In the descriptions of monster action options, what's the difference between “one target” and “one creature”?

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Something I have been wondering about since I started DM'ing: in the Monster Manual, most actions specify "one target", while some have "one creature".



Example with Ghouls & Ghasts: Bite specifies one creature, Claws specify one target.



What is the difference? Does it matter for regular play?










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  • 2




    +1, Nice find. Welcome to the stack. We look forward to your next questions (and answers too!)
    – Mindwin
    Dec 17 at 13:52











  • @Mindwin Thanks!
    – Thijs B.
    Dec 17 at 14:57















29














Something I have been wondering about since I started DM'ing: in the Monster Manual, most actions specify "one target", while some have "one creature".



Example with Ghouls & Ghasts: Bite specifies one creature, Claws specify one target.



What is the difference? Does it matter for regular play?










share|improve this question



















  • 2




    +1, Nice find. Welcome to the stack. We look forward to your next questions (and answers too!)
    – Mindwin
    Dec 17 at 13:52











  • @Mindwin Thanks!
    – Thijs B.
    Dec 17 at 14:57













29












29








29







Something I have been wondering about since I started DM'ing: in the Monster Manual, most actions specify "one target", while some have "one creature".



Example with Ghouls & Ghasts: Bite specifies one creature, Claws specify one target.



What is the difference? Does it matter for regular play?










share|improve this question















Something I have been wondering about since I started DM'ing: in the Monster Manual, most actions specify "one target", while some have "one creature".



Example with Ghouls & Ghasts: Bite specifies one creature, Claws specify one target.



What is the difference? Does it matter for regular play?







dnd-5e monsters targeting






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edited Dec 18 at 1:54









V2Blast

19.6k356121




19.6k356121










asked Dec 17 at 10:15









Thijs B.

148127




148127







  • 2




    +1, Nice find. Welcome to the stack. We look forward to your next questions (and answers too!)
    – Mindwin
    Dec 17 at 13:52











  • @Mindwin Thanks!
    – Thijs B.
    Dec 17 at 14:57












  • 2




    +1, Nice find. Welcome to the stack. We look forward to your next questions (and answers too!)
    – Mindwin
    Dec 17 at 13:52











  • @Mindwin Thanks!
    – Thijs B.
    Dec 17 at 14:57







2




2




+1, Nice find. Welcome to the stack. We look forward to your next questions (and answers too!)
– Mindwin
Dec 17 at 13:52





+1, Nice find. Welcome to the stack. We look forward to your next questions (and answers too!)
– Mindwin
Dec 17 at 13:52













@Mindwin Thanks!
– Thijs B.
Dec 17 at 14:57




@Mindwin Thanks!
– Thijs B.
Dec 17 at 14:57










1 Answer
1






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oldest

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30














A target includes: creatures, objects, and locations.



The PHB p194 states:




Pick a target ...: a creature, an object or a location.




For spells, PHB p204 states:




A spell's description tells you whether the spell targets creatures, objects, or a point of origin...




The Ghoul can use its Bite Action to target only other creatures, e.g. PCs, NPCs, beasts and other monsters. It cannot use the Bite action to target an object, e.g. a door.



The Ghoul can use its Claws Action to target a creature or an object. For example, to do damage to a door.






share|improve this answer


















  • 12




    The ghoul can, in a 10 wide by 10 tall long corridor, bite a 10x10 gelatinous cube whose corners are not reachable, but it cannot bite the door (unless it is a mimic... good for detecting mimics). Oh, 5e, what realism. Lolz. +1'd
    – Mindwin
    Dec 17 at 13:51







  • 4




    @davidrice From the makers of "Magic the Lawyering..."
    – Mindwin
    Dec 17 at 17:39






  • 7




    @Mindwin It can still probably bite the door (and a real treasure chest), it just can't do so as an attack in RAW... now I have the image of a random ghoul just curiously gnawing on everything around it to see if it should scratch it or bite it harder...
    – MrSpudtastic
    Dec 17 at 17:47






  • 1




    Spells often have similar restrictions. Most can only target creatures while only a few can target objects. For example, fire bolt can target a creature or object while eldritch blast can only target creatures.
    – Allan Mills
    Dec 17 at 21:15






  • 1




    @MrSpudtastic RAW you cannot perform an action on an invalid target, it fails. Mimic or bust. Of course we are not OCD DMs.
    – Mindwin
    Dec 18 at 14:28










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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









30














A target includes: creatures, objects, and locations.



