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[[Image:Warforged lance.jpg|thumb|right]]'''Warforged''' are basically an excuse to play a robot in a fantasy campaign without having to deal with level adjustment. They are similar to [[golem|golems]] but differ in the fact that they are actually sentient creatures, created by magically coagulating metal and wood in a vat, and count as a special type of creature known as a "living construct", meaning they still have a constitution score and various other properties not possessed by other constructs, at the expense of sharing a lot of vulnerabilities with living creatures that plain old constructs don't.
[[Image:Warforged lance.jpg|thumb|right]]


This player race came about with the advent of the [[Eberron]] campaign setting for D&D and since then gained considerable popularity amongst the gaming community (which [[Dragonborn]] will never live to see). Surprisingly enough, Warforged are generally quite popular on /tg/. Warforged were originally used as mass produced soldiers in the big "not World War I" of the Eberron setting.
'''Warforged''' are a race of "living constructs" native to the [[Dungeons & Dragons]] campaign setting of [[Eberron]]. What's a living construct? Mechanically, they're an excuse to play a robot in a fantasy campaign without having to deal with level adjustment. Fundamentally, warforged are [[golem]]s, but they differ from their more mainstream counterparts in the fact that they are actually sentient creatures, created by magically coagulating and blending metal, stone, and wood in a vat. This means that warforged are far smarter than standard golems, and lack certain golem weaknesses, like not being able to benefit from healing magic... though they ''also'' have a lot of weaknesses that normal golems wouldn't; being a ''living'' construct means having the equivalent of vital organs, and thus being able to bleed out if you prod them with a sharp enough stick.
 
==Eberron Warforged==
As detailed in ''Races of Eberron'', all warforged share a common facial design, with a hinged jaw and crystal eyes embedded beneath a reinforced brow ridge with a sigil, called a "ghulra", engraved into the center of the forehead which "are as individual as human fingerprints". [[Dragon Magazine]] #352 claims some Warforged have cubical heads (which it has an illustration of), blank heads, demon heads, skull heads or cyclops heads on top of some variety in torso shape and aesthetic accents (all of which is presented in a random appearance table).
 
Warforged were the ultimate creations of House Cannith, the House of the [[Dragonmark]] of Making. During the chaos of the Last War (aka "[[Dungeonpunk]] [[World War I]]"), House Cannith used strange [[artificer]] magic brought back from [[Xen'drik]] to churn out enormous legions of artificial soldiers - essentially a cheaper, mass produced version of the common golem that wasn't as morally uncertain as just using the [[undead]] and didn't need to eat or sleep and don't become fatigued. This came back to bite them when the war ended and people found out that warforged were actually sentient creatures, with individual personalities and full consciousnesses. As slavery isn't exactly kosher in Khorvaire, House Cannith was forced to turn them loose... now they're trying to figure out just what to do with themselves, especially because the special buildings that make them have officially been all shut down, so they can't "breed" like the organic races around them - which they fear is a deliberate ploy to slowly grind them into extinction.
 
One of the big bads of the setting is the Lord of Blades, a high-level warforged who wants to unite all of the warforged under his banner and genocide all the squishy races of the world, so he's basically goddamn Ultron Hitler. He is believed to have one of the few creation forges that remain active; however, either from damage and/or being in the [[Mournland]], it's churning out "mutant" warforged and/or Psiforged.
 
Warforged-Meatbag relations are strained in most of the world. Their ability to work without sleep or breaks while not caring about the heat of the factories is causing a lot of [[meme|terk er jerbs]] among the squishies, but their lack of history and support structure makes them vulnerable to exploitative practices and low wages humanoids wised up to long ago (though to be fair it's not like they'd have much to ''spend'' their money on to begin with when you think about it). Some Cannith outposts are alleged to hold Warforged in effective slavery by keeping them unaware of their legal freedom. They are also viewed as inherently dangerous, as a warforged with the [[Adamantine]] body feat is very difficult to damage by conventional means and they're never ''quite'' sure the tin can ''won't'' go on a rampage...
 
===Warforged Variants===
{{NeedsImages}}
As versatile as the warforged are, House Cannith wasn't content to simply run with them. No, they played around with the process, and managed to produce a number of different Warforged variants.
 
'''Warforged Titans''' are much closer to the traditional [[golem]]; not entirely brainless, but nowhere near as smart as a true warforged. They make up for it by being ''really'' big (Huge sized). They typically possess a giant crushing hammer for one hand and a scything mega-axe for the other hand, although individual models may swap this out, such as replacing one hand with a siege staff (magical cannon). They are basically the [[Eberron]] version of tanks, with hollow interiors that let them carry troops into battle, as well as platforms that troops can use to fire ranged weapons, artillery, or spells from.
 
'''Warforged Colossi''' (singular: '''Colossus''') are the '''really''' big brothers. They're basically [[magitek]] [[titan]]s, being Gargantuan-sized versions of the Titans with magitek cannons, a freaking death ray for a head, and a really pissed off attitude. They were intended to be House Cannith's ultimate weapon, able to singlehandedly crush armies, but roughly the same day that they took to the battlefield, the Mourning happened, and so they are largely either destroyed, inoperable, or just impossible to recover.
 
'''Warforged Scouts''' go in the opposite direction. A fully sapient branch of the warforged family tree, Scouts are miniature warforged designed to be about the size of [[halfling]]s. Why? Well, it's all in the name; they were meant to be used to sneak around the battle field to chart the terrain, spy on the enemy, launch assassination missions... aside from the whole "20ft base speed" thing, they're actually pretty good at it. As a "true" warforged variant, they're actually playable in 3e. They showed up in the [[Monster Manual 3]].
 
'''Warforged Chargers''' are the missing link between the Titans and the Soldiers; smaller and smarter than Titans, but still big, dumb bruisers compared to the standard warforged. They basically look like a warforged gorilla, with stumpy legs and overly long arms that let them hunker down on all fours and sprint across the battlefield at an improved pace. Combined with beefed up armor and the strength to literally rip squishy humans limb from limb with their bare metallic hands, Chargers are basically all the best parts of a [[golem]] and a battle-trained killer gorilla. Like the scout, they appeared in the [[Monster Manual]] 3 and are technically a playable race, although they have to deal with [[Level Adjustment]].
 
