy Crossbow
Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
50 gp see ammo see ammo see ammo see ammo see ammo 8 lbs Piercing (physical, common) or by ammunition
Weapon Qualities: Mighty, Non-Melee
You draw a heavy crossbow back by turning a small winch. Normally, operating a heavy crossbow requires two hands. However, you can shoot, but not load, a heavy crossbow with one hand at a -4 penalty on attack rolls. Despite this, due to their vigorous kick when fired, you cannot shoot a heavy crossbow with each hand. Heavy crossbows can be purchased in higher draw weights to match the Strength bonus of the wielder. This costs 50 gp per Strength mod plus added.

Load: Loading a heavy crossbow can be performed with either a move action or an attack action. The reload time can be reduced by taking the Rapid Reload (Feat).

The heavy crossbow belongs to the "Crossbows" weapon group.

Show / Hide Ammunition Types
Simple, effective, and deadly.
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Crossbow Bolt 1 sp each 1d8 1d10 2d8 19-20 / x2 120 ft 0.1 lbs each Piercing (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable
Crossbow bolts are thick, graceless things compared to arrows. In keeping with the simplicity of the crossbow, the bolts are not sophisticated, either. Arrows must be carefully made with just the right amount of flex, or spine, in the long, slim shafts. Bolts are far too thick and short to flex, even under the brutal firing conditions of heavy crossbows or hand onagers. Bolts have simple conical tips hammered of mild steel, massive shafts of heavy, cheap woods like greenheart, swamp oak, or sycamore, and durable fletching made of thin sections of cherry or pine. They take little to no skill to make, but they do have to be consistently made, so they are all the same size. Despite their low sophistication, nobody can argue that bolts lack in power, and they have won many, many battles.
Hurts as much coming out as going in.
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Barbed Bolt 5 gp each 1d10 1d12 3d6 19-20 / x2 60 ft 0.25 lbs each Piercing (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable
Barbed crossbow bolts are just about the nastiest things you'll ever see. They are stout, brutal devices, whose wicked barbs make the terrible wounds already inflicted by a crossbow much, much worse. Unlike normal bolts, barbed bolts are difficult to make and thus are expensive. They are typically made of the same woods as arrows, although in a thick, strong, graceless fashion, and are often fletched with thin shavings of horn or turtle shell. The massive barbed heads require considerable skill to forge and sharpen. Barbed bolts are heavier than standard bolts, and cannot be fired as far as standard bolts. Pointing a crossbow loaded with a barbed bolt at a someone is a very clear statement that you mean business.
Admit it. You were expecting a boxing glove on the end, weren't you?
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Blunt Bolt 5 cp each 1d8 1d10 2d8 19-20 / x2 60 ft 0.1 lbs each Bludgeoning (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable
Blunt crossbow bolts have the simple conical tip of mild steel replaced by a small round bit of glued-on iron that covers the end of the thick wooden shaft. This means blunt bolts can be made without a blacksmith, just punched out bits of iron. As a result, the cost of blunt crossbow bolts is half that of standard bolts. Blunt bolts weigh the same and do the same amount of damage as regular bolts, although the range is halved. In a hand onager, blunt bolts grant the weapon the Sunder quality at range, since the Hand Onager is also a Siege Weapon.


Martial Projectile Weapons

Longbow 2-Hand Projectile / Martial [edit]
Longbow
Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
75 gp see ammo see ammo see ammo see ammo see ammo 3 lbs Piercing (physical, common) or by ammunition
Weapon Qualities: Non-Melee, Primitive Availability
The longbow is a large, powerful simple bow, made of a single baulk of the properly selected and cured wood, bone, horn, or other strongly resilient material. They demand exquisite craftsmanship in forming them properly, but they need very little assembly.

You need two hands to use any bow, regardless of its size. A longbow is too unwieldy to use while you are mounted. If you have a penalty for low Strength, apply it to damage rolls when you use a longbow. If you have a Strength bonus, however, it is not applied to the longbow's damage.

The longbow has been invented many times by different cultures. All large simple bows, regardless of name, are longbows. The longbow belongs to the "Bows" weapon group.

