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Yorrin
2014-10-23, 12:05 PM
I've seen a lot of estimation of how much each type of damage is resisted or dealt by creatures in the Monster Manual (and done a good bit of speculation myself), but I decided to go through and actually count how many of each there were. The following is the result:




Damage
Resistance
Immunity
Vulnerability


Acid
21
18
15
0


Cold
23
46
20
4


Fire
46
37
40
9


Force
12
0
1
0


Lightning
22
35
10
0


Necrotic
22
11
11
0


Poison
43
5
95
0


Psychic
11
1
10
1



Radiant
14
4
0
1



Thunder
4
14
2
1


Nonmagical
Most
60
17
0


Magic Weapons
13
1
0
0


Bludgeoning
Many
8
0
4


Slashing
Many
6
2
0


Piercing
Many
10
0
0


Spells
Several
1
0
0


Silver Bybass
n/a
13
4
n/a


Adamantine Bypass
n/a
3
4
n/a



Silver Bypass and Adamantine Bypass refer to how may resistances or immunities to nonmagical damage can be overcome by those materials, but they are also counted under the "nonmagical" column itself. The "Spells" entry was created for the Archmage, who is resistant to all damage from spells. Everything else should be self explanatory.

Conclusions to be drawn would include not specializing in Poison or Fire damage, and getting resistances to both those elements.

GWJ_DanyBoy
2014-10-23, 12:32 PM
Hey thanks for doing the tally. Very useful info for comparing the possible strengths of different spells, weapons, and class focuses like the draconic Sorc. Not a perfect predictor, since the DM is still choosing which monsters the party faces.

Edit: Surprising to see so few vulnerabilities. I expected to see more for Radiant or Necrotic.

Kyutaru
2014-10-23, 12:33 PM
Some of the conclusions we can draw from this remain the same as past editions.

Fire and Lightning are among the most commonly ignored elements with fire also featuring a few vulnerabilities. Good elements to toss around if the enemy isn't resistant to anything.

Poison and Fire are among the most common damage types players will get hit by. Poison-using rogues are also less effective than critical-based ones.

Force remains the most awesome damage type ever, with Radiant sharing in its neatness.

Acid and Necrotic are still fairly good midrange damage types with only certain types of monsters countering them.

Nonmagical weapons suck. Go big or go home.

The things I DIDN'T expect, however, are these:

- Cold damage is the most resisted basic element. Using cold spells is actually not that great of an idea. Luckily, the cold spells tend to have more damage than their fire and lightning variants because they are higher level.

- Thunder damage is a new hotness. Apparently similar to force damage in its capacity to damage almost anything, hitting people with sonic booms is not likely to be resisted.

- Psychic damage sucks worse than Force now.

odigity
2014-10-23, 12:43 PM
You just cast a huge rain cloud over my planned Fiend-pact Warlock. :( The whole spell list is fire...

I suppose I could take Elemental Adapt, but I was already planning to take four feats. If I take a fifth, it means I'll be stuck at Str/Cha 16 forever.

Edit: Forgot to mention - great post! That must have been a lot of work, but the results are very useful.

Easy_Lee
2014-10-23, 12:45 PM
Force remains the most awesome damage type ever, with Radiant sharing in its neatness.

Can we go ahead and confirm that warlock/sorcerer brings the most consistent damage out of any build? Seems like we're unlikely to find a more consistent source of damage, what with only two creatures in the entire DMG not taking full damage from two EB's per round (one immune, archmage half because spell).

Demonicattorney
2014-10-23, 01:10 PM
Radiant is better than it appears here, because it shuts down regeneration on a few creatures, like the Vampire. Force is a little worse, because of creatures like the Rakshasha.

Easy_Lee
2014-10-23, 01:24 PM
Radiant is better than it appears here, because it shuts down regeneration on a few creatures, like the Vampire. Force is a little worse, because of creatures like the Rakshasha.

So a vengeance paladin and warlock-sorcerer teamed up kills the world? Interesting.

hymer
2014-10-23, 01:39 PM
Force is a little worse, because of creatures like the Rakshasha.

Have to admit, I don't get it. Why?

Cambrian
2014-10-23, 01:46 PM
Conclusions to be drawn would include not specializing in Poison or Fire damage, and getting resistances to both those elements.Awesome work!

