Is my paladin/warlock multiclass a viable tank?











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I'll be playing a D&D 5e Warlock/Paladin character in the Curse of Strahd adventure. I'll start off by taking 2 levels of Paladin (variant human with War Caster) and then start taking levels in Celestial Warlock until I'm Paladin 2/Warlock 9.



My plan is to get the armor proficiency with the paladin and to nab some extra spell slots along with Divine Smite. I'll be using Warlock to gain Agonizing Blast and Grasp of Hadar. I'm choosing Pact of the Chain so I can take the Gift of the Ever Living Ones (eldritch invocation) in order to maximize my own healing with spells and class abilities. (Celestial Warlocks can heal as a bonus action.) I want to use my familiar's Help action to give my one attack (with shadow blade) advantage.



I'll be taking the Sentinel feat so I can tank.

My main method of damage is shadow blade past character level 5.

It will start off as 2d8 + Dex mod at 2nd spell level, and 4d8 + Dex at spell level 5. I'll be casting the green-flame blade cantrip until I gain the Extra Attack from Paladin.



My plan is to be a high-damage tank so that enemies notice me and start targeting me while my allies pick the enemies off.



I will be a Dex-based fighter wearing medium armor and a shield.



Will this work? How do I keep the enemies focused on me so that my allies can do as I intend: pick them off while I keep the enemies busy?










share|improve this question




















  • 3




    "to give my one attack advantage" - to clear up a potential misunderstand: starting at character level 5 (not class level), you will have 2 attacks (as in: roll twice) when using eldritch blast, not one.
    – PixelMaster
    Nov 11 at 20:38










  • Thank you, KorvinStarmast
    – DnDDjinni
    Nov 11 at 21:40






  • 3




    Please don't update your question with a rebuild. It invalidates the answers that are already there. If you'd like to post a new question with the new build, that's a better option.
    – NautArch
    Nov 12 at 16:35








  • 1




    Or if you just wanted to update us on what you decided for your character you can leave it in a comment below your question (so, here) and people can see it there! :) If you actually wanted to ask about a new build you have to ask it as a new question.
    – Rubiksmoose
    Nov 12 at 16:43












  • Alright, thanks
    – DnDDjinni
    Nov 12 at 17:34















up vote
2
down vote

favorite












I'll be playing a D&D 5e Warlock/Paladin character in the Curse of Strahd adventure. I'll start off by taking 2 levels of Paladin (variant human with War Caster) and then start taking levels in Celestial Warlock until I'm Paladin 2/Warlock 9.



My plan is to get the armor proficiency with the paladin and to nab some extra spell slots along with Divine Smite. I'll be using Warlock to gain Agonizing Blast and Grasp of Hadar. I'm choosing Pact of the Chain so I can take the Gift of the Ever Living Ones (eldritch invocation) in order to maximize my own healing with spells and class abilities. (Celestial Warlocks can heal as a bonus action.) I want to use my familiar's Help action to give my one attack (with shadow blade) advantage.



I'll be taking the Sentinel feat so I can tank.

My main method of damage is shadow blade past character level 5.

It will start off as 2d8 + Dex mod at 2nd spell level, and 4d8 + Dex at spell level 5. I'll be casting the green-flame blade cantrip until I gain the Extra Attack from Paladin.



My plan is to be a high-damage tank so that enemies notice me and start targeting me while my allies pick the enemies off.



I will be a Dex-based fighter wearing medium armor and a shield.



Will this work? How do I keep the enemies focused on me so that my allies can do as I intend: pick them off while I keep the enemies busy?










share|improve this question




















  • 3




    "to give my one attack advantage" - to clear up a potential misunderstand: starting at character level 5 (not class level), you will have 2 attacks (as in: roll twice) when using eldritch blast, not one.
    – PixelMaster
    Nov 11 at 20:38










  • Thank you, KorvinStarmast
    – DnDDjinni
    Nov 11 at 21:40






  • 3




    Please don't update your question with a rebuild. It invalidates the answers that are already there. If you'd like to post a new question with the new build, that's a better option.
    – NautArch
    Nov 12 at 16:35








  • 1




    Or if you just wanted to update us on what you decided for your character you can leave it in a comment below your question (so, here) and people can see it there! :) If you actually wanted to ask about a new build you have to ask it as a new question.
    – Rubiksmoose
    Nov 12 at 16:43












  • Alright, thanks
    – DnDDjinni
    Nov 12 at 17:34













up vote
2
down vote

favorite









up vote
2
down vote

favorite











I'll be playing a D&D 5e Warlock/Paladin character in the Curse of Strahd adventure. I'll start off by taking 2 levels of Paladin (variant human with War Caster) and then start taking levels in Celestial Warlock until I'm Paladin 2/Warlock 9.