Show / Hide Ammunition Types
Arrows don't kill people; people kill people. With arrows.
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Common Arrow 5 cp each 1d6 1d8 2d6 x3 100 ft 0.1 lbs each Piercing (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable
Common arrows are standard bow ammunition. They have sturdy diamond points on them, they're shafted with easy to get ash, maple, or willow, and they have reliable goose-feather fletchings. They do a bit less damage in shortbows than they do in longbows, and a bit less damage in longbows than they do in greatbows. A common arrow is denoted by that classic, deadly but easy to make, diamond-shaped point. It's good against armor, it's good against beasts, and it can be made quickly. You'll see these everywhere, and rightly so, because they're great.
Just rip it out and get it over with, ya baby.
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Barbed Arrow 2 gp each 1d4 1d6 1d10 x3 50 ft 0.5 lbs each Slashing (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable, Weapon Qualities: Special
The barbed arrow is a specialty product, since making that extravagant head takes a lot of time and skill. Barbed arrows are based off broadhead arrows, with all their characteristics, but they do the same damage as flight arrows. So why bother with them? Because to remove a barbed arrowhead is a deadly and dangerous process. To remove a barbed arrow after you've been struck by one and taken damage past any DR requires greater than animal intelligence and a heal check against an Easy DC. Either the victim or an adjacent creature can attempt to remove barb heads. Failing the heal check means removing the barbed arrow inflicts 1d6 of additional damage which cannot be reduced by DR. Ouch.
Some of these had little metal fists on the end, which is pretty fancy.
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Blunt Arrow 5 sp each 1d6 1d8 2d6 x3 50 ft 0.5 lbs each Bludgeoning (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable
Take a broadhead arrow and remove that big, deadly steel point. Replace it with a shaped boiled-leather cup into which a tightly rolled mass of cotton cloth is firmly wedged, presenting the firm, flat side of the roll toward the front of the arrow. What you get is the blunt arrow, which does bludgeoning damage rather than piercing damage. Why would you do this? Well, hunting of some delicate game species is easier with blunt arrows. Blunt arrows have the same construction as broadhead arrows, but to keep that heavy, flat tip pointed right, they suffer a reduced range increment.
Just an all-around better arrow than the common arrow.
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Broadhead Arrow 3 sp each 1d8 1d10 2d8 x3 50 ft 0.25 lbs each Piercing (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable
The obvious difference to a broadhead arrow is the head, which is a heavy delta-shaped thing with sharp wings and modest barbs. They have more steel in them than common heads, and the blacksmith has to spend some time on them compared to diamond points. The shaft of the broadhead arrow is made of a dense, heavy wood like buckeye, hickory, or dogwood to maintain the proper spine with that heavy head on it. And instead of three fletchings a broadhead arrow has four, to keep that big-winged head pointed the right direction. As a result, broadheads are expensive, short-ranged, and weigh over twice as much as a standard arrow, but they hit really hard.
Not actually that great against creatures, but a true nightmare against building roofs, and pitch-covered ship decks.
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Flaming Arrow 3 gp each 1d4 1d6 1d10 x3 50 ft 0.5 lbs each Piercing (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable
Flaming arrows are an age-old terror weapon. Flaming arrows are based off broadheads, as the dense, hardwood shafts are required to allow them to do their fiery work. The massive broadhead is removed and replaced with a small needle-like head with a hole in it. Through the hole is threaded a soft rag of cotton, wool, or linen and the whole thing is soaked in tar and wrapped around the head and top of the shaft. This is allowed to cool into a solid, flammable mass. Lighting a flaming arrow requires a move action and access to a considerable source of flame (larger than a torch, such as a good fire or a brazier). Any amount of magical flame will touch one off, as well. Once lit, a flaming arrow burns for 5 rounds, regardless of wind or rain, although being underwater or doused by a bucket will extinguish it. Flaming arrows do piercing damage as above, as well as 1d4 of fire damage to creatures struck. When fired at flammable structures like cloth wagon covers, thatch roofs, haystacks, etc, they ignite such things automatically the next round unless doused. On light wooden structures they ignite on a 1-2 on a d6 roll. On heavy wooden structures they ignite after three rounds on a roll of 1 on a d10. See the Environmental Effects rules for how to put things out again. Fire Arrows get really scary when you fire a few hundred of them at once....
For when you really need to send a message, but can't be bothered to walk all the way over there to do it in person...
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Flight Arrow 5 sp each 1d4 1d6 1d10 x3 150 ft 0.05 lbs each Piercing (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable
Flight arrows are designed for the maximum possible range. As a result, they use common diamond-tip arrowheads in good quality steel but in very small sizes. The shafts are made of kiln-dried lightweight woods, like alder, fir, spruce, or cedar. And the fletching is small, often made of chicken feathers rather than goose. The result is an arrow that is the same size as a regular arrow but weighs about half as much and is ridiculously streamlined. Flight arrows shoot like lightning, and are what are used in target shooting competitions.
Need a distraction?
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Whistling Arrow 1 gp each 1d4 1d6 1d10 x3 100 ft 0.1 lbs each Piercing (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable, Audible
Take a common arrow, replace that simple but elegant diamond point with a whistling cage made of bent rod, and you create a whistling arrow. These are audible in flight to a distance of 50 feet from the path of their flight, so they're pretty darn loud. They make a distinctive falling shriek as they fly that sounds eerie, especially if you get a few hundred going all at once. Great fun, but expensive. Whistling arrows even do reasonable damage, since they have a functional chisel point atop the whistling cage.
Composite Longbow 2-Hand Projectile / Martial [edit]
Composite Longbow
Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
100 gp see ammo see ammo see ammo see ammo see ammo 3 lbs Piercing (physical, common) or by ammunition
Weapon Qualities: Mighty, Non-Melee
The composite longbow is a large complex bow whose limbs are built up of various materials, usually in a recurve shape. You need at least two hands to use a bow, regardless of its size. You can use a composite longbow while mounted. All composite bows are made with a particular strength rating (that is, each requires a minimum Strength modifier to use with proficiency). If your Strength bonus is less than the strength rating of the composite bow, you can't effectively use it, so you take a -2 penalty to-hit on attacks with it, per plus of Strength modifier greater than your own. The default composite longbow requires a Strength modifier of +0 or higher to use with proficiency. A composite longbow can be made with a high strength rating to take advantage of an above-average Strength score; this feature allows you to add your Strength bonus to damage, up to the maximum bonus indicated for the bow. Each point of Strength bonus granted by the bow adds 100 gp to its cost. If you have a penalty for low Strength, you apply it to damage rolls when you use a composite longbow, in addition to the to-hit penalty for insufficient Strength.

For purposes of Weapon Proficiency and similar feats, a composite longbow is treated as if it were a longbow. The composite longbow belongs to the "Bows" weapon group.