It looks like fire is actually okay to specialize in with Elemental Adept. The forty creatures immune to it might be a problem (don't overspecialize!) but having nine creatures are vulnerable to it and variety of fire spells in the PHB means it wouldn't be bad.

Poison either works or it doesn't (only five creatures resist it). Given undead and constructs are always immune to poison it does remove much of the guess work. If you know you won't be facing poison immune creatures then the damage type becomes useful for a prepared caster.

Kyutaru
2014-10-23, 01:47 PM
So a vengeance paladin and warlock-sorcerer teamed up kills the world? Interesting.

6 Paladin/2 Warlock/12 Sorcerer = Almighty Gish Destroyer

Can turn his blade into a radiant weapon.
Can fire force blasts out of it instead.
Can buff and heal himself.
CHARISMA UP THE WAZOO!!!

Easy_Lee
2014-10-23, 02:05 PM
6 Paladin/2 Warlock/12 Sorcerer = Almighty Gish Destroyer

Can turn his blade into a radiant weapon.
Can fire force blasts out of it instead.
Can buff and heal himself.
CHARISMA UP THE WAZOO!!!

Not even bad. Could add a warlock level or two for blade pact and lifedrinker for even more damage on your holy paladin smites.

BW022
2014-10-23, 02:14 PM
Yorrin,

Thanks for the research. I don't think it is that surprising. However, you may need to be a bit more careful on your conclusion.

a) You do have to factor in how common certain opponents are. This is really hard to determine and could easily be altered by the campaign, setting, the players, levels of the campaign, how long players are at certain levels, etc. For example, PCs are probably likely to run into more NPCs, humanoids, or animals than say devils, demons, or elementals. The later are simply rarer.

b) You have to look at how effective certain spell may be at non-immune creatures. A fireball might not be effective vs. a demon, but it's extremely affective against mobs of most other creatures, while a lightning bolt... let so. Certain spells are also useful objects. Fire spells can still collapse a rope bridge or destroy some scrolls on a table. Cold... probably not.

c) You have to remember that all casters cast spontaneously and that many spells can be cast effectively into higher slots. A caster with magic missile, could specialize in fire spells and fall back on magic missile if they run into some fire elementals. You pay less of a penalty for specializing that say a 3.x wizard.

Galen
2014-10-23, 02:14 PM
Very useful analysis. I allowed myself to elaborate on it slightly by adding "Resistance Index", which is equal to <number of monsters resistant> + 2 x <number of monsters immune> - <number of monsters vulnerable>

Poison 195
Fire 108
Cold 82
Lightning 55
Acid 48
Necrotic 33
Psychic 20
Thunder 17
Radiant 3
Force 2

So Poison is by far the worst damage to inflict, with Fire distant second. Radiant and Force are by far the best.

Easy_Lee
2014-10-23, 02:19 PM
What about mundane damage from a magical weapon? Looks like only one thing resists, so that would be technically the most reliable type, I think.

Yorrin
2014-10-23, 02:20 PM
Hey thanks for doing the tally
great post! That must have been a lot of work, but the results are very useful.
Awesome work!
Thanks!

What about mundane damage from a magical weapon? Looks like only one thing resists, so that would be technically the most reliable type, I think.

Demilich is resistant to "mundane" damage from magic weapons (and immune to nonmagical weapons!) and the "Bludgeoning" "Slashing" and "Piercing" entries on the table count for any type of weapon, magical or not.


From looking at things I think that if one is going to specialize in something other than Force one is probably going to pick up Elemental Adept, which makes the resistance for your element of choice disappear. That being assumed it's the immunities that you really need to watch out for, which means

Force~Radiant>Thunder>Lighting=Psychic>Necrotic>Acid>Cold>Fire>Poison

Note that if you're getting resistance to an element it's almost backwards, as might be expected:

Fire>Poison>Cold>Lighting=Necrotic>Acid>Radiant>Force>Psychic>Thunder

Acid seems to be a relative loser in both lists, with Lightning being a well-rounded "middle of the road" choice if you're both dishing it out and receiving it.

Demonicattorney
2014-10-23, 02:21 PM
Have to admit, I don't get it. Why?