My plan is to get the armor proficiency with the paladin and to nab some extra spell slots along with Divine Smite. I'll be using Warlock to gain Agonizing Blast and Grasp of Hadar. I'm choosing Pact of the Chain so I can take the Gift of the Ever Living Ones (eldritch invocation) in order to maximize my own healing with spells and class abilities. (Celestial Warlocks can heal as a bonus action.) I want to use my familiar's Help action to give my one attack (with shadow blade) advantage.



I'll be taking the Sentinel feat so I can tank.

My main method of damage is shadow blade past character level 5.

It will start off as 2d8 + Dex mod at 2nd spell level, and 4d8 + Dex at spell level 5. I'll be casting the green-flame blade cantrip until I gain the Extra Attack from Paladin.



My plan is to be a high-damage tank so that enemies notice me and start targeting me while my allies pick the enemies off.



I will be a Dex-based fighter wearing medium armor and a shield.



Will this work? How do I keep the enemies focused on me so that my allies can do as I intend: pick them off while I keep the enemies busy?










share|improve this question















I'll be playing a D&D 5e Warlock/Paladin character in the Curse of Strahd adventure. I'll start off by taking 2 levels of Paladin (variant human with War Caster) and then start taking levels in Celestial Warlock until I'm Paladin 2/Warlock 9.



My plan is to get the armor proficiency with the paladin and to nab some extra spell slots along with Divine Smite. I'll be using Warlock to gain Agonizing Blast and Grasp of Hadar. I'm choosing Pact of the Chain so I can take the Gift of the Ever Living Ones (eldritch invocation) in order to maximize my own healing with spells and class abilities. (Celestial Warlocks can heal as a bonus action.) I want to use my familiar's Help action to give my one attack (with shadow blade) advantage.



I'll be taking the Sentinel feat so I can tank.

My main method of damage is shadow blade past character level 5.

It will start off as 2d8 + Dex mod at 2nd spell level, and 4d8 + Dex at spell level 5. I'll be casting the green-flame blade cantrip until I gain the Extra Attack from Paladin.



My plan is to be a high-damage tank so that enemies notice me and start targeting me while my allies pick the enemies off.



I will be a Dex-based fighter wearing medium armor and a shield.



Will this work? How do I keep the enemies focused on me so that my allies can do as I intend: pick them off while I keep the enemies busy?







dnd-5e optimization warlock multi-classing paladin






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share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Nov 12 at 17:09









Rubiksmoose

46.1k6229352




46.1k6229352










asked Nov 11 at 19:40









DnDDjinni

397




397








  • 3




    "to give my one attack advantage" - to clear up a potential misunderstand: starting at character level 5 (not class level), you will have 2 attacks (as in: roll twice) when using eldritch blast, not one.
    – PixelMaster
    Nov 11 at 20:38










  • Thank you, KorvinStarmast
    – DnDDjinni
    Nov 11 at 21:40






  • 3




    Please don't update your question with a rebuild. It invalidates the answers that are already there. If you'd like to post a new question with the new build, that's a better option.
    – NautArch
    Nov 12 at 16:35








  • 1




    Or if you just wanted to update us on what you decided for your character you can leave it in a comment below your question (so, here) and people can see it there! :) If you actually wanted to ask about a new build you have to ask it as a new question.
    – Rubiksmoose
    Nov 12 at 16:43












  • Alright, thanks
    – DnDDjinni
    Nov 12 at 17:34














  • 3




    "to give my one attack advantage" - to clear up a potential misunderstand: starting at character level 5 (not class level), you will have 2 attacks (as in: roll twice) when using eldritch blast, not one.
    – PixelMaster
    Nov 11 at 20:38










  • Thank you, KorvinStarmast
    – DnDDjinni
    Nov 11 at 21:40






  • 3




    Please don't update your question with a rebuild. It invalidates the answers that are already there. If you'd like to post a new question with the new build, that's a better option.
    – NautArch
    Nov 12 at 16:35








