![]() ![]() ![]() In this case, it's worth spending expensive page space repeating it, so that everything a class needs is in one place.Quests & Puzzle Solutions - Act One How To Save The Owlbear Cub Where To Find Mayrina (& How To Save Her) How To Disable The Guardian Statues How to Free Shadowheart (Woman in Pod) Find Your Belongings Walkthrough Defiled Temple Moon Puzzle Solution How To Save Arabella What Is The Book Of Dead Gods? How To Help Edowin How To Disable The Sarcophagus Trap (Overgrown Ruins/Dank Crypt) How To Help Alfira Finish Her Song How to Use The Rune of The Wolf How To Expose Kagha Where To Find The Dowry (& Should You Return It?) Baldur's Gate 3: Where To Find Miri How To Save Everyone From The Burning Building How To Get Into The Toll House Secret Room (Stone Chair Puzzle) How To Heal Padirna's Legs & Open The Pantry Chest Baldur's Gate 3: How To Save Findal How To Help Edowin How to Find and Save the Mushroom Picker How to Find and Save the Mushroom Picker How to Finish the Masterwork Weapon How to Finish the Masterwork Weapon How To Save Liam How To Save Liam How To Save Thulla How To Save Thulla How to Free the Deep Gnomes in Grymforge How to Free the Deep Gnomes in Grymforge How To Save The Kuo-Toa From BOOOAL How To Save The Kuo-Toa From BOOOAL How to Use the Adamantine Forge How to Use the Adamantine Forge Actually, Proficiency Bonus is the same for everyone of a given level regardless of class, but having a separate "everyone's Proficiency Bonus table" would just scatter the information around the book and make it that much harder to use.Being in separate tables doesn't imply that Proficiency doesn't apply to the spells. Proficiency Bonus is the same for every Rogue of a given level, 1 so it goes in the main Rogue table spell details are not the same for every Rogue, so they go in a separate table. ![]() Looking at it another way: it wouldn't make sense to repeat Proficiency Bonus in both tables (it would be a waste of expensive page space), and it wouldn't make sense to combine the tables (all the spell stuff would be confusing for non–Arcane Trickster Rogue players), so it makes the most sense to have these things separate. Rogues don't normally get spells, so the stuff that's normally in one table for a spellcaster - including proficiency bonus and spells known/slots - is for an Arcane Trickster split across the Rogue table and the Arcane Trickster table. The Arcane Trickster though is a set of added abilities on top of Rogue. Spellcasters usually have spells as a core feature and they have all their level-based numbers in one table (see the Sorcerer just a few pages further on, on page 100). ![]() It's not missing from the table, it's just in another table on page 95, along with all the other core Rogue numbers. The rule says you add your proficiency bonus to spell attack rolls, so you do. ![]()
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