Radiant is a damage type that is dealt through a few spells, but typically through Paladin smites, Spiritual Weapon, (though there are some exceptions like flame strike, and guiding bolt). Force damage is dealt primarily by Eldritch Blast and Disentegrate. Some things are immune to all spells(below level 6), like Rakshasha (below level 6), or are immune to how Force does damage, like the Tarrasque. These things don't typically apply to Paladin smites, Divine Favor etc. Meaning that in practice, Radiant is typically better than force, because during some really tough fights your abilities still work.

Yorrin
2014-10-23, 02:27 PM
Yorrin,

Thanks for the research. I don't think it is that surprising. However, you may need to be a bit more careful on your conclusion.

a) You do have to factor in how common certain opponents are. This is really hard to determine and could easily be altered by the campaign, setting, the players, levels of the campaign, how long players are at certain levels, etc. For example, PCs are probably likely to run into more NPCs, humanoids, or animals than say devils, demons, or elementals. The later are simply rarer.

b) You have to look at how effective certain spell may be at non-immune creatures. A fireball might not be effective vs. a demon, but it's extremely affective against mobs of most other creatures, while a lightning bolt... let so. Certain spells are also useful objects. Fire spells can still collapse a rope bridge or destroy some scrolls on a table. Cold... probably not.

c) You have to remember that all casters cast spontaneously and that many spells can be cast effectively into higher slots. A caster with magic missile, could specialize in fire spells and fall back on magic missile if they run into some fire elementals. You pay less of a penalty for specializing that say a 3.x wizard.

Oh yes, this is certainly not an end-all be-all master index of what spells are best. Rather these are guidelines for a specialist, and if anything they show that you should probably have more than one type of damage at your disposal. Also not accounted for is which resistances/immunities show up together most often- for example many outsiders resist or are immune to Cold, Fire, Lightning, and Poison all at the same time, which makes specializing in two of those elements less effective than mixing one of those with Necrotic, for example.

Easy_Lee
2014-10-23, 02:34 PM
Does anything have resistance/immunity to both force and thunder, or any damage type in which the sorcerer can specialize?

Yorrin
2014-10-23, 02:39 PM
Does anything have resistance/immunity to both force and thunder, or any damage type in which the sorcerer can specialize?

The only thing immune to Force is the Helmed Horror, which does not resist Thunder. Demons have Cold+Fire+Lighting+Posion, but can't cover the full spectrum of Sorc options (I can't think of anything that does, besides Archmage which is resistant to ALL spell damage).

EDIT: The two Thunder immunities are Djinni and Storm Giant, neither of which have a ton of resistances anyway (Both are immune to Lightning, Storm Giant is also resistant to Cold).

MaxWilson
2014-10-23, 03:37 PM
The only thing immune to Force is the Helmed Horror, which does not resist Thunder.

...although it could be immune to any given Thunder-based spell. (Creator gets to pick 3 spells it is immune to.)

Easy_Lee
2014-10-23, 03:54 PM
...although it could be immune to any given Thunder-based spell. (Creator gets to pick 3 spells it is immune to.)

So I guess the warlock sorcerer needs to bring at least four sources of thunder damage plus EB to absolutely be able to kill anything.

EvilAnagram
2014-10-23, 04:03 PM
I am appalled at how few creatures have vulnerabilities. Most of these deal extra damage to one creature? Why even have types like this? Why aren't more fire-based creatures vulnerable to cold? Why aren't undead vulnerable to radiant? Why would anyone ever us poison?

This confirms the impression I already had from the MM, but it's still so ****ing disappointing.

Yorrin
2014-10-23, 04:05 PM
So I guess the warlock sorcerer needs to bring at least four sources of thunder damage plus EB to absolutely be able to kill anything.

That or dip 3 for a Pact Blade rapier and have a good Dex (which is already advisable). Honestly- Warlock 3 is a great start for just about any offensive build.

odigity
2014-10-23, 04:13 PM
Why aren't undead vulnerable to radiant?

(spits out coffee)

What!? Undead are not vulnerable to radiant? How is that even possible? What then is the point of radiant damage other than fluff?

We just played our first 5e session this week, and my Paladin saved the party from an inappropriately high CR undead encounter because of radiant doing double damage... were we wrong?

Rezby
2014-10-23, 04:26 PM
I am appalled at how few creatures have vulnerabilities. Most of these deal extra damage to one creature? Why even have types like this? Why aren't more fire-based creatures vulnerable to cold? Why aren't undead vulnerable to radiant? Why would anyone ever us poison?