  • 1




    Or if you just wanted to update us on what you decided for your character you can leave it in a comment below your question (so, here) and people can see it there! :) If you actually wanted to ask about a new build you have to ask it as a new question.
    – Rubiksmoose
    Nov 12 at 16:43












  • Alright, thanks
    – DnDDjinni
    Nov 12 at 17:34








3




3




"to give my one attack advantage" - to clear up a potential misunderstand: starting at character level 5 (not class level), you will have 2 attacks (as in: roll twice) when using eldritch blast, not one.
– PixelMaster
Nov 11 at 20:38




"to give my one attack advantage" - to clear up a potential misunderstand: starting at character level 5 (not class level), you will have 2 attacks (as in: roll twice) when using eldritch blast, not one.
– PixelMaster
Nov 11 at 20:38












Thank you, KorvinStarmast
– DnDDjinni
Nov 11 at 21:40




Thank you, KorvinStarmast
– DnDDjinni
Nov 11 at 21:40




3




3




Please don't update your question with a rebuild. It invalidates the answers that are already there. If you'd like to post a new question with the new build, that's a better option.
– NautArch
Nov 12 at 16:35






Please don't update your question with a rebuild. It invalidates the answers that are already there. If you'd like to post a new question with the new build, that's a better option.
– NautArch
Nov 12 at 16:35






1




1




Or if you just wanted to update us on what you decided for your character you can leave it in a comment below your question (so, here) and people can see it there! :) If you actually wanted to ask about a new build you have to ask it as a new question.
– Rubiksmoose
Nov 12 at 16:43






Or if you just wanted to update us on what you decided for your character you can leave it in a comment below your question (so, here) and people can see it there! :) If you actually wanted to ask about a new build you have to ask it as a new question.
– Rubiksmoose
Nov 12 at 16:43














Alright, thanks
– DnDDjinni
Nov 12 at 17:34




Alright, thanks
– DnDDjinni
Nov 12 at 17:34










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
12
down vote



accepted










The core idea of this build seems to be: you want to have a high AC and be a tank, but you only need to spend two levels on paladin to pull that off, and you're going to spend the rest of your levels on something with higher utility. I haven't tried this myself, but I've seen others try it and it seems to work pretty well.



The thing where you heal yourself as a warlock seems like a good trick. It's only a tiny bit more healing than you would have gotten from Lay On Hands as a normal paladin, but having it be a bonus action is useful.



Smiting using your warlock spell slots is also a good trick.





You've written that you want to have a high damage output to draw aggro. I don't think this will work as well as you want, because being a multiclass character will drop your damage output significantly. In particular, a single-class paladin would get double-attack at fifth level, and you're not going to get that until much later.



You'll get shadow blade instead, but it's not as good: the damage output is less (2d8+DEX with your build, versus two attacks at 1d8+DEX each for the paladin), you're spending spell slots which could be used for other things (like smites), and every time you get hit, you'll have to make a constitution save or lose your weapon.



(Also, tanks don't hold aggro by having high damage output. Tanks hold aggro by having the Sentinel feat.)



As a side note, it's not surprising that it's hard to optimize both AC and damage simultaneously. If there were a build that gave you high damage and also high AC, everyone would be doing it already.





As Andras notes, your current build requires STR 13 and a high DEX. If you switch to a STR-focused build, then your stat requirements go down and your AC goes up, at the cost of some initiative. I'm not sure what your stat array looks like, but one guess might be that you'd go from 13/15/12/8/10/14 to 15/8/13/10/12/14, and you could put a racial +1 in CON to get bonus hit points.





I don't think Agonizing Blast is a good choice for you. Your eldritch blast spell has a low attack bonus because CHA isn't your primary stat; also, it will have disadvantage any time you use it while in melee combat. Warlock invocations are valuable, and it seems weird to spend one for a minor buff to an ability you'll rarely use.



I'm unsure about Grasp of Hadar. You might be able to use it to pull foes out of the air, or to pull them away from allies they were grappling. Those are good effects.