Show / Hide Ammunition Types
Arrows don't kill people; people kill people. With arrows.
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Common Arrow 5 cp each 1d6 1d8 2d6 x3 100 ft 0.1 lbs each Piercing (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable
Common arrows are standard bow ammunition. They have sturdy diamond points on them, they're shafted with easy to get ash, maple, or willow, and they have reliable goose-feather fletchings. They do a bit less damage in shortbows than they do in longbows, and a bit less damage in longbows than they do in greatbows. A common arrow is denoted by that classic, deadly but easy to make, diamond-shaped point. It's good against armor, it's good against beasts, and it can be made quickly. You'll see these everywhere, and rightly so, because they're great.
Just rip it out and get it over with, ya baby.
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Barbed Arrow 2 gp each 1d4 1d6 1d10 x3 50 ft 0.5 lbs each Slashing (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable, Weapon Qualities: Special
The barbed arrow is a specialty product, since making that extravagant head takes a lot of time and skill. Barbed arrows are based off broadhead arrows, with all their characteristics, but they do the same damage as flight arrows. So why bother with them? Because to remove a barbed arrowhead is a deadly and dangerous process. To remove a barbed arrow after you've been struck by one and taken damage past any DR requires greater than animal intelligence and a heal check against an Easy DC. Either the victim or an adjacent creature can attempt to remove barb heads. Failing the heal check means removing the barbed arrow inflicts 1d6 of additional damage which cannot be reduced by DR. Ouch.
Some of these had little metal fists on the end, which is pretty fancy.
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Blunt Arrow 5 sp each 1d6 1d8 2d6 x3 50 ft 0.5 lbs each Bludgeoning (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable
Take a broadhead arrow and remove that big, deadly steel point. Replace it with a shaped boiled-leather cup into which a tightly rolled mass of cotton cloth is firmly wedged, presenting the firm, flat side of the roll toward the front of the arrow. What you get is the blunt arrow, which does bludgeoning damage rather than piercing damage. Why would you do this? Well, hunting of some delicate game species is easier with blunt arrows. Blunt arrows have the same construction as broadhead arrows, but to keep that heavy, flat tip pointed right, they suffer a reduced range increment.
Just an all-around better arrow than the common arrow.
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Broadhead Arrow 3 sp each 1d8 1d10 2d8 x3 50 ft 0.25 lbs each Piercing (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable
The obvious difference to a broadhead arrow is the head, which is a heavy delta-shaped thing with sharp wings and modest barbs. They have more steel in them than common heads, and the blacksmith has to spend some time on them compared to diamond points. The shaft of the broadhead arrow is made of a dense, heavy wood like buckeye, hickory, or dogwood to maintain the proper spine with that heavy head on it. And instead of three fletchings a broadhead arrow has four, to keep that big-winged head pointed the right direction. As a result, broadheads are expensive, short-ranged, and weigh over twice as much as a standard arrow, but they hit really hard.
Not actually that great against creatures, but a true nightmare against building roofs, and pitch-covered ship decks.
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Flaming Arrow 3 gp each 1d4 1d6 1d10 x3 50 ft 0.5 lbs each Piercing (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable
Flaming arrows are an age-old terror weapon. Flaming arrows are based off broadheads, as the dense, hardwood shafts are required to allow them to do their fiery work. The massive broadhead is removed and replaced with a small needle-like head with a hole in it. Through the hole is threaded a soft rag of cotton, wool, or linen and the whole thing is soaked in tar and wrapped around the head and top of the shaft. This is allowed to cool into a solid, flammable mass. Lighting a flaming arrow requires a move action and access to a considerable source of flame (larger than a torch, such as a good fire or a brazier). Any amount of magical flame will touch one off, as well. Once lit, a flaming arrow burns for 5 rounds, regardless of wind or rain, although being underwater or doused by a bucket will extinguish it. Flaming arrows do piercing damage as above, as well as 1d4 of fire damage to creatures struck. When fired at flammable structures like cloth wagon covers, thatch roofs, haystacks, etc, they ignite such things automatically the next round unless doused. On light wooden structures they ignite on a 1-2 on a d6 roll. On heavy wooden structures they ignite after three rounds on a roll of 1 on a d10. See the Environmental Effects rules for how to put things out again. Fire Arrows get really scary when you fire a few hundred of them at once....
For when you really need to send a message, but can't be bothered to walk all the way over there to do it in person...
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Flight Arrow 5 sp each 1d4 1d6 1d10 x3 150 ft 0.05 lbs each Piercing (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable
Flight arrows are designed for the maximum possible range. As a result, they use common diamond-tip arrowheads in good quality steel but in very small sizes. The shafts are made of kiln-dried lightweight woods, like alder, fir, spruce, or cedar. And the fletching is small, often made of chicken feathers rather than goose. The result is an arrow that is the same size as a regular arrow but weighs about half as much and is ridiculously streamlined. Flight arrows shoot like lightning, and are what are used in target shooting competitions.
Need a distraction?
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Whistling Arrow 1 gp each 1d4 1d6 1d10 x3 100 ft 0.1 lbs each Piercing (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable, Audible
Take a common arrow, replace that simple but elegant diamond point with a whistling cage made of bent rod, and you create a whistling arrow. These are audible in flight to a distance of 50 feet from the path of their flight, so they're pretty darn loud. They make a distinctive falling shriek as they fly that sounds eerie, especially if you get a few hundred going all at once. Great fun, but expensive. Whistling arrows even do reasonable damage, since they have a functional chisel point atop the whistling cage.
Shortbow 2-Hand Projectile / Martial [edit]
Shortbow
Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
30 gp see ammo see ammo see ammo see ammo see ammo 2 lbs Piercing (physical, common) or by ammunition
Weapon Qualities: Non-Melee, Primitive Availability
The shortbow is a compact simple bow, made of a single baulk of the properly selected and cured wood, bone, horn, or other strongly resilient material. They demand exquisite craftsmanship in forming them properly, but they need very little assembly.

You need two hands to use any bow, regardless of its size. A shortbow is compact enough to use while you are mounted. If you have a penalty for low Strength, apply it to damage rolls when you use a longbow. However, if you have a Strength bonus, it is not applied to the shortbow's damage.

The shortbow has been invented many times by different cultures. All small simple bows, regardless of name, are shortbows. The shortbow belongs to the "Bows" weapon group.