This confirms the impression I already had from the MM, but it's still so ****ing disappointing.

Its almost as if the Monster Manual is a collection of monsters that may or may not see use in a campaign.

Poison works almost universally on human/humanoids, so if you're ever up against evil humanoids (I know, how unlikely), it might even be useful.

Demonicattorney
2014-10-23, 06:44 PM
(spits out coffee)

What!? Undead are not vulnerable to radiant? How is that even possible? What then is the point of radiant damage other than fluff?

We just played our first 5e session this week, and my Paladin saved the party from an inappropriately high CR undead encounter because of radiant doing double damage... were we wrong?

Some undead are vulnerable to radiant, but differently than you might expect. For some, its the only damage they don't resist (for practical purposes it is vulnerable), for other it kills them without a save (zombies), for Vampires it prevents their regeneration from rendering your strikes useless. Second, Paladins smites do additional damage to undead anyway, they added it directly to the ability, and not to the creature.

odigity
2014-10-23, 06:49 PM
Some undead are vulnerable to radiant, but differently than you might expect. For some, its the only damage they don't resist (for practical purposes it is vulnerable), for other it kills them without a save (zombies), for Vampires it prevents their regeneration from rendering your strikes useless. Second, Paladins smites do additional damage to undead anyway, they added it directly to the ability, and not to the creature.

True, Divine Smite does say it does an extra 1d8 to undead/fiends, which is a far cry from doubling all radiant, which would give you 4d8-10d8 instead of 3d8-6d8. Also means the radiant dmg from Improved Divine Smite @ 11th level doesn't get doubled, nor does the extra 1d4 radiant from Divine Favor spell, which I was also using this week...

Lame.

rhouck
2015-01-02, 06:13 PM
Sorry to bump an old thread, but Yorrin did an excellent job collecting this information. I was looking into resistances/immunities for a fire-based caster and I admit that, at first glance, fire seems like it could be a rough choice. But obviously the raw numbers, while useful, don't always tell the whole story, so I decided to take a closer look at what kinds of creatures had these resistances/immunities.

I counted 38 fire resistant creatures (Yorrin had 37, so I may have made an error) and 40 fire immune creatures. That sounds like a lot!

However, first it is important to remember that there are 430 stat blocks for monsters/creatures/etc. (I'll refer to them all as "monsters") in the Monster Manual. So even with 40 fire immune creatures, your DM still has stat blocks for another 390 monsters in the book -- a fire-specialized caster will hardly be useless against over 90% of the monsters.

Second, of those 40, 8 are "good" monsters, which you are unlikely to face.

Third, of the remaining 32 that are evil/neutral/unaligned, they are not evenly spread across the creature types:
- 13 of them are fiends (e.g., pit fiend, balor)
- 8 of them are elementals (e.g., fire elemental, mephits)
- 5 are evil dragons (e.g., red dragon)
- 1 is the Tarrasque

A similar pattern holds up for those that are fire resistant, with 21 of the 38 being "fiends".


So returning to the question that prompted this: is fire really that bad?
- Answer: it depends on your campaign. Fire resistance/immunity is heavily skewed due to fiends, with 34 of the fire immune/resistant monsters falling into that category -- nearly half of the total 70 non-good fire immune/resistant monsters. So if you will end up fighting a lot of fiends in your campaign, then fire might not be for you.
- Keep in mind, however, that of 21 fire resistant monsters, only 1 of them is not also resistant to cold (in fact, of the 38 total fire resistant creatures, 31 of them are also resistant to cold). And of the 13 fire immune fiends, 11 are also resistant (and 1 immune) to cold. Yorrin mentions this as a reason not to just carry fire and cold spells if you are worried about immunities.
- Fire has the most damage spells available, especially at the highest levels, especially for big AoE spells.
- There also 8 non-good monsters which are fire damage vulnerable.