But the thing is: you're also spending an ASI on this (for War Caster). There are lots of super valuable things you could be doing with an ASI and two warlock invocations. The ASI could give you +1 to attack and damage rolls; the invocations could add non-combat utility to your character with Beast Speech or Mask of Many Faces or Misty Visions, or you could just get the Devil's Sight invocation and use the darkness spell.






share|improve this answer



















  • 1




    I'm going for DEX based. I'm wearing medium armor and a shield. Shadow blade is the my main method of drawing agro from the enemies as a "priority target number 1". Blade pact would mean I can't get Gift of the Ever Living Ones for max healing.
    – DnDDjinni
    Nov 11 at 21:01








  • 1




    Also I don't plan to function as a main caster. I don't get many spell slots in the first place and my party already has better full casters.
    – DnDDjinni
    Nov 11 at 21:02










  • Good plan. I'll drop the high damage in favor of tanking. I can have short rest recharged spell slots for my divine smite when I need a damage boost. My only problem with that is that I could cast shadow blade and deal consistent damage with 2d8+DEX as long as the spell persists rather than attacking normally and smiting the more powerful foes, which uses a whole spell slot. I have to pick my spell slot usage carefully. Otherwise, this is pretty helpful.
    – DnDDjinni
    Nov 12 at 4:02






  • 1




    My new plan is to take 2 levels of Paladin and 3 levels of Warlock by level 5. Then I can continue to Paladin 5/Warlock 3, this way even if shadow blade is the slightly less effective option, I wouldn't have to deal with it for too long. (I know the concentration is an issue, but Shadow Blade was a big part of his character concept. My DM reskinned it to look like a "Radient Blade".)
    – DnDDjinni
    Nov 12 at 4:23




















up vote
4
down vote













Viable, but not good



Abilities



You will be very MAD, needing Str 13 for multiclassing, Dex 16+ for attacking, Con 14+ for survival, and some Cha 14+ for casting.

By going with Str as primary, you can dump Dex completely, gaining +1 AC in the process, and losing some initiative.



Patron



Healing Light is great for two reasons:




  1. It is like Healing Word, can be used to bring back unconcious allies without having to spend a whole turn on it

  2. It is not a spell like Healing Word, so you can use full action spells in the same round


Neither of which matters for you, you want to use it on yourself, which takes away more than half of its usefulness, and you don't intend to cast spells as actions mostly.



I would recommend Hexblade for damage or Fiend for survivability instead.



Invocations



Pact of the Chain is great for scouting, but Gift of the Ever Living Ones is mediocre at best. Agonizing Blast is also not for you, as you want to stay close. If Eldritch Blast is just a backup option for flying enemies for example, you should not waste your few invocations on it.



If you do not have darkvision, Devil's Sight is great, also Relentless Hex is an easy way to keep up with elusive enemies.



Damage



You want to use Green-Flame Blade until you get Extra Attack from Paladin, but Paladin 2/Warlock 9 does not get Extra Attack. You are much better off with Palading 6/Warlock 5 in terms of sustainable damage, and the great Aura of Protection.



Survivability



If you take the Defense Fighting Style, wear the heavies armor available, and plan on using a shield, you do not have to worry much about your HP, so Healing Light is not really a must.






share|improve this answer





















  • +1, good point about the MAD, I've added it to my answer. : )
    – Dan B
    Nov 14 at 14:36










  • Good advice and great points.
    – Davo
    Nov 14 at 15:02











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2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes








up vote
12
down vote



accepted










The core idea of this build seems to be: you want to have a high AC and be a tank, but you only need to spend two levels on paladin to pull that off, and you're going to spend the rest of your levels on something with higher utility. I haven't tried this myself, but I've seen others try it and it seems to work pretty well.



The thing where you heal yourself as a warlock seems like a good trick. It's only a tiny bit more healing than you would have gotten from Lay On Hands as a normal paladin, but having it be a bonus action is useful.



Smiting using your warlock spell slots is also a good trick.





You've written that you want to have a high damage output to draw aggro. I don't think this will work as well as you want, because being a multiclass character will drop your damage output significantly. In particular, a single-class paladin would get double-attack at fifth level, and you're not going to get that until much later.



You'll get shadow blade instead, but it's not as good: the damage output is less (2d8+DEX with your build, versus two attacks at 1d8+DEX each for the paladin), you're spending spell slots which could be used for other things (like smites), and every time you get hit, you'll have to make a constitution save or lose your weapon.



(Also, tanks don't hold aggro by having high damage output. Tanks hold aggro by having the Sentinel feat.)



As a side note, it's not surprising that it's hard to optimize both AC and damage simultaneously. If there were a build that gave you high damage and also high AC, everyone would be doing it already.