Show / Hide Ammunition Types
Arrows don't kill people; people kill people. With arrows.
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Common Arrow 5 cp each 1d4 1d6 1d10 x3 60 ft 0.1 lbs each Piercing (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable
Common arrows are standard bow ammunition. They have sturdy diamond points on them, they're shafted with easy to get ash, maple, or willow, and they have reliable goose-feather fletchings. They do a bit less damage in shortbows than they do in longbows, and a bit less damage in longbows than they do in greatbows. A common arrow is denoted by that classic, deadly but easy to make, diamond-shaped point. It's good against armor, it's good against beasts, and it can be made quickly. You'll see these everywhere, and rightly so, because they're great.
Just rip it out and get it over with, ya baby.
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Barbed Arrow 2 gp each 1d3 1d4 1d8 x3 30 ft 0.5 lbs each Slashing (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable, Weapon Qualities: Special
The barbed arrow is a specialty product, since making that extravagant head takes a lot of time and skill. Barbed arrows are based off broadhead arrows, with all their characteristics, but they do the same damage as flight arrows. So why bother with them? Because to remove a barbed arrowhead is a deadly and dangerous process. To remove a barbed arrow after you've been struck by one and taken damage past any DR requires greater than animal intelligence and a heal check against an Easy DC. Either the victim or an adjacent creature can attempt to remove barb heads. Failing the heal check means removing the barbed arrow inflicts 1d6 of additional damage which cannot be reduced by DR. Ouch.
Some of these had little metal fists on the end, which is pretty fancy.
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Blunt Arrow 5 sp each 1d4 1d6 1d10 x3 30 ft 0.5 lbs each Bludgeoning (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable
Take a broadhead arrow and remove that big, deadly steel point. Replace it with a shaped boiled-leather cup into which a tightly rolled mass of cotton cloth is firmly wedged, presenting the firm, flat side of the roll toward the front of the arrow. What you get is the blunt arrow, which does bludgeoning damage rather than piercing damage. Why would you do this? Well, hunting of some delicate game species is easier with blunt arrows. Blunt arrows have the same construction as broadhead arrows, but to keep that heavy, flat tip pointed right, they suffer a reduced range increment.
Just an all-around better arrow than the common arrow.
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Broadhead Arrow 3 sp each 1d6 1d8 2d6 x3 30 ft 0.25 lbs each Piercing (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable
The obvious difference to a broadhead arrow is the head, which is a heavy delta-shaped thing with sharp wings and modest barbs. They have more steel in them than common heads, and the blacksmith has to spend some time on them compared to diamond points. The shaft of the broadhead arrow is made of a dense, heavy wood like buckeye, hickory, or dogwood to maintain the proper spine with that heavy head on it. And instead of three fletchings a broadhead arrow has four, to keep that big-winged head pointed the right direction. As a result, broadheads are expensive, short-ranged, and weigh over twice as much as a standard arrow, but they hit really hard.
Not actually that great against creatures, but a true nightmare against building roofs, and pitch-covered ship decks.
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Flaming Arrow 3 gp each 1d3 1d4 1d8 x3 30 ft 0.5 lbs each Piercing (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable
Flaming arrows are an age-old terror weapon. Flaming arrows are based off broadheads, as the dense, hardwood shafts are required to allow them to do their fiery work. The massive broadhead is removed and replaced with a small needle-like head with a hole in it. Through the hole is threaded a soft rag of cotton, wool, or linen and the whole thing is soaked in tar and wrapped around the head and top of the shaft. This is allowed to cool into a solid, flammable mass. Lighting a flaming arrow requires a move action and access to a considerable source of flame (larger than a torch, such as a good fire or a brazier). Any amount of magical flame will touch one off, as well. Once lit, a flaming arrow burns for 5 rounds, regardless of wind or rain, although being underwater or doused by a bucket will extinguish it. Flaming arrows do piercing damage as above, as well as 1d4 of fire damage to creatures struck. When fired at flammable structures like cloth wagon covers, thatch roofs, haystacks, etc, they ignite such things automatically the next round unless doused. On light wooden structures they ignite on a 1-2 on a d6 roll. On heavy wooden structures they ignite after three rounds on a roll of 1 on a d10. See the Environmental Effects rules for how to put things out again. Fire Arrows get really scary when you fire a few hundred of them at once....
For when you really need to send a message, but can't be bothered to walk all the way over there to do it in person...
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Flight Arrow 5 sp each 1d3 1d4 1d8 x3 90 ft 0.05 lbs each Piercing (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable
Flight arrows are designed for the maximum possible range. As a result, they use common diamond-tip arrowheads in good quality steel but in very small sizes. The shafts are made of kiln-dried lightweight woods, like alder, fir, spruce, or cedar. And the fletching is small, often made of chicken feathers rather than goose. The result is an arrow that is the same size as a regular arrow but weighs about half as much and is ridiculously streamlined. Flight arrows shoot like lightning, and are what are used in target shooting competitions.
Need a distraction?
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Whistling Arrow 1 gp each 1d3 1d4 1d8 x3 60 ft 0.1 lbs each Piercing (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable, Audible
Take a common arrow, replace that simple but elegant diamond point with a whistling cage made of bent rod, and you create a whistling arrow. These are audible in flight to a distance of 50 feet from the path of their flight, so they're pretty darn loud. They make a distinctive falling shriek as they fly that sounds eerie, especially if you get a few hundred going all at once. Great fun, but expensive. Whistling arrows even do reasonable damage, since they have a functional chisel point atop the whistling cage.
Composite Shortbow 2-Hand Projectile / Martial [edit]
Composite Shortbow
Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
75 gp see ammo see ammo see ammo see ammo see ammo 2 lbs Piercing (physical, common) or by ammunition
Weapon Qualities: Mighty, Non-Melee
The composite shortbow is a small but complex bow whose limbs are built up of various materials, usually in a recurve shape. You need at least two hands to use any bow, regardless of its size. You can use a composite shortbow while mounted. All composite bows are made with a particular strength rating (that is, each requires a minimum Strength modifier to use with proficiency). If your Strength bonus is less than the strength rating of the composite bow, you can't effectively use it, so you take a -2 penalty to-hit on attacks with it, per plus of Strength modifier greater than your own. The default composite bow requires a Strength modifier of +0 or higher to use with proficiency. A composite shortbow can be made with a high strength rating to take advantage of an above-average Strength score; this feature allows you to add your Strength bonus to damage, up to the maximum bonus indicated for the bow. Each point of Strength bonus granted by the bow adds 75 gp to its cost. If you have a penalty for low Strength, apply it to damage rolls when you use a composite shortbow, in addition to the to-hit penalty for insufficient Strength.

For purposes of Weapon Proficiency and similar feats, a composite shortbow is treated as if it were a shortbow. The composite shortbow belongs to the "Bows" weapon group.