It also makes me second-guess the elemental adept feat (which the raw numbers seemed to make it seem like a "must have" for a fire caster):
- It does nothing for fire immunity.
- Unless you are fighting fiends regularly, there are only 17 non-fiends with resistance -- less than 4% of all the monsters.
- I'm not sure if the damage boost is enough to make up for it (e.g, fireballs do 29.3 average damage instead of 28). I haven't done all the math, but boosting the primary stat to raise your spell DC seems like it will come out ahead for the vast majority of monsters.

tl;dr -- don't give up on fire or think it is a necessity to have elemental adept based purely on the raw number of monsters with resistances/immunities. Unless you fight a lot of fiends, it will rarely come up. It also makes me wish for the old Monstrous Manual stat of "Frequency" -- while that is obviously campaign dependent, it would have been interesting to see how these monsters fell into each category (e.g., pit fiends were "very rare" and that was on their own plane, whereas goblins were merely "uncommon" and found in any non-arctic land).

KorvinStarmast
2015-06-25, 12:31 PM
I am appalled at how few creatures have vulnerabilities.
QFT. Why put that column in if one isn't goint to use it?
Side note:
At least Skeletons are vulnerable to bludgeon, but there are others who ought to be ... and aren't. :smalltongue:

ImperiousLeader
2015-10-31, 11:29 PM
tl;dr -- don't give up on fire or think it is a necessity to have elemental adept based purely on the raw number of monsters with resistances/immunities. Unless you fight a lot of fiends, it will rarely come up. It also makes me wish for the old Monstrous Manual stat of "Frequency" -- while that is obviously campaign dependent, it would have been interesting to see how these monsters fell into each category (e.g., pit fiends were "very rare" and that was on their own plane, whereas goblins were merely "uncommon" and found in any non-arctic land).

... Thanks for this, although this is frustrating news, as I was planning a Dragon (Fire) Sorcerer for Out of the Abyss, which will unfortunately feature fiends.

*sigh*

ShikomeKidoMi
2015-11-01, 02:29 AM
It also makes me second-guess the elemental adept feat (which the raw numbers seemed to make it seem like a "must have" for a fire caster):

... Thanks for this, although this is frustrating news, as I was planning a Dragon (Fire) Sorcerer for Out of the Abyss, which will unfortunately feature fiends.

Looking at the compiled monster stats, I think Elemental Adept might be best on a Lightning caster. It has a high ratio of resistant to immune monsters compared to fire, cold, or acid.

This is particularly true in adventures like Out of the Abyss where you know you'll be fighting a lot of demons, who are commonly resistant but not immune to the element.

Of course, Fire has many of the best area of effect spells, so it might be worth taking a few of them to round things out.

Mjolnirbear
2015-11-01, 02:51 AM
I think i may do this, and then divide it level tiers (1-4, 5-10, etc)

I'm curious how the numbers will change from tier to tier

ImperiousLeader
2015-11-01, 12:06 PM
That'd be great.

A quick perusal of the MM makes me think I can get away with Fire anyway. Devils are immune to fire, demons merely resist it. Assuming that "The Rage of Demons" is going to be more demonic than devilish, as long as I've got a Force spell or two, I should be fine.

EvilAnagram
2015-11-01, 05:12 PM
If you're dealing with demons, Eldritch Blast and Magic Missile are ridiculously effective. Their Magic Resistance isn't a factor, and you're dealing Force damage. They're essentially essential.

Safety Sword
2015-11-02, 05:32 AM
If you're dealing with demons, Eldritch Blast and Magic Missile are ridiculously effective. Their Magic Resistance isn't a factor, and you're dealing Force damage. They're essentially essential.

Redundantly redundant? :smallamused:

RMcD
2015-12-27, 01:46 AM
What monsters have each of those?

It would be very useful as a DM to know the list of say the 14 monsters that do radiant damage, etc.

rhouck
2016-01-04, 02:16 PM
I think i may do this, and then divide it level tiers (1-4, 5-10, etc)

I'm curious how the numbers will change from tier to tier


What monsters have each of those?

It would be very useful as a DM to know the list of say the 14 monsters that do radiant damage, etc.

Sorry, just saw these posts. My spreadsheet is here: https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B5icAE9rHK_DbnNRZF9WNGpCRFE/view?usp=sharing (I think I used a spreadsheet from 7heprofessor for the base monster listing and info, so thanks to him)

Feel free to download and then you can sort by column. It should be fairly self-explanatory (DR = Damage Resistance, DI = Damage Immunity, etc.) It's kind of rough-looking, as it was just a place to toss marks as I flipped through the MM.