'''Psiforged''' are the most recently emerged warforged strain, and represent an experimental line that was just reaching production when [[Mournland|The Mourning]] happened. As a result, they are the rarest of the warforged variants. As their name suggests, they are warforged created with a particular affinity for [[psionics]], and can easily be visually distinguished from the standard Soldier model by the psi-channeling crystals that sprout, tumor-like, from their bodies. They appeared as a playable race in Magic of Eberron.
 
==Nentir Vale Warforged==
One of the good things about the [[Nentir Vale]] setting was that A: as a new setting, it could develop in its own way, and B: it wasn't afraid to tinker with racial backstories to justify the addition of races originating from other settings, like [[thri-kreen]] and [[mul]]s. Thus, Dragon Magazine #364 debuted the article "Playing Warforged", all about the Warforged of the Points of Light.
 
In the Nentir Vale world, warforged were born of the empire of Nerath, under the wisdom of King Eothyr III. A visionary man, King Eothyr founded the Society of Imperial Artificers, an organization of learned arcanists, and set them the goal of creating an adaptive artificial being - one that could autonomously learn and adapt, but which didn't require the imprisonment of an immortal spirit or an elemental to serve as the spark of its sentience.
 
The Society labored on this task for many years, working tirelessly to succeed. Sadly, King Eothyr died only a short period before they succeeded. When his son, Prince Elidyr, ascended the throne, he told the Society they had to make some changes: rumblings of unrest suggested that war was coming, and he had no need for his father's Utopian vision of a sentient construct. He needed soldiers, and he told the Society that their artificial lifeform was to fill that need.
 
This prompted an ideological split within the Society: some were appalled at the idea of turning these artificial beings, naive and innocent, into living weapons and fodder for the wars of man. These rogues took copies of their notes and left. Still, it wasn't enough to stop progress; the Society created their first creation forge, and soon the first of their constructs, the warforged, walked the earth. And just in time - a massive force of demon-worshipping savage humanoids launched itself against Nerath.
 
Warforged went on to prove significant to Nerath's battle. The empire's own treasury paid for the formation of legions of artificial soldiers, whilst nobles were offered the chance to eschew battlefield duties by paying for warforged soldiers to take the place of their men. Even some of the rogues succumbed to patriotism or pragmatism and used their private creation forges to support the war effort. The warforged weren't numerous enough to prevent the loss of King Elidyr, his heirs, and many of the most influential leaders of Nerath, sadly.
 
Regardless, their strength and sacrifices kept Nerath from being totally annihilated; even though the former empire crumbled into a series of independent city-states after decades of factional war and territorial squabbling, the slaughter could have been far worse. In fact, warforged continued to play a role in the fighting, and still do today. The Society of Imperial Artificers still exists today, turning out warforged troopers for profit. Some creation forges still remain in the hands of other artificers, churning out new warforged for their own ideological reasons. There's at least one creation forge that remains in the hands of a band of warforged veterans, ensuring the race has some control over its destiny. And those are just the known ones.
 
A sidebar addresses other possible ways of incorporating warforged into your campaign. For example, they could be an ancient race of self-propagating people, or an experiment in immortality that didn't quite work. They could be exoskeletons for some limbless species of sapients, perhaps constructed by human, dwarven or other "tinker race" allies. They might be a race of human-like beings that convert themselves into artificial creatures at certain age, or implant themselves into armored exoskeletons as part of their maturation cycle. Or your warforged could be unique; some wizard's special experiment that has either escaped or been loaned to the party by their patron.
 
== Undead Warforged ==
There's a brief mention of undead Warforged in the Mournland in a 3E book. They appear to be rusting and decaying. Mechanically, zombie or skeleton Warforged are pretty indistinguishable from other undead player races since most of what makes a Warforged interesting mechanically is attached to the subtype they lose. In the end you just have a zombie with composite plating. Still, you can't deny that something like a rusty robo-lich is a pretty cool mental image.
 
==PC Stats==
===3e===
::Attributes: +2 Constitution, -2 Wisdom, -2 Charisma
::Construct (Living Construct Subtype): You're essentially a construct that has a [[Constitution]] score and lacks the extreme immunities of normal constructs (Crits, mind-control, nonlethal damage, etc.) but retain immunity to poisons and fatigue. Healing is also only half as effective on you and can only be fully healed by a mechanic.
::Medium Size
::Speed: 30'
::Composite Plating: +2 armor bonus, 5% spell failure, cannot wear armor, but can be enchanted directly and have docent slots instead
::Light Fortification: 25% chance to negate critical hits or sneak attacks
::Slam: Unarmed attacks deal 1d4 bludgeoning damage
::Automatic Languages: Common, Bonus Languages: None
::Favored Class: Fighter