As Andras notes, your current build requires STR 13 and a high DEX. If you switch to a STR-focused build, then your stat requirements go down and your AC goes up, at the cost of some initiative. I'm not sure what your stat array looks like, but one guess might be that you'd go from 13/15/12/8/10/14 to 15/8/13/10/12/14, and you could put a racial +1 in CON to get bonus hit points.





I don't think Agonizing Blast is a good choice for you. Your eldritch blast spell has a low attack bonus because CHA isn't your primary stat; also, it will have disadvantage any time you use it while in melee combat. Warlock invocations are valuable, and it seems weird to spend one for a minor buff to an ability you'll rarely use.



I'm unsure about Grasp of Hadar. You might be able to use it to pull foes out of the air, or to pull them away from allies they were grappling. Those are good effects.



But the thing is: you're also spending an ASI on this (for War Caster). There are lots of super valuable things you could be doing with an ASI and two warlock invocations. The ASI could give you +1 to attack and damage rolls; the invocations could add non-combat utility to your character with Beast Speech or Mask of Many Faces or Misty Visions, or you could just get the Devil's Sight invocation and use the darkness spell.






share|improve this answer



















  • 1




    I'm going for DEX based. I'm wearing medium armor and a shield. Shadow blade is the my main method of drawing agro from the enemies as a "priority target number 1". Blade pact would mean I can't get Gift of the Ever Living Ones for max healing.
    – DnDDjinni
    Nov 11 at 21:01








  • 1




    Also I don't plan to function as a main caster. I don't get many spell slots in the first place and my party already has better full casters.
    – DnDDjinni
    Nov 11 at 21:02










  • Good plan. I'll drop the high damage in favor of tanking. I can have short rest recharged spell slots for my divine smite when I need a damage boost. My only problem with that is that I could cast shadow blade and deal consistent damage with 2d8+DEX as long as the spell persists rather than attacking normally and smiting the more powerful foes, which uses a whole spell slot. I have to pick my spell slot usage carefully. Otherwise, this is pretty helpful.
    – DnDDjinni
    Nov 12 at 4:02






  • 1




    My new plan is to take 2 levels of Paladin and 3 levels of Warlock by level 5. Then I can continue to Paladin 5/Warlock 3, this way even if shadow blade is the slightly less effective option, I wouldn't have to deal with it for too long. (I know the concentration is an issue, but Shadow Blade was a big part of his character concept. My DM reskinned it to look like a "Radient Blade".)
    – DnDDjinni
    Nov 12 at 4:23

















up vote
12
down vote



accepted










The core idea of this build seems to be: you want to have a high AC and be a tank, but you only need to spend two levels on paladin to pull that off, and you're going to spend the rest of your levels on something with higher utility. I haven't tried this myself, but I've seen others try it and it seems to work pretty well.



The thing where you heal yourself as a warlock seems like a good trick. It's only a tiny bit more healing than you would have gotten from Lay On Hands as a normal paladin, but having it be a bonus action is useful.



Smiting using your warlock spell slots is also a good trick.





You've written that you want to have a high damage output to draw aggro. I don't think this will work as well as you want, because being a multiclass character will drop your damage output significantly. In particular, a single-class paladin would get double-attack at fifth level, and you're not going to get that until much later.



You'll get shadow blade instead, but it's not as good: the damage output is less (2d8+DEX with your build, versus two attacks at 1d8+DEX each for the paladin), you're spending spell slots which could be used for other things (like smites), and every time you get hit, you'll have to make a constitution save or lose your weapon.



(Also, tanks don't hold aggro by having high damage output. Tanks hold aggro by having the Sentinel feat.)



As a side note, it's not surprising that it's hard to optimize both AC and damage simultaneously. If there were a build that gave you high damage and also high AC, everyone would be doing it already.





As Andras notes, your current build requires STR 13 and a high DEX. If you switch to a STR-focused build, then your stat requirements go down and your AC goes up, at the cost of some initiative. I'm not sure what your stat array looks like, but one guess might be that you'd go from 13/15/12/8/10/14 to 15/8/13/10/12/14, and you could put a racial +1 in CON to get bonus hit points.