This is just of the monsters with their size, CR, alignment, type, and immunities, so hopefully it's not running afoul of any rules (you certainly couldn't use this info to run encounters, for example).

Aeradom
2016-01-27, 04:24 PM
I wish this thread including Charm resistance and such.

WereRabbitz
2016-07-22, 01:48 PM
Paladin/Bard loves your list and will use it well!

Oramac
2017-03-02, 10:51 AM
I just found this thread, but wanted to say thank you! This is incredibly helpful!

infinitetech
2017-08-10, 01:57 AM
So, i have used this page and the different links many times, however i may have recently encountered a massively efficient build option with this:
Lvl1. Wizard
Lvl2. Lore master
Lvl3.
Lvl4. Elemental adept Thunder

(Or you could do it with human variant starting with thunder elemental adept)

The lore master abilities also seem to work with any spell causing an element's damage, not just wizard ones, so you can even use it on other really nice spells. And with that you can use thunder for most things to boost base damage and swap to force whenever it fails to work (or a quick fire to stop a troll's regen i guess haha)

But you can basically rock two of the best elements with one being well boosted and late game lore masters can even dabble with radiant, or you can do it earlier if you use feats on gaining cross class spells (actually not a horrid use of feats in theory)

Of course the lore master is just generally awesome for this sort of stuff as they can pick and choose as they go.

Ryuu Hayato
2017-12-08, 08:56 PM
Someone could update the list with the new monsters?

arimareiji
2018-01-19, 09:04 PM
QFT. Why put that column in if one isn't goint to use it?
Side note:
At least Skeletons are vulnerable to bludgeon, but there are others who ought to be ... and aren't. :smalltongue:

The Glass Golem, Demon Roaches, Crystalline Entity, and Giant Carnivorous Blinding Lightbulb all look at you suspiciously, wanting to know what you have against them. :smallconfused:

sambojin
2018-01-20, 04:29 AM
Makes the Zeal domain from one of the planeshift UAs look pretty good. You've got plenty of Radiant, Fire and Thunder damage on your lists, with the option to maximise fire/thunder whenever you want. Fair enough, it's a UA (and is sort of the best bits of tempest and war), but it doesn't seem quite as OP as the Loremaster Wizard. At least you'll always be able to do a bit of damage to anything. Well, a lot, actually, and in good armour too.

goycherizer
2018-03-19, 11:34 AM
So I took the sheet and mucked around with it (largely as extra practice for the Office-based software class I'm taking).

I condensed the damage resistance/immunity/vulnerability columns into a single column for each damage type, added info from all the new, unique statblocks from the Plane Shift supplements, and created some named ranges for each sourcebook (not that that's hugely relevant yet). All of the Elder Dinosaurs in PS:Ixalan share the same set of core stats, so there's no real reason to have six entries that all list the same stats unless people really like the names.

I haven't touched any material from Volo's, so that is going to be a project in and of itself; same will go for the impending release of Tome of Foes. Condition immunities are another big thing; whether to add them in piecemeal by condition, or to list them all in the same column, or honestly at all.

I have the new file with a changelog sheet up in my google drive; pretty new account so I'm not yet able to link to it.

Tetrasodium
2018-03-19, 04:06 PM
nice work, this pretty much confirms what I noticed when I started giving players things like weapons that dealt elemental damage instead of slash/pierce/bludgeon. In older editions there seemed a lot more creatures that took extra damage from various elements while 5e it seems to mostly be magic weapons or nearly any spell that deals damage of a type the creature is not made of

Goldlizard
2018-12-24, 06:51 PM
(spits out coffee)

What!? Undead are not vulnerable to radiant? How is that even possible? What then is the point of radiant damage other than fluff?

The point is its the only one no one's immune to.

cinnamoony
2019-02-09, 01:20 PM
[/tr]
[tr]
Force
12
0
1
0

may I ask what creature/abberation/horrifying eldritch monstrosity is immune to force damage?

Tetrasodium
2019-02-09, 11:31 PM
may I ask what creature/abberation/horrifying eldritch monstrosity is immune to force damage?

MM183: helmed Horror. Keep in mind that force immune does not exempt it from repelling blast & every other "[when] you hit with eldritch blast" invocation except possibly it is also outright immune to eldritch blast depending on gm interpretation.