Mechanically, while they do come with penalties to two mental stats, built-in spell-failure chance, and half-healing from spells, they also come with a ''shitload'' of immunities and some fun robo-feats no one else gets.
Mechanically, while they do come with penalties to two mental stats, built-in spell-failure chance, and half-healing from spells, they also come with a ''shitload'' of immunities and some fun robo-feats no one else gets.
The ''Eberron Campaign Setting'' and ''Races of Eberron'' have several Warforged-only feats and [[Prestige Class]]es that take advantage of their mechanical nature. The ___ Body series are level 1 only feats that increase (or delete) your inherent armor by making it made of adamantine, mithral, or ironwood and increasing the AC it gives you. Ironwood has the unique property of not being made of metal, meaning that it does not interfere with Druid spellcasting, and is designed specifically for warforged druids (which are still a stupid idea because warforged take a -2 penalty to wisdom, the druid's [[god stat]], but whatever). Second Slam and Jaws of Death make Warforged capable natural attackers.
Warforged Juggernaut makes a warforged a bit more like a proper golem, sacrificing squishy goodies like the ability to benefit from healing spells in exchange for golem-like immunities and goodies. Reforged is a prestige class that does the exact opposite, gaining natural healing and some improved wisdom and social skills. The final level tosses away everything good about being a Warforged for ''nothing'' and makes it one of the few prestige classes where getting the levels level drained away and replaced with nothing will actually make you stronger. The art does give us a Warforged pimp though. Renegade Master can't be taken by Warforged and is an attempt by squishies to make themselves more like Warforged. Spellcarved Soldier is a gish class that doesn't advance spellcasting and instead gives a bunch of mediocre bonuses you can only have one of active.
Warforged [[Artificer]] racial substitution levels allow a Warforged to focus more on augmenting their own body and gain the ability to make magic weapons into familiars. There's also Warforged Fighter and Paladin substitution levels, but they're trash.
====Scout====
So... you wanna play the mini-mecha, eh? Well, this is what you get:
::Ability Score Modifiers: +2 Dexterity, -2 Strength, -2 Wisdom, -2 Charisma
::Size: Small (+1 AC, +1 to Attack Rolls, 4 to Hide, -4 to grapple, lifting & carrying limits are 3/4 those of Medium character)
::Base Land Speed: 20 feet
::Living Construct: See the Warforged above.
::Composite Plating: See the Warforged above.
::Light Fortification: See the Warforged above.
::[[Favored Class]]: [[Rogue]]
So, yeah, whilst the Living Construct, Composite Plating and Light Fortification traits technically mean you aren't as squishy as a [[gnome]] or a [[halfling]]... you basically suck, with that 20ft speed in particular making you absolutely terrible at actually scouting things out ahead of the party.
====Charger====
Because, sometimes, you just want to play a Mechani-Kong!
::Ability Score Modifiers: +10 Strength, +10 Constitution, –6 Intelligence, –4 Wisdom, –8 Charisma
::Size: Large (-1 AC, -1 to attack rolls, -4 to Hide, +4 to grapple checks, double lifting and carrying limits)
::Base Speed 30ft (20ft)
::Space/Reach: 10ft/10ft
::Natural Weapons: 2 slams (1d8).
::Racial Hit Dice: A warforged charger begins with four levels of construct, which provide 4d10 Hit Dice, a base attack bonus of +3, and base saving throw bonuses of Fort +1, Ref +1, and Will +1.
::Racial Skills: A warforged charger’s construct levels give it skill points equal to 7 × (2 + Int modifier, minimum 1). Its class skill is Jump.
::Racial Feats: A warforged charger’s construct levels give it two feats. It also receives Adamantine Body and Powerful Charge as bonus feats.
::Living Construct: See the Warforged above.
::Composite Plating: See the Warforged above.
::Adamantine Plating (Ex): Due to having the Adamantine Body feat, a Warforged Charger's Composite Plating has altered bonuses and penalties; +8 AC, Damage Reduction 2/Adamantine, 35% arcane spell failure chance, maximum Dexterity bonus +1, -5 armor check penalty, -10ft speed penalty. It otherwise functions as Composite Plating.
::Moderate Fortification: As Light Fortification, except the chance to nullify a critical hit or sneak attack is 75%.
::Adamantine Fists (Ex): A warforged charger's Slam attacks count as being made with Adamantine weapons, meaning they ignore object hardness.
::[[Favored Class]]: [[Fighter]].
::[[Level Adjustment]]: +4.
Whilst you're still pretty slow, you are a ''juggernaut'' in battle, so apart from the whole [[Linear Warriors, Quadratic Wizards]] thing that 3e has going on, you're a pretty damn good beatstick. Definitely more worthwhile than the Scout!
====Psiforged====
This is the simplest Warforged variant to play, as the mechanics are thus: take the Standard Warforged race above, then take the Character Creation ONLY racial feat "Psiforged Body". That's it. You're done. Take a [[psionics]] class and then try not to get too disappointed.
What does Psiforged Body actually do? Well, you get +1 psionic power point at 1st level, even if you don't take a psionic class, and your body now functions like a cognizance cyrstal, letting you store (1 + (1 per 2 character levels)) psionic power points for later usage. That's it.
===4e===
::Ability scores: +2 Constitution, +2 Intelligence or +2 Strength
::Size: Medium
::Speed: 6 squares.
::Vision: Normal
::Languages: Common
::Skill Bonuses: +2 Endurance, +2 Intimidate.
::Living Construct: You are a living construct. You do not need to eat, drink, breathe, or sleep. You never make Endurance checks to resist the effect of starvation, thirst, or suffocation. All other conditions and effects affect you normally.
::Unsleeping Watcher: You do not sleep and instead enter a state of inactivity for 4 hours to gain the benefits of an extended rest. While in this state, you are fully aware of your surroundings and notice approaching enemies and other events as normal.
::Warforged Mind: You have a +1 racial bonus to your Will.
::Warforged Resilience: You have a +2 racial bonus to saving throws against ongoing damage. Also, when you make a death saving throw, you can take the better result of your die roll or 10.
::Warforged Resolve: Encounter minor Racial. You gain 3+1/2 level THP (And 3+1/2 level HP when bloodied) and can make a saving throw.
This statline makes Warforged ideal for a great many roles, including frontliners like [[Fighter]]s or [[Barbarian]]s and Supporters, most especially the [[Artificer]] (which was also introduced in the Eberron Campaign Setting). In regards of feats, the majority of them fall under one of two groups: Those that improve the racial power, and those that synergize with alchemical item powers and drive in how much warforged artificers work.
They also possess two [[Paragon Path]]s, Warforged Juggernaut and Warforged Lifeseeker, and are the only race with a PP set on emulating them, the Self-Forged.
===5e===