I don't think Agonizing Blast is a good choice for you. Your eldritch blast spell has a low attack bonus because CHA isn't your primary stat; also, it will have disadvantage any time you use it while in melee combat. Warlock invocations are valuable, and it seems weird to spend one for a minor buff to an ability you'll rarely use.



I'm unsure about Grasp of Hadar. You might be able to use it to pull foes out of the air, or to pull them away from allies they were grappling. Those are good effects.



But the thing is: you're also spending an ASI on this (for War Caster). There are lots of super valuable things you could be doing with an ASI and two warlock invocations. The ASI could give you +1 to attack and damage rolls; the invocations could add non-combat utility to your character with Beast Speech or Mask of Many Faces or Misty Visions, or you could just get the Devil's Sight invocation and use the darkness spell.






share|improve this answer



















  • 1




    I'm going for DEX based. I'm wearing medium armor and a shield. Shadow blade is the my main method of drawing agro from the enemies as a "priority target number 1". Blade pact would mean I can't get Gift of the Ever Living Ones for max healing.
    – DnDDjinni
    Nov 11 at 21:01








  • 1




    Also I don't plan to function as a main caster. I don't get many spell slots in the first place and my party already has better full casters.
    – DnDDjinni
    Nov 11 at 21:02










  • Good plan. I'll drop the high damage in favor of tanking. I can have short rest recharged spell slots for my divine smite when I need a damage boost. My only problem with that is that I could cast shadow blade and deal consistent damage with 2d8+DEX as long as the spell persists rather than attacking normally and smiting the more powerful foes, which uses a whole spell slot. I have to pick my spell slot usage carefully. Otherwise, this is pretty helpful.
    – DnDDjinni
    Nov 12 at 4:02






  • 1




    My new plan is to take 2 levels of Paladin and 3 levels of Warlock by level 5. Then I can continue to Paladin 5/Warlock 3, this way even if shadow blade is the slightly less effective option, I wouldn't have to deal with it for too long. (I know the concentration is an issue, but Shadow Blade was a big part of his character concept. My DM reskinned it to look like a "Radient Blade".)
    – DnDDjinni
    Nov 12 at 4:23















up vote
12
down vote



accepted







up vote
12
down vote



accepted






The core idea of this build seems to be: you want to have a high AC and be a tank, but you only need to spend two levels on paladin to pull that off, and you're going to spend the rest of your levels on something with higher utility. I haven't tried this myself, but I've seen others try it and it seems to work pretty well.



The thing where you heal yourself as a warlock seems like a good trick. It's only a tiny bit more healing than you would have gotten from Lay On Hands as a normal paladin, but having it be a bonus action is useful.



Smiting using your warlock spell slots is also a good trick.





You've written that you want to have a high damage output to draw aggro. I don't think this will work as well as you want, because being a multiclass character will drop your damage output significantly. In particular, a single-class paladin would get double-attack at fifth level, and you're not going to get that until much later.



You'll get shadow blade instead, but it's not as good: the damage output is less (2d8+DEX with your build, versus two attacks at 1d8+DEX each for the paladin), you're spending spell slots which could be used for other things (like smites), and every time you get hit, you'll have to make a constitution save or lose your weapon.



(Also, tanks don't hold aggro by having high damage output. Tanks hold aggro by having the Sentinel feat.)



As a side note, it's not surprising that it's hard to optimize both AC and damage simultaneously. If there were a build that gave you high damage and also high AC, everyone would be doing it already.





As Andras notes, your current build requires STR 13 and a high DEX. If you switch to a STR-focused build, then your stat requirements go down and your AC goes up, at the cost of some initiative. I'm not sure what your stat array looks like, but one guess might be that you'd go from 13/15/12/8/10/14 to 15/8/13/10/12/14, and you could put a racial +1 in CON to get bonus hit points.





I don't think Agonizing Blast is a good choice for you. Your eldritch blast spell has a low attack bonus because CHA isn't your primary stat; also, it will have disadvantage any time you use it while in melee combat. Warlock invocations are valuable, and it seems weird to spend one for a minor buff to an ability you'll rarely use.



I'm unsure about Grasp of Hadar. You might be able to use it to pull foes out of the air, or to pull them away from allies they were grappling. Those are good effects.