Show / Hide Ammunition Types
Arrows don't kill people; people kill people. With arrows.
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Common Arrow 5 cp each 1d4 1d6 1d10 x3 60 ft 0.1 lbs each Piercing (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable
Common arrows are standard bow ammunition. They have sturdy diamond points on them, they're shafted with easy to get ash, maple, or willow, and they have reliable goose-feather fletchings. They do a bit less damage in shortbows than they do in longbows, and a bit less damage in longbows than they do in greatbows. A common arrow is denoted by that classic, deadly but easy to make, diamond-shaped point. It's good against armor, it's good against beasts, and it can be made quickly. You'll see these everywhere, and rightly so, because they're great.
Just rip it out and get it over with, ya baby.
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Barbed Arrow 2 gp each 1d3 1d4 1d8 x3 30 ft 0.5 lbs each Slashing (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable, Weapon Qualities: Special
The barbed arrow is a specialty product, since making that extravagant head takes a lot of time and skill. Barbed arrows are based off broadhead arrows, with all their characteristics, but they do the same damage as flight arrows. So why bother with them? Because to remove a barbed arrowhead is a deadly and dangerous process. To remove a barbed arrow after you've been struck by one and taken damage past any DR requires greater than animal intelligence and a heal check against an Easy DC. Either the victim or an adjacent creature can attempt to remove barb heads. Failing the heal check means removing the barbed arrow inflicts 1d6 of additional damage which cannot be reduced by DR. Ouch.
Some of these had little metal fists on the end, which is pretty fancy.
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Blunt Arrow 5 sp each 1d4 1d6 1d10 x3 30 ft 0.5 lbs each Bludgeoning (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable
Take a broadhead arrow and remove that big, deadly steel point. Replace it with a shaped boiled-leather cup into which a tightly rolled mass of cotton cloth is firmly wedged, presenting the firm, flat side of the roll toward the front of the arrow. What you get is the blunt arrow, which does bludgeoning damage rather than piercing damage. Why would you do this? Well, hunting of some delicate game species is easier with blunt arrows. Blunt arrows have the same construction as broadhead arrows, but to keep that heavy, flat tip pointed right, they suffer a reduced range increment.
Just an all-around better arrow than the common arrow.
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Broadhead Arrow 3 sp each 1d6 1d8 2d6 x3 30 ft 0.25 lbs each Piercing (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable
The obvious difference to a broadhead arrow is the head, which is a heavy delta-shaped thing with sharp wings and modest barbs. They have more steel in them than common heads, and the blacksmith has to spend some time on them compared to diamond points. The shaft of the broadhead arrow is made of a dense, heavy wood like buckeye, hickory, or dogwood to maintain the proper spine with that heavy head on it. And instead of three fletchings a broadhead arrow has four, to keep that big-winged head pointed the right direction. As a result, broadheads are expensive, short-ranged, and weigh over twice as much as a standard arrow, but they hit really hard.
Not actually that great against creatures, but a true nightmare against building roofs, and pitch-covered ship decks.
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Flaming Arrow 3 gp each 1d3 1d4 1d8 x3 30 ft 0.5 lbs each Piercing (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable
Flaming arrows are an age-old terror weapon. Flaming arrows are based off broadheads, as the dense, hardwood shafts are required to allow them to do their fiery work. The massive broadhead is removed and replaced with a small needle-like head with a hole in it. Through the hole is threaded a soft rag of cotton, wool, or linen and the whole thing is soaked in tar and wrapped around the head and top of the shaft. This is allowed to cool into a solid, flammable mass. Lighting a flaming arrow requires a move action and access to a considerable source of flame (larger than a torch, such as a good fire or a brazier). Any amount of magical flame will touch one off, as well. Once lit, a flaming arrow burns for 5 rounds, regardless of wind or rain, although being underwater or doused by a bucket will extinguish it. Flaming arrows do piercing damage as above, as well as 1d4 of fire damage to creatures struck. When fired at flammable structures like cloth wagon covers, thatch roofs, haystacks, etc, they ignite such things automatically the next round unless doused. On light wooden structures they ignite on a 1-2 on a d6 roll. On heavy wooden structures they ignite after three rounds on a roll of 1 on a d10. See the Environmental Effects rules for how to put things out again. Fire Arrows get really scary when you fire a few hundred of them at once....
For when you really need to send a message, but can't be bothered to walk all the way over there to do it in person...
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Flight Arrow 5 sp each 1d3 1d4 1d8 x3 90 ft 0.05 lbs each Piercing (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable
Flight arrows are designed for the maximum possible range. As a result, they use common diamond-tip arrowheads in good quality steel but in very small sizes. The shafts are made of kiln-dried lightweight woods, like alder, fir, spruce, or cedar. And the fletching is small, often made of chicken feathers rather than goose. The result is an arrow that is the same size as a regular arrow but weighs about half as much and is ridiculously streamlined. Flight arrows shoot like lightning, and are what are used in target shooting competitions.
Need a distraction?
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Whistling Arrow 1 gp each 1d3 1d4 1d8 x3 60 ft 0.1 lbs each Piercing (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable, Audible
Take a common arrow, replace that simple but elegant diamond point with a whistling cage made of bent rod, and you create a whistling arrow. These are audible in flight to a distance of 50 feet from the path of their flight, so they're pretty darn loud. They make a distinctive falling shriek as they fly that sounds eerie, especially if you get a few hundred going all at once. Great fun, but expensive. Whistling arrows even do reasonable damage, since they have a functional chisel point atop the whistling cage.


Exotic Projectile Weapons

Hand Crossbow Light Projectile / Exotic [edit]
Hand Crossbow
Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
100 gp see ammo see ammo see ammo see ammo see ammo 2 lbs Piercing (physical, common) or by ammunition
Weapon Qualities: Mighty, Non-Melee
A hand crossbow is a very small crossbow, typically intended to be fired early in a combat and discarded, to be retrieved and loaded after the fight ends. They are favored by drow as a means of delivering poisons. You can draw back the action of a hand crossbow by hand. You can shoot, but not load, a hand crossbow with one hand at no penalty. You can shoot a hand crossbow with each hand, but you take a penalty on attack rolls as if attacking with two light weapons. Hand crossbows can be purchased in higher draw weights to match the Strength bonus of the wielder. This costs 25 gp per Strength mod plus added.

Load: Loading a hand crossbow can be performed with either a move action or an attack action. The reload time can be reduced by taking the Rapid Reload (Feat).

The hand crossbow belongs to the "Crossbows" weapon group.