[[5e|Fifth Edition]] is rather peculiar to talk about for warforged because there are three very different statlines to use for warforged: The original stats from the Eberron [[Unearthed Arcana]], the stats from Keith Baker's ''Wayfinder's Guide to Eberron'', and Wizards' own official ''Eberron: Rising from the Last War''.
====Unearthed Arcana====
::Ability Scores: Str +1; Con +1
::Size: Medium
::Speed: 30 ft.
::Composite Plating: +1 to Armor Class.
::Living Construct: Even though you were constructed, you are a living creature. You are immune to disease. You do not need to eat or breathe, but you can ingest food and drink if you wish.<br />Instead of sleeping, you enter an inactive state for 4 hours each day. You do not dream in this state; you are fully aware of your surroundings and notice approaching enemies and other events as normal.
::Languages: Common and one other language of your choice.
This particular statline, while unremarkable, does give them the well-renowned durability of being a living robot, ideal for Fighters and Barbarians, though other classes can definitely find benefits.
====Wayfinder's Guide to Eberron====
The ''WGE'' stats, however, give a much grander means to build Warforged PCs, mainly by giving three different frames to work from. All warforged, however, maintain the following abilities:
::Ability Scores: All Warforged have Con +1
::Size: Medium
::Warforged Resilience: Immunities everywhere: You cant go to sleep or be fatigued and you get advantage on poison resistance checks with resistance to poison.
::Sentry's Rest: When you take a long rest, you must spend at least six hours of it in an inactive, motionless state, rather than sleeping. In this state, you appear inert, but it doesn't render you unconscious, and you can see and hear as normal.
::Integrated Protection: At the end of a long rest, you can choose between three different forms of armor to wear. But in exchange, you gain no benefit from wearing armor, not even magical benefits.
:::Darkwood Core: Counts as unarmored. AC 11 + Dex Mod + Proficiency Mod (If proficient in light armor)
:::Composite Plating: Requires proficiency in medium armor. AC 13 + Dex Mod (Max 2) + Proficiency Mod
:::Heavy Plating: Requires proficiency in heavy armor and gives disadvantage on stealth checks. AC 16 + Proficiency Mod
::Languages: Common
'''Envoy'''
::Ability Scores: Choose any two +1
::Speed: 30 ft.
::Specialized Design: You gain one skill proficiency of your choice, one tool proficiency of your choice, and fluency in one language of your choice.
::Integrated Tool: Choose one tool you're proficient with. This tool is integrated into your body, and you double your proficiency bonus for any ability checks you make with it. You must have your hands free to use this integrated tool.
'''Juggernaut'''
::Ability Scores: Str +2
::Speed: 30 ft.
::Iron Fists: Your unarmed strike deals 1d4 + your Strength modifier bludgeoning damage
::Powerful Build: You count as one size larger when determining your carrying capacity and the weight you can push, drag, or lift
'''Skirmisher'''
::Ability Scores: Dex +2
::Speed: 35 ft.
::Graceful: You are proficient in Acrobatics
::Light Step: When you are traveling alone for an extended period of time (one hour or more), you can move stealthily at a normal pace.
This all makes the new version of Warforged at an incredibly powerful and possibly OP tier for a race, least of all because of the variety. Really, all classes have an ideal subrace to work with with a possible second if you feel up for it. The real breaking feature is the plating. There are no other races, let alone other means period to get AC as high as a warforged's (not counting a [[tortle]] hiding in his shell). For comparison, A Warforged fighter with Heavy Plating already sits at a comfy AC 18 at level 1, a score inaccessible by comparable fighters since the only non-magical armor available is the absurdly-expensive plate armor and a starting fighter is stuck with AC 16 chain mail (or 17 if they sank all 200 starting gold into a suit of splint armor and no weapons). Even non-heavy armor users can't compete, as an elf rogue with maxed-out dex (Let's say 20 due to a good roll) and studded leather can only reach AC 17. By Level 10, that heavy Warforged is now at AC 20, a level only attainable by magical +2 plate armor with no other recourse to match such a thing, and that gap grows ever wider as the levels pass.
Also, the internal balance is shot.  Setting aside any and all questions of which stats are best (even though everyone and their dog knows [[Dexterity]] blows most other stats out of the water this edition), Skirmisher gets a speed boost, a useful skill, and a situational power that is at least thematic and flavorful, Envoy is basically a variant human who doesn't get to pick his free feat but gets a beast of a feat-equivalent in exchange, and Juggernaut is, while propped up by the race’s powerful chassis, a comical example of exactly how overvalued natural weapons and Powerful Build are in every race designed this edition.
However, the specific wording of Integrated Protection somewhat balances the AC issue, gaining no benifits from wearing armor extends to magical effects on armor as well, so while you do max out at 22 AC with integrated protection you get no use out of magic armor such as Armor of Invulnerability or any form of resistance armor.
tl;dr WGE Warforged require some extremely generous magic item-gifting and perhaps a means to control the scaling AC (Maybe banning the proficiency bonus altogether from the non-darkwood ones? Maybe halving Proficiency Bonus to AC?), which is on-brand for ‘’Eberron’’ but a bit at odds with 5E's philosophy of miserly magical item-gifting.
====Eberron: Rising from the Last War====
::Ability Scores: Con +2, choose any +1
::Size: Medium
::Speed: 30 ft
::Warforged Resilience: Immunities everywhere: You cant go to sleep or be fatigued and you get advantage on poison resistance checks with resistance to poison.
::Sentry's Rest: When you take a long rest, you must spend at least six hours of it in an inactive, motionless state, rather than sleeping. In this state, you appear inert, but it doesn't render you unconscious, and you can see and hear as normal.
::Integrated Protection: All Warforged add +1 to AC. This can stack to any other armor that they have proficiency in, which they can integrate with over the span of 1 hour. Once integrated, this armor cannot be forcibly removed.
::Specialized Design: Gain proficiency in one skill and one set of tools.
::Languages: Common + one other
This version of the statline acts more like an improvement to the Eberron UA version's versatility than any nerfing of the WGE version. As one can see, this version can play more nicely with comparative builds without looking like the far-and-away superior choice and doesn't trigger the ire of anyone who follows 5E's limited item-gifting. Though that comes at the cost of improving any class' central stat beyond that +1, the proficiencies and armor bonus are capable of offsetting that weakness. And yes, subraces were removed.
But alas, they once again have the short end of the stick, as Tasha's Caldron of Everything came out with a new rule where [[What|''Everyone'' can move around ''both'' of their ability bonuses]].