The PHB p194 states:




Pick a target ...: a creature, an object or a location.




For spells, PHB p204 states:




A spell's description tells you whether the spell targets creatures, objects, or a point of origin...




The Ghoul can use its Bite Action to target only other creatures, e.g. PCs, NPCs, beasts and other monsters. It cannot use the Bite action to target an object, e.g. a door.



The Ghoul can use its Claws Action to target a creature or an object. For example, to do damage to a door.






share|improve this answer


















  • 12




    The ghoul can, in a 10 wide by 10 tall long corridor, bite a 10x10 gelatinous cube whose corners are not reachable, but it cannot bite the door (unless it is a mimic... good for detecting mimics). Oh, 5e, what realism. Lolz. +1'd
    – Mindwin
    Dec 17 at 13:51







  • 4




    @davidrice From the makers of "Magic the Lawyering..."
    – Mindwin
    Dec 17 at 17:39






  • 7




    @Mindwin It can still probably bite the door (and a real treasure chest), it just can't do so as an attack in RAW... now I have the image of a random ghoul just curiously gnawing on everything around it to see if it should scratch it or bite it harder...
    – MrSpudtastic
    Dec 17 at 17:47






  • 1




    Spells often have similar restrictions. Most can only target creatures while only a few can target objects. For example, fire bolt can target a creature or object while eldritch blast can only target creatures.
    – Allan Mills
    Dec 17 at 21:15






  • 1




    @MrSpudtastic RAW you cannot perform an action on an invalid target, it fails. Mimic or bust. Of course we are not OCD DMs.
    – Mindwin
    Dec 18 at 14:28















30














A target includes: creatures, objects, and locations.



The PHB p194 states:




Pick a target ...: a creature, an object or a location.




For spells, PHB p204 states:




A spell's description tells you whether the spell targets creatures, objects, or a point of origin...




The Ghoul can use its Bite Action to target only other creatures, e.g. PCs, NPCs, beasts and other monsters. It cannot use the Bite action to target an object, e.g. a door.



The Ghoul can use its Claws Action to target a creature or an object. For example, to do damage to a door.






share|improve this answer


















  • 12




    The ghoul can, in a 10 wide by 10 tall long corridor, bite a 10x10 gelatinous cube whose corners are not reachable, but it cannot bite the door (unless it is a mimic... good for detecting mimics). Oh, 5e, what realism. Lolz. +1'd
    – Mindwin
    Dec 17 at 13:51







  • 4




    @davidrice From the makers of "Magic the Lawyering..."
    – Mindwin
    Dec 17 at 17:39






  • 7




    @Mindwin It can still probably bite the door (and a real treasure chest), it just can't do so as an attack in RAW... now I have the image of a random ghoul just curiously gnawing on everything around it to see if it should scratch it or bite it harder...
    – MrSpudtastic
    Dec 17 at 17:47






  • 1




    Spells often have similar restrictions. Most can only target creatures while only a few can target objects. For example, fire bolt can target a creature or object while eldritch blast can only target creatures.
    – Allan Mills
    Dec 17 at 21:15






  • 1




    @MrSpudtastic RAW you cannot perform an action on an invalid target, it fails. Mimic or bust. Of course we are not OCD DMs.
    – Mindwin
    Dec 18 at 14:28













30












30








30






A target includes: creatures, objects, and locations.



The PHB p194 states:




Pick a target ...: a creature, an object or a location.




For spells, PHB p204 states:




A spell's description tells you whether the spell targets creatures, objects, or a point of origin...




The Ghoul can use its Bite Action to target only other creatures, e.g. PCs, NPCs, beasts and other monsters. It cannot use the Bite action to target an object, e.g. a door.



The Ghoul can use its Claws Action to target a creature or an object. For example, to do damage to a door.






share|improve this answer














A target includes: creatures, objects, and locations.



The PHB p194 states:




Pick a target ...: a creature, an object or a location.




For spells, PHB p204 states:




A spell's description tells you whether the spell targets creatures, objects, or a point of origin...




The Ghoul can use its Bite Action to target only other creatures, e.g. PCs, NPCs, beasts and other monsters. It cannot use the Bite action to target an object, e.g. a door.