Show / Hide Ammunition Types
Simple, effective, and deadly.
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Crossbow Bolt 1 sp each 1d3 1d4 1d8 19-20 / x2 30 ft 0.1 lbs each Piercing (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable
Crossbow bolts are thick, graceless things compared to arrows. In keeping with the simplicity of the crossbow, the bolts are not sophisticated, either. Arrows must be carefully made with just the right amount of flex, or spine, in the long, slim shafts. Bolts are far too thick and short to flex, even under the brutal firing conditions of heavy crossbows or hand onagers. Bolts have simple conical tips hammered of mild steel, massive shafts of heavy, cheap woods like greenheart, swamp oak, or sycamore, and durable fletching made of thin sections of cherry or pine. They take little to no skill to make, but they do have to be consistently made, so they are all the same size. Despite their low sophistication, nobody can argue that bolts lack in power, and they have won many, many battles.
Hurts as much coming out as going in.
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Barbed Bolt 5 gp each 1d4 1d6 1d10 19-20 / x2 20 ft 0.25 lbs each Piercing (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable
Barbed crossbow bolts are just about the nastiest things you'll ever see. They are stout, brutal devices, whose wicked barbs make the terrible wounds already inflicted by a crossbow much, much worse. Unlike normal bolts, barbed bolts are difficult to make and thus are expensive. They are typically made of the same woods as arrows, although in a thick, strong, graceless fashion, and are often fletched with thin shavings of horn or turtle shell. The massive barbed heads require considerable skill to forge and sharpen. Barbed bolts are heavier than standard bolts, and cannot be fired as far as standard bolts. Pointing a crossbow loaded with a barbed bolt at a someone is a very clear statement that you mean business.
Admit it. You were expecting a boxing glove on the end, weren't you?
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Blunt Bolt 5 cp each 1d3 1d4 1d8 19-20 / x2 15 ft 0.1 lbs each Bludgeoning (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable
Blunt crossbow bolts have the simple conical tip of mild steel replaced by a small round bit of glued-on iron that covers the end of the thick wooden shaft. This means blunt bolts can be made without a blacksmith, just punched out bits of iron. As a result, the cost of blunt crossbow bolts is half that of standard bolts. Blunt bolts weigh the same and do the same amount of damage as regular bolts, although the range is halved. In a hand onager, blunt bolts grant the weapon the Sunder quality at range, since the Hand Onager is also a Siege Weapon.
Greatbow 2-Hand Projectile / Exotic [edit]
Greatbow
Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
150 gp 1d8 1d10 2d8 x3 120 ft 6 lbs Piercing or by ammunition
Weapon Qualities: Non-Melee
The greatbow is a rare but extremely powerful weapon. Also called a double bow or war bow, the greatbow is physically not much larger than a longbow. However, because of the exotic double-limbed design, the greatbow has a much heavier draw weight and a considerably longer draw than a longbow of equal size, while the limb speed is considerably higher, since thinner, more responsive limbs can be used. Since a greatbow must be drawn back further than a longbow (usually to the point of the jaw or even further), it requires an exotic weapon proficiency to use properly. The greatbow belongs to the "Bows" weapon group.
Show / Hide Ammunition Types
Arrows don't kill people; people kill people. With arrows.
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Common Arrow 5 cp each 1d8 1d10 1d8 x3 120 ft 0.1 lbs each Piercing (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable
Common arrows are standard bow ammunition. They have sturdy diamond points on them, they're shafted with easy to get ash, maple, or willow, and they have reliable goose-feather fletchings. They do a bit less damage in shortbows than they do in longbows, and a bit less damage in longbows than they do in greatbows. A common arrow is denoted by that classic, deadly but easy to make, diamond-shaped point. It's good against armor, it's good against beasts, and it can be made quickly. You'll see these everywhere, and rightly so, because they're great.
Just rip it out and get it over with, ya baby.
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Barbed Arrow 2 gp each 1d6 1d8 2d6 x3 60 ft 0.5 lbs each Slashing (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable, Weapon Qualities: Special
The barbed arrow is a specialty product, since making that extravagant head takes a lot of time and skill. Barbed arrows are based off broadhead arrows, with all their characteristics, but they do the same damage as flight arrows. So why bother with them? Because to remove a barbed arrowhead is a deadly and dangerous process. To remove a barbed arrow after you've been struck by one and taken damage past any DR requires greater than animal intelligence and a heal check against an Easy DC. Either the victim or an adjacent creature can attempt to remove barb heads. Failing the heal check means removing the barbed arrow inflicts 1d6 of additional damage which cannot be reduced by DR. Ouch.
Some of these had little metal fists on the end, which is pretty fancy.
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Blunt Arrow 5 sp each 1d8 1d10 2d8 x3 60 ft 0.5 lbs each Bludgeoning (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable
Take a broadhead arrow and remove that big, deadly steel point. Replace it with a shaped boiled-leather cup into which a tightly rolled mass of cotton cloth is firmly wedged, presenting the firm, flat side of the roll toward the front of the arrow. What you get is the blunt arrow, which does bludgeoning damage rather than piercing damage. Why would you do this? Well, hunting of some delicate game species is easier with blunt arrows. Blunt arrows have the same construction as broadhead arrows, but to keep that heavy, flat tip pointed right, they suffer a reduced range increment.
Just an all-around better arrow than the common arrow.
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Broadhead Arrow 3 sp each 1d10 1d12 3d6 x3 60 ft 0.25 lbs each Piercing (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable
The obvious difference to a broadhead arrow is the head, which is a heavy delta-shaped thing with sharp wings and modest barbs. They have more steel in them than common heads, and the blacksmith has to spend some time on them compared to diamond points. The shaft of the broadhead arrow is made of a dense, heavy wood like buckeye, hickory, or dogwood to maintain the proper spine with that heavy head on it. And instead of three fletchings a broadhead arrow has four, to keep that big-winged head pointed the right direction. As a result, broadheads are expensive, short-ranged, and weigh over twice as much as a standard arrow, but they hit really hard.
Not actually that great against creatures, but a true nightmare against building roofs, and pitch-covered ship decks.
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Flaming Arrow 3 gp each 1d6 1d8 2d6 x3 60 ft 0.5 lbs each Piercing (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable, Special
Flaming arrows are an age-old terror weapon. Flaming arrows are based off broadheads, as the dense, hardwood shafts are required to allow them to do their fiery work. The massive broadhead is removed and replaced with a small needle-like head with a hole in it. Through the hole is threaded a soft rag of cotton, wool, or linen and the whole thing is soaked in tar and wrapped around the head and top of the shaft. This is allowed to cool into a solid, flammable mass. Lighting a flaming arrow requires a move action and access to a considerable source of flame (larger than a torch, such as a good fire or a brazier). Any amount of magical flame will touch one off, as well. Once lit, a flaming arrow burns for 5 rounds, regardless of wind or rain, although being underwater or doused by a bucket will extinguish it. Flaming arrows do piercing damage as above, as well as 1d4 of fire damage to creatures struck. When fired at flammable structures like cloth wagon covers, thatch roofs, haystacks, etc, they ignite such things automatically the next round unless doused. On light wooden structures they ignite on a 1-2 on a d6 roll. On heavy wooden structures they ignite after three rounds on a roll of 1 on a d10. See the Environmental Effects rules for how to put things out again. Fire Arrows get really scary when you fire a few hundred of them at once....
For when you really need to send a message, but can't be bothered to walk all the way over there to do it in person...
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Flight Arrow 5 sp each 1d6 1d8 2d6 x3 160 ft 0.05 lbs each Piercing (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable
Flight arrows are designed for the maximum possible range. As a result, they use common diamond-tip arrowheads in good quality steel but in very small sizes. The shafts are made of kiln-dried lightweight woods, like alder, fir, spruce, or cedar. And the fletching is small, often made of chicken feathers rather than goose. The result is an arrow that is the same size as a regular arrow but weighs about half as much and is ridiculously streamlined. Flight arrows shoot like lightning, and are what are used in target shooting competitions.