==See Also==
==See Also==
*[[Gearforged]]
*[[Beeforged]]
*[[Beeforged]]
*[[Rood]]
*[[Rood]]
*[[Dungeons & Dragons 3rd Edition races]]


==Gallery==
==Gallery==
{{SectionalPromotions}}
<gallery>
<gallery>
Image:Warforged artificer.jpg|Artificer.
Image:Warforged artificer.jpg|Artificer.
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Image:Doorforgedmouthfuck.jpg|Forged for war, and mouth fucking.
Image:Doorforgedmouthfuck.jpg|Forged for war, and mouth fucking.
Image:Shanky.png|How it's done.
Image:Shanky.png|How it's done.
Image:Warforged_Bard.png|Warforged bards play heavy metal.
Image:Warforged_Bard.png|Warforged bards play heavy metal, techno, and love to rock out. Too bad they have a tin ear.
Image:Warforged Breach Warden.jpg
Image:Warforged Adventurers.png
Image:Tumblr mzilaryv2j1t89rtno1 1280.jpg
</gallery>
</gallery>


{{D&D4e-Races}}
{{D&D4e-Races}}
{{D&D5e-Races}}
{{D&D5e-Races}}
[[Category:Dungeons & Dragons Races]]
[[Category:Eberron]]
[[Category:Being working on by a man obsessed with mangoes and his dumbass friend]]

Latest revision as of 11:20, 23 June 2023

Warforged are a race of "living constructs" native to the Dungeons & Dragons campaign setting of Eberron. What's a living construct? Mechanically, they're an excuse to play a robot in a fantasy campaign without having to deal with level adjustment. Fundamentally, warforged are golems, but they differ from their more mainstream counterparts in the fact that they are actually sentient creatures, created by magically coagulating and blending metal, stone, and wood in a vat. This means that warforged are far smarter than standard golems, and lack certain golem weaknesses, like not being able to benefit from healing magic... though they also have a lot of weaknesses that normal golems wouldn't; being a living construct means having the equivalent of vital organs, and thus being able to bleed out if you prod them with a sharp enough stick.

Eberron Warforged[edit]

As detailed in Races of Eberron, all warforged share a common facial design, with a hinged jaw and crystal eyes embedded beneath a reinforced brow ridge with a sigil, called a "ghulra", engraved into the center of the forehead which "are as individual as human fingerprints". Dragon Magazine #352 claims some Warforged have cubical heads (which it has an illustration of), blank heads, demon heads, skull heads or cyclops heads on top of some variety in torso shape and aesthetic accents (all of which is presented in a random appearance table).

Warforged were the ultimate creations of House Cannith, the House of the Dragonmark of Making. During the chaos of the Last War (aka "Dungeonpunk World War I"), House Cannith used strange artificer magic brought back from Xen'drik to churn out enormous legions of artificial soldiers - essentially a cheaper, mass produced version of the common golem that wasn't as morally uncertain as just using the undead and didn't need to eat or sleep and don't become fatigued. This came back to bite them when the war ended and people found out that warforged were actually sentient creatures, with individual personalities and full consciousnesses. As slavery isn't exactly kosher in Khorvaire, House Cannith was forced to turn them loose... now they're trying to figure out just what to do with themselves, especially because the special buildings that make them have officially been all shut down, so they can't "breed" like the organic races around them - which they fear is a deliberate ploy to slowly grind them into extinction.

One of the big bads of the setting is the Lord of Blades, a high-level warforged who wants to unite all of the warforged under his banner and genocide all the squishy races of the world, so he's basically goddamn Ultron Hitler. He is believed to have one of the few creation forges that remain active; however, either from damage and/or being in the Mournland, it's churning out "mutant" warforged and/or Psiforged.

Warforged-Meatbag relations are strained in most of the world. Their ability to work without sleep or breaks while not caring about the heat of the factories is causing a lot of terk er jerbs among the squishies, but their lack of history and support structure makes them vulnerable to exploitative practices and low wages humanoids wised up to long ago (though to be fair it's not like they'd have much to spend their money on to begin with when you think about it). Some Cannith outposts are alleged to hold Warforged in effective slavery by keeping them unaware of their legal freedom. They are also viewed as inherently dangerous, as a warforged with the Adamantine body feat is very difficult to damage by conventional means and they're never quite sure the tin can won't go on a rampage...

Warforged Variants[edit]

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As versatile as the warforged are, House Cannith wasn't content to simply run with them. No, they played around with the process, and managed to produce a number of different Warforged variants.

Warforged Titans are much closer to the traditional golem; not entirely brainless, but nowhere near as smart as a true warforged. They make up for it by being really big (Huge sized). They typically possess a giant crushing hammer for one hand and a scything mega-axe for the other hand, although individual models may swap this out, such as replacing one hand with a siege staff (magical cannon). They are basically the Eberron version of tanks, with hollow interiors that let them carry troops into battle, as well as platforms that troops can use to fire ranged weapons, artillery, or spells from.

Warforged Colossi (singular: Colossus) are the really big brothers. They're basically magitek titans, being Gargantuan-sized versions of the Titans with magitek cannons, a freaking death ray for a head, and a really pissed off attitude. They were intended to be House Cannith's ultimate weapon, able to singlehandedly crush armies, but roughly the same day that they took to the battlefield, the Mourning happened, and so they are largely either destroyed, inoperable, or just impossible to recover.

Warforged Scouts go in the opposite direction. A fully sapient branch of the warforged family tree, Scouts are miniature warforged designed to be about the size of halflings. Why? Well, it's all in the name; they were meant to be used to sneak around the battle field to chart the terrain, spy on the enemy, launch assassination missions... aside from the whole "20ft base speed" thing, they're actually pretty good at it. As a "true" warforged variant, they're actually playable in 3e. They showed up in the Monster Manual 3.

Warforged Chargers are the missing link between the Titans and the Soldiers; smaller and smarter than Titans, but still big, dumb bruisers compared to the standard warforged. They basically look like a warforged gorilla, with stumpy legs and overly long arms that let them hunker down on all fours and sprint across the battlefield at an improved pace. Combined with beefed up armor and the strength to literally rip squishy humans limb from limb with their bare metallic hands, Chargers are basically all the best parts of a golem and a battle-trained killer gorilla. Like the scout, they appeared in the Monster Manual 3 and are technically a playable race, although they have to deal with Level Adjustment.

Psiforged are the most recently emerged warforged strain, and represent an experimental line that was just reaching production when The Mourning happened. As a result, they are the rarest of the warforged variants. As their name suggests, they are warforged created with a particular affinity for psionics, and can easily be visually distinguished from the standard Soldier model by the psi-channeling crystals that sprout, tumor-like, from their bodies. They appeared as a playable race in Magic of Eberron.

Nentir Vale Warforged[edit]

One of the good things about the Nentir Vale setting was that A: as a new setting, it could develop in its own way, and B: it wasn't afraid to tinker with racial backstories to justify the addition of races originating from other settings, like thri-kreen and muls. Thus, Dragon Magazine #364 debuted the article "Playing Warforged", all about the Warforged of the Points of Light.