The Ghoul can use its Claws Action to target a creature or an object. For example, to do damage to a door.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Dec 17 at 11:14

























answered Dec 17 at 10:46









Richard Smith

35628




35628







  • 12




    The ghoul can, in a 10 wide by 10 tall long corridor, bite a 10x10 gelatinous cube whose corners are not reachable, but it cannot bite the door (unless it is a mimic... good for detecting mimics). Oh, 5e, what realism. Lolz. +1'd
    – Mindwin
    Dec 17 at 13:51







  • 4




    @davidrice From the makers of "Magic the Lawyering..."
    – Mindwin
    Dec 17 at 17:39






  • 7




    @Mindwin It can still probably bite the door (and a real treasure chest), it just can't do so as an attack in RAW... now I have the image of a random ghoul just curiously gnawing on everything around it to see if it should scratch it or bite it harder...
    – MrSpudtastic
    Dec 17 at 17:47






  • 1




    Spells often have similar restrictions. Most can only target creatures while only a few can target objects. For example, fire bolt can target a creature or object while eldritch blast can only target creatures.
    – Allan Mills
    Dec 17 at 21:15






  • 1




    @MrSpudtastic RAW you cannot perform an action on an invalid target, it fails. Mimic or bust. Of course we are not OCD DMs.
    – Mindwin
    Dec 18 at 14:28












  • 12




    The ghoul can, in a 10 wide by 10 tall long corridor, bite a 10x10 gelatinous cube whose corners are not reachable, but it cannot bite the door (unless it is a mimic... good for detecting mimics). Oh, 5e, what realism. Lolz. +1'd
    – Mindwin
    Dec 17 at 13:51







  • 4




    @davidrice From the makers of "Magic the Lawyering..."
    – Mindwin
    Dec 17 at 17:39






  • 7




    @Mindwin It can still probably bite the door (and a real treasure chest), it just can't do so as an attack in RAW... now I have the image of a random ghoul just curiously gnawing on everything around it to see if it should scratch it or bite it harder...
    – MrSpudtastic
    Dec 17 at 17:47






  • 1




    Spells often have similar restrictions. Most can only target creatures while only a few can target objects. For example, fire bolt can target a creature or object while eldritch blast can only target creatures.
    – Allan Mills
    Dec 17 at 21:15






  • 1




    @MrSpudtastic RAW you cannot perform an action on an invalid target, it fails. Mimic or bust. Of course we are not OCD DMs.
    – Mindwin
    Dec 18 at 14:28







12




12




The ghoul can, in a 10 wide by 10 tall long corridor, bite a 10x10 gelatinous cube whose corners are not reachable, but it cannot bite the door (unless it is a mimic... good for detecting mimics). Oh, 5e, what realism. Lolz. +1'd
– Mindwin
Dec 17 at 13:51





The ghoul can, in a 10 wide by 10 tall long corridor, bite a 10x10 gelatinous cube whose corners are not reachable, but it cannot bite the door (unless it is a mimic... good for detecting mimics). Oh, 5e, what realism. Lolz. +1'd
– Mindwin
Dec 17 at 13:51





4




4




@davidrice From the makers of "Magic the Lawyering..."
– Mindwin
Dec 17 at 17:39




@davidrice From the makers of "Magic the Lawyering..."
– Mindwin
Dec 17 at 17:39




7




7




@Mindwin It can still probably bite the door (and a real treasure chest), it just can't do so as an attack in RAW... now I have the image of a random ghoul just curiously gnawing on everything around it to see if it should scratch it or bite it harder...
– MrSpudtastic
Dec 17 at 17:47




@Mindwin It can still probably bite the door (and a real treasure chest), it just can't do so as an attack in RAW... now I have the image of a random ghoul just curiously gnawing on everything around it to see if it should scratch it or bite it harder...
– MrSpudtastic
Dec 17 at 17:47




1




1




Spells often have similar restrictions. Most can only target creatures while only a few can target objects. For example, fire bolt can target a creature or object while eldritch blast can only target creatures.
– Allan Mills
Dec 17 at 21:15




Spells often have similar restrictions. Most can only target creatures while only a few can target objects. For example, fire bolt can target a creature or object while eldritch blast can only target creatures.
– Allan Mills
Dec 17 at 21:15




1




1




@MrSpudtastic RAW you cannot perform an action on an invalid target, it fails. Mimic or bust. Of course we are not OCD DMs.
– Mindwin
Dec 18 at 14:28




@MrSpudtastic RAW you cannot perform an action on an invalid target, it fails. Mimic or bust. Of course we are not OCD DMs.
– Mindwin
Dec 18 at 14:28

















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