Need a distraction?
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Whistling Arrow 1 gp each 1d6 1d8 2d6 x3 120 ft 0.1 lbs each Piercing (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable, Audible
Take a common arrow, replace that simple but elegant diamond point with a whistling cage made of bent rod, and you create a whistling arrow. These are audible in flight to a distance of 50 feet from the path of their flight, so they're pretty darn loud. They make a distinctive falling shriek as they fly that sounds eerie, especially if you get a few hundred going all at once. Great fun, but expensive. Whistling arrows even do reasonable damage, since they have a functional chisel point atop the whistling cage.
Composite Greatbow 2-Hand Projectile / Exotic [edit]
Composite Greatbow
Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
200 gp see ammo see ammo see ammo see ammo see ammo 6 lbs Piercing (physical, common) or by ammunition
Weapon Qualities: Mighty, Non-Melee
This is the composite version of the greatbow. Adjust cost per composite longbow, +200 gp per point of Strength mod applied to damage. For the purposes of any feats or abilities, the composite greatbow counts as a greatbow. The composite greatbow belongs to the "Bows" weapon group.
Show / Hide Ammunition Types
Arrows don't kill people; people kill people. With arrows.
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Common Arrow 5 cp each 1d8 1d10 1d8 x3 120 ft 0.1 lbs each Piercing (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable
Common arrows are standard bow ammunition. They have sturdy diamond points on them, they're shafted with easy to get ash, maple, or willow, and they have reliable goose-feather fletchings. They do a bit less damage in shortbows than they do in longbows, and a bit less damage in longbows than they do in greatbows. A common arrow is denoted by that classic, deadly but easy to make, diamond-shaped point. It's good against armor, it's good against beasts, and it can be made quickly. You'll see these everywhere, and rightly so, because they're great.
Just rip it out and get it over with, ya baby.
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Barbed Arrow 2 gp each 1d6 1d8 2d6 x3 60 ft 0.5 lbs each Slashing (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable, Weapon Qualities: Special
The barbed arrow is a specialty product, since making that extravagant head takes a lot of time and skill. Barbed arrows are based off broadhead arrows, with all their characteristics, but they do the same damage as flight arrows. So why bother with them? Because to remove a barbed arrowhead is a deadly and dangerous process. To remove a barbed arrow after you've been struck by one and taken damage past any DR requires greater than animal intelligence and a heal check against an Easy DC. Either the victim or an adjacent creature can attempt to remove barb heads. Failing the heal check means removing the barbed arrow inflicts 1d6 of additional damage which cannot be reduced by DR. Ouch.
Some of these had little metal fists on the end, which is pretty fancy.
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Blunt Arrow 5 sp each 1d8 1d10 2d8 x3 60 ft 0.5 lbs each Bludgeoning (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable
Take a broadhead arrow and remove that big, deadly steel point. Replace it with a shaped boiled-leather cup into which a tightly rolled mass of cotton cloth is firmly wedged, presenting the firm, flat side of the roll toward the front of the arrow. What you get is the blunt arrow, which does bludgeoning damage rather than piercing damage. Why would you do this? Well, hunting of some delicate game species is easier with blunt arrows. Blunt arrows have the same construction as broadhead arrows, but to keep that heavy, flat tip pointed right, they suffer a reduced range increment.
Just an all-around better arrow than the common arrow.
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Broadhead Arrow 3 sp each 1d10 1d12 3d6 x3 60 ft 0.25 lbs each Piercing (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable
The obvious difference to a broadhead arrow is the head, which is a heavy delta-shaped thing with sharp wings and modest barbs. They have more steel in them than common heads, and the blacksmith has to spend some time on them compared to diamond points. The shaft of the broadhead arrow is made of a dense, heavy wood like buckeye, hickory, or dogwood to maintain the proper spine with that heavy head on it. And instead of three fletchings a broadhead arrow has four, to keep that big-winged head pointed the right direction. As a result, broadheads are expensive, short-ranged, and weigh over twice as much as a standard arrow, but they hit really hard.
Not actually that great against creatures, but a true nightmare against building roofs, and pitch-covered ship decks.
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Flaming Arrow 3 gp each 1d6 1d8 2d6 x3 60 ft 0.5 lbs each Piercing (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable, Special
Flaming arrows are an age-old terror weapon. Flaming arrows are based off broadheads, as the dense, hardwood shafts are required to allow them to do their fiery work. The massive broadhead is removed and replaced with a small needle-like head with a hole in it. Through the hole is threaded a soft rag of cotton, wool, or linen and the whole thing is soaked in tar and wrapped around the head and top of the shaft. This is allowed to cool into a solid, flammable mass. Lighting a flaming arrow requires a move action and access to a considerable source of flame (larger than a torch, such as a good fire or a brazier). Any amount of magical flame will touch one off, as well. Once lit, a flaming arrow burns for 5 rounds, regardless of wind or rain, although being underwater or doused by a bucket will extinguish it. Flaming arrows do piercing damage as above, as well as 1d4 of fire damage to creatures struck. When fired at flammable structures like cloth wagon covers, thatch roofs, haystacks, etc, they ignite such things automatically the next round unless doused. On light wooden structures they ignite on a 1-2 on a d6 roll. On heavy wooden structures they ignite after three rounds on a roll of 1 on a d10. See the Environmental Effects rules for how to put things out again. Fire Arrows get really scary when you fire a few hundred of them at once....
For when you really need to send a message, but can't be bothered to walk all the way over there to do it in person...
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Flight Arrow 5 sp each 1d6 1d8 2d6 x3 160 ft 0.05 lbs each Piercing (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable
Flight arrows are designed for the maximum possible range. As a result, they use common diamond-tip arrowheads in good quality steel but in very small sizes. The shafts are made of kiln-dried lightweight woods, like alder, fir, spruce, or cedar. And the fletching is small, often made of chicken feathers rather than goose. The result is an arrow that is the same size as a regular arrow but weighs about half as much and is ridiculously streamlined. Flight arrows shoot like lightning, and are what are used in target shooting competitions.
Need a distraction?
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Whistling Arrow 1 gp each 1d6 1d8 2d6 x3 120 ft 0.1 lbs each Piercing (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable, Audible
Take a common arrow, replace that simple but elegant diamond point with a whistling cage made of bent rod, and you create a whistling arrow. These are audible in flight to a distance of 50 feet from the path of their flight, so they're pretty darn loud. They make a distinctive falling shriek as they fly that sounds eerie, especially if you get a few hundred going all at once. Great fun, but expensive. Whistling arrows even do reasonable damage, since they have a functional chisel point atop the whistling cage.
Hand Onager 2-Hand Projectile / Exotic [edit]
Hand Onager
Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
250 gp see ammo see ammo see ammo see ammo see ammo 18 lbs Piercing (physical, common) or by ammunition
Weapon Qualities: Handy, Massive, Mighty, Non-Melee
The hand onager is a powerful ranged weapon rarely seen in use. A hand onager uses twisted skeins of spider silk to place tension upon a pair of sturdy wooden arms. It is treated as a heavy crossbow and a siege weapon to determine what feats are usable with it. Unlike lesser crossbow-class weapons, a hand onager may never be fired one-handed under any circumstances. A hand onager fires the same ammo a heavy crossbow fires, but with significantly greater force. A large part of this is due to the fact that a hand onager does not keep the bowstring under tension when it is not cocked, so it can be made with much heavier draw weights without worrying about breaking the string. Even more important, for a given size, a hand onager can be drawn back much further than a crossbow, and the longer length of draw allows it to shoot much harder even at the same draw weight. In addition, a hand onager can be obtained in Mighty versions at a price of 250gp per Strength plus.