In the Nentir Vale world, warforged were born of the empire of Nerath, under the wisdom of King Eothyr III. A visionary man, King Eothyr founded the Society of Imperial Artificers, an organization of learned arcanists, and set them the goal of creating an adaptive artificial being - one that could autonomously learn and adapt, but which didn't require the imprisonment of an immortal spirit or an elemental to serve as the spark of its sentience.

The Society labored on this task for many years, working tirelessly to succeed. Sadly, King Eothyr died only a short period before they succeeded. When his son, Prince Elidyr, ascended the throne, he told the Society they had to make some changes: rumblings of unrest suggested that war was coming, and he had no need for his father's Utopian vision of a sentient construct. He needed soldiers, and he told the Society that their artificial lifeform was to fill that need.

This prompted an ideological split within the Society: some were appalled at the idea of turning these artificial beings, naive and innocent, into living weapons and fodder for the wars of man. These rogues took copies of their notes and left. Still, it wasn't enough to stop progress; the Society created their first creation forge, and soon the first of their constructs, the warforged, walked the earth. And just in time - a massive force of demon-worshipping savage humanoids launched itself against Nerath.

Warforged went on to prove significant to Nerath's battle. The empire's own treasury paid for the formation of legions of artificial soldiers, whilst nobles were offered the chance to eschew battlefield duties by paying for warforged soldiers to take the place of their men. Even some of the rogues succumbed to patriotism or pragmatism and used their private creation forges to support the war effort. The warforged weren't numerous enough to prevent the loss of King Elidyr, his heirs, and many of the most influential leaders of Nerath, sadly.

Regardless, their strength and sacrifices kept Nerath from being totally annihilated; even though the former empire crumbled into a series of independent city-states after decades of factional war and territorial squabbling, the slaughter could have been far worse. In fact, warforged continued to play a role in the fighting, and still do today. The Society of Imperial Artificers still exists today, turning out warforged troopers for profit. Some creation forges still remain in the hands of other artificers, churning out new warforged for their own ideological reasons. There's at least one creation forge that remains in the hands of a band of warforged veterans, ensuring the race has some control over its destiny. And those are just the known ones.

A sidebar addresses other possible ways of incorporating warforged into your campaign. For example, they could be an ancient race of self-propagating people, or an experiment in immortality that didn't quite work. They could be exoskeletons for some limbless species of sapients, perhaps constructed by human, dwarven or other "tinker race" allies. They might be a race of human-like beings that convert themselves into artificial creatures at certain age, or implant themselves into armored exoskeletons as part of their maturation cycle. Or your warforged could be unique; some wizard's special experiment that has either escaped or been loaned to the party by their patron.

Undead Warforged[edit]

There's a brief mention of undead Warforged in the Mournland in a 3E book. They appear to be rusting and decaying. Mechanically, zombie or skeleton Warforged are pretty indistinguishable from other undead player races since most of what makes a Warforged interesting mechanically is attached to the subtype they lose. In the end you just have a zombie with composite plating. Still, you can't deny that something like a rusty robo-lich is a pretty cool mental image.

PC Stats[edit]

3e[edit]

Attributes: +2 Constitution, -2 Wisdom, -2 Charisma
Construct (Living Construct Subtype): You're essentially a construct that has a Constitution score and lacks the extreme immunities of normal constructs (Crits, mind-control, nonlethal damage, etc.) but retain immunity to poisons and fatigue. Healing is also only half as effective on you and can only be fully healed by a mechanic.
Medium Size
Speed: 30'
Composite Plating: +2 armor bonus, 5% spell failure, cannot wear armor, but can be enchanted directly and have docent slots instead
Light Fortification: 25% chance to negate critical hits or sneak attacks
Slam: Unarmed attacks deal 1d4 bludgeoning damage
Automatic Languages: Common, Bonus Languages: None
Favored Class: Fighter

Mechanically, while they do come with penalties to two mental stats, built-in spell-failure chance, and half-healing from spells, they also come with a shitload of immunities and some fun robo-feats no one else gets.

The Eberron Campaign Setting and Races of Eberron have several Warforged-only feats and Prestige Classes that take advantage of their mechanical nature. The ___ Body series are level 1 only feats that increase (or delete) your inherent armor by making it made of adamantine, mithral, or ironwood and increasing the AC it gives you. Ironwood has the unique property of not being made of metal, meaning that it does not interfere with Druid spellcasting, and is designed specifically for warforged druids (which are still a stupid idea because warforged take a -2 penalty to wisdom, the druid's god stat, but whatever). Second Slam and Jaws of Death make Warforged capable natural attackers.

Warforged Juggernaut makes a warforged a bit more like a proper golem, sacrificing squishy goodies like the ability to benefit from healing spells in exchange for golem-like immunities and goodies. Reforged is a prestige class that does the exact opposite, gaining natural healing and some improved wisdom and social skills. The final level tosses away everything good about being a Warforged for nothing and makes it one of the few prestige classes where getting the levels level drained away and replaced with nothing will actually make you stronger. The art does give us a Warforged pimp though. Renegade Master can't be taken by Warforged and is an attempt by squishies to make themselves more like Warforged. Spellcarved Soldier is a gish class that doesn't advance spellcasting and instead gives a bunch of mediocre bonuses you can only have one of active.

Warforged Artificer racial substitution levels allow a Warforged to focus more on augmenting their own body and gain the ability to make magic weapons into familiars. There's also Warforged Fighter and Paladin substitution levels, but they're trash.

Scout[edit]

So... you wanna play the mini-mecha, eh? Well, this is what you get:

Ability Score Modifiers: +2 Dexterity, -2 Strength, -2 Wisdom, -2 Charisma
Size: Small (+1 AC, +1 to Attack Rolls, 4 to Hide, -4 to grapple, lifting & carrying limits are 3/4 those of Medium character)
Base Land Speed: 20 feet
Living Construct: See the Warforged above.
Composite Plating: See the Warforged above.
Light Fortification: See the Warforged above.
Favored Class: Rogue

So, yeah, whilst the Living Construct, Composite Plating and Light Fortification traits technically mean you aren't as squishy as a gnome or a halfling... you basically suck, with that 20ft speed in particular making you absolutely terrible at actually scouting things out ahead of the party.

Charger[edit]

Because, sometimes, you just want to play a Mechani-Kong!

Ability Score Modifiers: +10 Strength, +10 Constitution, –6 Intelligence, –4 Wisdom, –8 Charisma
Size: Large (-1 AC, -1 to attack rolls, -4 to Hide, +4 to grapple checks, double lifting and carrying limits)
Base Speed 30ft (20ft)
Space/Reach: 10ft/10ft
Natural Weapons: 2 slams (1d8).
Racial Hit Dice: A warforged charger begins with four levels of construct, which provide 4d10 Hit Dice, a base attack bonus of +3, and base saving throw bonuses of Fort +1, Ref +1, and Will +1.
Racial Skills: A warforged charger’s construct levels give it skill points equal to 7 × (2 + Int modifier, minimum 1). Its class skill is Jump.
Racial Feats: A warforged charger’s construct levels give it two feats. It also receives Adamantine Body and Powerful Charge as bonus feats.
Living Construct: See the Warforged above.
Composite Plating: See the Warforged above.
Adamantine Plating (Ex): Due to having the Adamantine Body feat, a Warforged Charger's Composite Plating has altered bonuses and penalties; +8 AC, Damage Reduction 2/Adamantine, 35% arcane spell failure chance, maximum Dexterity bonus +1, -5 armor check penalty, -10ft speed penalty. It otherwise functions as Composite Plating.
Moderate Fortification: As Light Fortification, except the chance to nullify a critical hit or sneak attack is 75%.
Adamantine Fists (Ex): A warforged charger's Slam attacks count as being made with Adamantine weapons, meaning they ignore object hardness.
Favored Class: Fighter.
Level Adjustment: +4.

Whilst you're still pretty slow, you are a juggernaut in battle, so apart from the whole Linear Warriors, Quadratic Wizards thing that 3e has going on, you're a pretty damn good beatstick. Definitely more worthwhile than the Scout!

Psiforged[edit]

This is the simplest Warforged variant to play, as the mechanics are thus: take the Standard Warforged race above, then take the Character Creation ONLY racial feat "Psiforged Body". That's it. You're done. Take a psionics class and then try not to get too disappointed.

What does Psiforged Body actually do? Well, you get +1 psionic power point at 1st level, even if you don't take a psionic class, and your body now functions like a cognizance cyrstal, letting you store (1 + (1 per 2 character levels)) psionic power points for later usage. That's it.

4e[edit]

Ability scores: +2 Constitution, +2 Intelligence or +2 Strength
Size: Medium
Speed: 6 squares.
Vision: Normal
Languages: Common
Skill Bonuses: +2 Endurance, +2 Intimidate.
Living Construct: You are a living construct. You do not need to eat, drink, breathe, or sleep. You never make Endurance checks to resist the effect of starvation, thirst, or suffocation. All other conditions and effects affect you normally.
Unsleeping Watcher: You do not sleep and instead enter a state of inactivity for 4 hours to gain the benefits of an extended rest. While in this state, you are fully aware of your surroundings and notice approaching enemies and other events as normal.
Warforged Mind: You have a +1 racial bonus to your Will.
Warforged Resilience: You have a +2 racial bonus to saving throws against ongoing damage. Also, when you make a death saving throw, you can take the better result of your die roll or 10.
Warforged Resolve: Encounter minor Racial. You gain 3+1/2 level THP (And 3+1/2 level HP when bloodied) and can make a saving throw.

This statline makes Warforged ideal for a great many roles, including frontliners like Fighters or Barbarians and Supporters, most especially the Artificer (which was also introduced in the Eberron Campaign Setting). In regards of feats, the majority of them fall under one of two groups: Those that improve the racial power, and those that synergize with alchemical item powers and drive in how much warforged artificers work.

They also possess two Paragon Paths, Warforged Juggernaut and Warforged Lifeseeker, and are the only race with a PP set on emulating them, the Self-Forged.

5e[edit]

Fifth Edition is rather peculiar to talk about for warforged because there are three very different statlines to use for warforged: The original stats from the Eberron Unearthed Arcana, the stats from Keith Baker's Wayfinder's Guide to Eberron, and Wizards' own official Eberron: Rising from the Last War.

Unearthed Arcana[edit]

Ability Scores: Str +1; Con +1
Size: Medium
Speed: 30 ft.
Composite Plating: +1 to Armor Class.
Living Construct: Even though you were constructed, you are a living creature. You are immune to disease. You do not need to eat or breathe, but you can ingest food and drink if you wish.
Instead of sleeping, you enter an inactive state for 4 hours each day. You do not dream in this state; you are fully aware of your surroundings and notice approaching enemies and other events as normal.
Languages: Common and one other language of your choice.

This particular statline, while unremarkable, does give them the well-renowned durability of being a living robot, ideal for Fighters and Barbarians, though other classes can definitely find benefits.

Wayfinder's Guide to Eberron[edit]

The WGE stats, however, give a much grander means to build Warforged PCs, mainly by giving three different frames to work from. All warforged, however, maintain the following abilities:

Ability Scores: All Warforged have Con +1
Size: Medium
Warforged Resilience: Immunities everywhere: You cant go to sleep or be fatigued and you get advantage on poison resistance checks with resistance to poison.
Sentry's Rest: When you take a long rest, you must spend at least six hours of it in an inactive, motionless state, rather than sleeping. In this state, you appear inert, but it doesn't render you unconscious, and you can see and hear as normal.
Integrated Protection: At the end of a long rest, you can choose between three different forms of armor to wear. But in exchange, you gain no benefit from wearing armor, not even magical benefits.
Darkwood Core: Counts as unarmored. AC 11 + Dex Mod + Proficiency Mod (If proficient in light armor)
Composite Plating: Requires proficiency in medium armor. AC 13 + Dex Mod (Max 2) + Proficiency Mod
Heavy Plating: Requires proficiency in heavy armor and gives disadvantage on stealth checks. AC 16 + Proficiency Mod
Languages: Common

Envoy

Ability Scores: Choose any two +1
Speed: 30 ft.
Specialized Design: You gain one skill proficiency of your choice, one tool proficiency of your choice, and fluency in one language of your choice.
Integrated Tool: Choose one tool you're proficient with. This tool is integrated into your body, and you double your proficiency bonus for any ability checks you make with it. You must have your hands free to use this integrated tool.