Load: Cranking back the arms of a hand onager to reload can be performed with either a move action or an attack action. The reload time can be reduced by taking the Rapid Reload (Feat).

The hand onager belongs to the "Crossbows" and "Siege Engines" weapon groups

Show / Hide Ammunition Types
Simple, effective, and deadly.
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Crossbow Bolt 1 sp each 2d6 2d8 3d8 19-20 / x2 120 ft 0.1 lbs each Piercing (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable
Crossbow bolts are thick, graceless things compared to arrows. In keeping with the simplicity of the crossbow, the bolts are not sophisticated, either. Arrows must be carefully made with just the right amount of flex, or spine, in the long, slim shafts. Bolts are far too thick and short to flex, even under the brutal firing conditions of heavy crossbows or hand onagers. Bolts have simple conical tips hammered of mild steel, massive shafts of heavy, cheap woods like greenheart, swamp oak, or sycamore, and durable fletching made of thin sections of cherry or pine. They take little to no skill to make, but they do have to be consistently made, so they are all the same size. Despite their low sophistication, nobody can argue that bolts lack in power, and they have won many, many battles.
Hurts as much coming out as going in.
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Barbed Bolt 5 gp each 2d8 2d10 4d8 19-20 / x2 80 ft 0.25 lbs each Piercing (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable
Barbed crossbow bolts are just about the nastiest things you'll ever see. They are stout, brutal devices, whose wicked barbs make the terrible wounds already inflicted by a crossbow much, much worse. Unlike normal bolts, barbed bolts are difficult to make and thus are expensive. They are typically made of the same woods as arrows, although in a thick, strong, graceless fashion, and are often fletched with thin shavings of horn or turtle shell. The massive barbed heads require considerable skill to forge and sharpen. Barbed bolts are heavier than standard bolts, and cannot be fired as far as standard bolts. Pointing a crossbow loaded with a barbed bolt at a someone is a very clear statement that you mean business.
Admit it. You were expecting a boxing glove on the end, weren't you?
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Blunt Bolt 5 cp each 2d6 2d8 3d8 19-20 / x2 60 ft 0.1 lbs each Bludgeoning (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable
Blunt crossbow bolts have the simple conical tip of mild steel replaced by a small round bit of glued-on iron that covers the end of the thick wooden shaft. This means blunt bolts can be made without a blacksmith, just punched out bits of iron. As a result, the cost of blunt crossbow bolts is half that of standard bolts. Blunt bolts weigh the same and do the same amount of damage as regular bolts, although the range is halved. In a hand onager, blunt bolts grant the weapon the Sunder quality at range, since the Hand Onager is also a Siege Weapon.
Stonebow 2-Hand Projectile / Exotic [edit]
Stonebow
Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
250 gp see ammo see ammo see ammo see ammo see ammo 8 lbs Bludgeoning (physical, common) or by ammunition
Weapon Qualities: Alchemical, Bullets, Mighty, Non-Melee
A stonebow is a modified version of a composite greatbow, except that the handle portion of the bow is offset to one side by a couple of inches with an integrated wrist brace, and a small wooden ring is woven into the bowstring where you would normally nock the arrows. This ring is used as a "cup" in which various sling or thrown projectiles are nestled, and then shot forth by the stonebow. A stonebow cannot fire arrows, but it can be used to fire anything a sling can throw, granting more range and greater impact. A stonebow cannot use found rocks as ammunition. The power of the weapon and the tight tolerances of the offset make manufactured ammunition the only kind possible. Each point of Strength adjustment adds +250 gp to the price of a stonebow. The stonebow belongs to the "Bows" weapon group.
Show / Hide Ammunition Types
These ceramic sling bullets are formed of dense white clay and fired to steely hardness.
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Sling Bullet 1 cp each 1d8 1d10 2d8 x3 100 ft 0.25 lbs each Bludgeoning (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable
Sling bullets are dense, hard pellets with either a round or football shape to them. They can be made of metal, bone, stone, or even hard woods. They all weigh a quarter of a pound for the medium sized version of them. They are uniformly cheap, ten for a silver piece. Exotic sling bullets may be made of gemstones, teeth, or other things.
You could hold these ten bullets in the palm of your hand, and yet they weigh seven and a half pounds.
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Dural Bullet 5 sp each 1d10 1d12 3d6 19-20/x2 50 ft 0.75 lbs each Bludgeoning (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable
Dural is a rare type of stone mined far underground which is valuable for its extreme density and hardness. Dural is unsuited to most uses, it is brittle in thin cross-sections and easily cracks and flakes if it is shaped into flat surfaces. Most Dural is used in the form of sand, as an extremely potent abrasive in sandpaper. Some Dural is mined in large chunks and formed into spheres, which avoids the worst of its spalling property. In this form Dural can be used for ranged weapons and ammunition. Dural increases the cost of ammo by five times, raises the damage and critical chance considerably, lowers the range, and triples the weight of the ammo. Many well-heeled adventurers consider the expense and short range of Dural ammunition well worth the tradeoffs.
It may seem silly now, but these things are scary as hell in the dark.
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Groaning Bullet 1 gp each 1 1 1 x2 150 ft 0.1 lbs each Bludgeoning (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Audible, Expendable
These sling bullets are riddled with cunning perforations that cause them to emit an eerie moan audible during the last 50 feet of their flight path. They are quite light and frangible, pulverizing into nearly harmless shards when they strike a target and inflicting only a single point of damage, although magic and strength can increase that considerably. Despite their light weight they are extremely aerodynamic and fly very far indeed.
Alchemist Bomb
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Alchemical Bomb free 3 + bomb 3 + bomb 3 + bomb x2 50 ft 0.25 lbs each Bludgeoning (physical, common) + bomb effect(s)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable
Only Alchemists have access to this type of ammunition, but they are highly versatile. With the use of discoveries, alchemical bombs can be modified to do a huge variety of damage types, status conditions, and other nasty surprises for the unwary.
Decorative bottle are optional, but for the prices you pay for this stuff, you deserve it.
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Alchemical Creation varies 3 + effect 3 + effect 3 + effect x2 40 ft 0.25 lbs each Bludgeoning (physical, common) + creation effect(s)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable
Some alchemical creations are meant to be thrown, but can also be propelled with the use of a sling, slingstaff, or stonebow (or any other weapon that projects bullet-type ammunition). A complete list of alchemical creations can be found on the Alchemical Creations page, but only the entries which show a range increment may be used here.
Some REALLY expensive rocks here.
Ammo Type Cost Sm Dmg Med Dmg Large Dmg Crit Range Wt Type
Skiprock 3 gp 1d8 1d10 2d8 x2 40 ft 0.25 lbs each Bludgeoning (physical, common)
Weapon Qualities: Expendable, Non-Melee, Ricochet
Skiprocks are small puck-shaped rocks that can be thrown, or fired from a sling, slingstaff, or stonebow. Skiprocks require the Exotic Weapon Proficiency feat to use proficiently. Although skiprocks can be used as ammunition, they are primarily thrown weapons. Because of this, if a skiprock is enchanted to at least +1, it gains the Returning weapon property and loses the Expendable quality. This means that a single enchanted skiprock can be used as ammunition multiple times per round. Skiprocks belong to the "Thrown" weapon group.