Juggernaut

Ability Scores: Str +2
Speed: 30 ft.
Iron Fists: Your unarmed strike deals 1d4 + your Strength modifier bludgeoning damage
Powerful Build: You count as one size larger when determining your carrying capacity and the weight you can push, drag, or lift

Skirmisher

Ability Scores: Dex +2
Speed: 35 ft.
Graceful: You are proficient in Acrobatics
Light Step: When you are traveling alone for an extended period of time (one hour or more), you can move stealthily at a normal pace.

This all makes the new version of Warforged at an incredibly powerful and possibly OP tier for a race, least of all because of the variety. Really, all classes have an ideal subrace to work with with a possible second if you feel up for it. The real breaking feature is the plating. There are no other races, let alone other means period to get AC as high as a warforged's (not counting a tortle hiding in his shell). For comparison, A Warforged fighter with Heavy Plating already sits at a comfy AC 18 at level 1, a score inaccessible by comparable fighters since the only non-magical armor available is the absurdly-expensive plate armor and a starting fighter is stuck with AC 16 chain mail (or 17 if they sank all 200 starting gold into a suit of splint armor and no weapons). Even non-heavy armor users can't compete, as an elf rogue with maxed-out dex (Let's say 20 due to a good roll) and studded leather can only reach AC 17. By Level 10, that heavy Warforged is now at AC 20, a level only attainable by magical +2 plate armor with no other recourse to match such a thing, and that gap grows ever wider as the levels pass.

Also, the internal balance is shot. Setting aside any and all questions of which stats are best (even though everyone and their dog knows Dexterity blows most other stats out of the water this edition), Skirmisher gets a speed boost, a useful skill, and a situational power that is at least thematic and flavorful, Envoy is basically a variant human who doesn't get to pick his free feat but gets a beast of a feat-equivalent in exchange, and Juggernaut is, while propped up by the race’s powerful chassis, a comical example of exactly how overvalued natural weapons and Powerful Build are in every race designed this edition.

However, the specific wording of Integrated Protection somewhat balances the AC issue, gaining no benifits from wearing armor extends to magical effects on armor as well, so while you do max out at 22 AC with integrated protection you get no use out of magic armor such as Armor of Invulnerability or any form of resistance armor.

tl;dr WGE Warforged require some extremely generous magic item-gifting and perhaps a means to control the scaling AC (Maybe banning the proficiency bonus altogether from the non-darkwood ones? Maybe halving Proficiency Bonus to AC?), which is on-brand for ‘’Eberron’’ but a bit at odds with 5E's philosophy of miserly magical item-gifting.

Eberron: Rising from the Last War[edit]

Ability Scores: Con +2, choose any +1
Size: Medium
Speed: 30 ft
Warforged Resilience: Immunities everywhere: You cant go to sleep or be fatigued and you get advantage on poison resistance checks with resistance to poison.
Sentry's Rest: When you take a long rest, you must spend at least six hours of it in an inactive, motionless state, rather than sleeping. In this state, you appear inert, but it doesn't render you unconscious, and you can see and hear as normal.
Integrated Protection: All Warforged add +1 to AC. This can stack to any other armor that they have proficiency in, which they can integrate with over the span of 1 hour. Once integrated, this armor cannot be forcibly removed.
Specialized Design: Gain proficiency in one skill and one set of tools.
Languages: Common + one other

This version of the statline acts more like an improvement to the Eberron UA version's versatility than any nerfing of the WGE version. As one can see, this version can play more nicely with comparative builds without looking like the far-and-away superior choice and doesn't trigger the ire of anyone who follows 5E's limited item-gifting. Though that comes at the cost of improving any class' central stat beyond that +1, the proficiencies and armor bonus are capable of offsetting that weakness. And yes, subraces were removed.


But alas, they once again have the short end of the stick, as Tasha's Caldron of Everything came out with a new rule where Everyone can move around both of their ability bonuses.

See Also[edit]

Gallery[edit]

This section contains PROMOTIONS! Don't say we didn't warn you.
Dungeons & Dragons 4th Edition Races
Player's Handbook 1 DragonbornDwarfEladrinElfHalf-ElfHalflingHumanTiefling
Player's Handbook 2 DevaGnomeGoliathHalf-OrcShifter
Player's Handbook 3 GithzeraiMinotaurShardmindWilden
Monster Manual 1: BugbearDoppelgangerGithyankiGoblinHobgoblinKoboldOrc
Monster Manual 2 BullywugDuergarKenku
Dragon Magazine GnollShadar-kai
Heroes of Shadow RevenantShadeVryloka
Heroes of the Feywild HamadryadPixieSatyr
Eberron's Player's Guide ChangelingKalashtarWarforged
The Manual of the Planes Bladeling
Dark Sun Campaign Setting MulThri-kreen
Forgotten Realms Player's Guide DrowGenasi
Dungeons & Dragons 5th Edition Races
Player's Handbook DragonbornDrowDwarfElfGnomeHalf-ElfHalf-OrcHalflingHumanTiefling
Dungeon Master's Guide AasimarEladrin
Elemental Evil Player's Guide AarakocraGenasiGoliathSvirfneblin
Sword Coast Adventurer's Guide DuergarGhostwise HalflingSvirfneblinTiefling Variants
Mordenkainen's Tome of Foes Baatific TieflingsDuergarEladrinGithyankiGithzeraiSea ElfShadar-kaiSvirfneblin
Volo's Guide to Monsters AasimarBugbearFirbolgGoblinGoliathHobgoblinKenkuKoboldLizardfolkOrcTabaxiTritonYuan-Ti Pureblood
Eberron: Rising from the Last War BugbearChangelingGoblinHobgoblinShifterWarforged
Guildmaster's Guide to Ravnica CentaurElfGoblinHumanLoxodonMinotaurSimic HybridVedalken
Mythic Odysseys of Theros HumanCentaurLeoninMinotaurSatyrTriton
Plane Shift: Amonkhet AvenKhenraMinotaurNaga
Plane Shift: Innistrad Human
Plane Shift: Ixalan GoblinHumanMerfolkOrcSirenVampire
Plane Shift: Kaladesh AetherbornDwarfElfHumanVedalken
Plane Shift: Zendikar ElfGoblinHumanKorMerfolkVampire
One Grung Above Grung
Astral Adventurer's Guide Astral ElfAutognomeGiffHadozeePlasmoidThri-kreen
Dragonlance: Shadow of the Dragon Queen Kender
Unearthed Arcana GlitchlingMinotaurRevenant