But the thing is: you're also spending an ASI on this (for War Caster). There are lots of super valuable things you could be doing with an ASI and two warlock invocations. The ASI could give you +1 to attack and damage rolls; the invocations could add non-combat utility to your character with Beast Speech or Mask of Many Faces or Misty Visions, or you could just get the Devil's Sight invocation and use the darkness spell.






share|improve this answer














The core idea of this build seems to be: you want to have a high AC and be a tank, but you only need to spend two levels on paladin to pull that off, and you're going to spend the rest of your levels on something with higher utility. I haven't tried this myself, but I've seen others try it and it seems to work pretty well.



The thing where you heal yourself as a warlock seems like a good trick. It's only a tiny bit more healing than you would have gotten from Lay On Hands as a normal paladin, but having it be a bonus action is useful.



Smiting using your warlock spell slots is also a good trick.





You've written that you want to have a high damage output to draw aggro. I don't think this will work as well as you want, because being a multiclass character will drop your damage output significantly. In particular, a single-class paladin would get double-attack at fifth level, and you're not going to get that until much later.



You'll get shadow blade instead, but it's not as good: the damage output is less (2d8+DEX with your build, versus two attacks at 1d8+DEX each for the paladin), you're spending spell slots which could be used for other things (like smites), and every time you get hit, you'll have to make a constitution save or lose your weapon.



(Also, tanks don't hold aggro by having high damage output. Tanks hold aggro by having the Sentinel feat.)



As a side note, it's not surprising that it's hard to optimize both AC and damage simultaneously. If there were a build that gave you high damage and also high AC, everyone would be doing it already.





As Andras notes, your current build requires STR 13 and a high DEX. If you switch to a STR-focused build, then your stat requirements go down and your AC goes up, at the cost of some initiative. I'm not sure what your stat array looks like, but one guess might be that you'd go from 13/15/12/8/10/14 to 15/8/13/10/12/14, and you could put a racial +1 in CON to get bonus hit points.





I don't think Agonizing Blast is a good choice for you. Your eldritch blast spell has a low attack bonus because CHA isn't your primary stat; also, it will have disadvantage any time you use it while in melee combat. Warlock invocations are valuable, and it seems weird to spend one for a minor buff to an ability you'll rarely use.



I'm unsure about Grasp of Hadar. You might be able to use it to pull foes out of the air, or to pull them away from allies they were grappling. Those are good effects.



But the thing is: you're also spending an ASI on this (for War Caster). There are lots of super valuable things you could be doing with an ASI and two warlock invocations. The ASI could give you +1 to attack and damage rolls; the invocations could add non-combat utility to your character with Beast Speech or Mask of Many Faces or Misty Visions, or you could just get the Devil's Sight invocation and use the darkness spell.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Nov 14 at 14:35

























answered Nov 11 at 20:49









Dan B

35.1k765137




35.1k765137








  • 1




    I'm going for DEX based. I'm wearing medium armor and a shield. Shadow blade is the my main method of drawing agro from the enemies as a "priority target number 1". Blade pact would mean I can't get Gift of the Ever Living Ones for max healing.
    – DnDDjinni
    Nov 11 at 21:01








  • 1




    Also I don't plan to function as a main caster. I don't get many spell slots in the first place and my party already has better full casters.
    – DnDDjinni
    Nov 11 at 21:02










  • Good plan. I'll drop the high damage in favor of tanking. I can have short rest recharged spell slots for my divine smite when I need a damage boost. My only problem with that is that I could cast shadow blade and deal consistent damage with 2d8+DEX as long as the spell persists rather than attacking normally and smiting the more powerful foes, which uses a whole spell slot. I have to pick my spell slot usage carefully. Otherwise, this is pretty helpful.
    – DnDDjinni
    Nov 12 at 4:02






  • 1




    My new plan is to take 2 levels of Paladin and 3 levels of Warlock by level 5. Then I can continue to Paladin 5/Warlock 3, this way even if shadow blade is the slightly less effective option, I wouldn't have to deal with it for too long. (I know the concentration is an issue, but Shadow Blade was a big part of his character concept. My DM reskinned it to look like a "Radient Blade".)
    – DnDDjinni
    Nov 12 at 4:23
















  • 1




    I'm going for DEX based. I'm wearing medium armor and a shield. Shadow blade is the my main method of drawing agro from the enemies as a "priority target number 1". Blade pact would mean I can't get Gift of the Ever Living Ones for max healing.
    – DnDDjinni
    Nov 11 at 21:01








  • 1




    Also I don't plan to function as a main caster. I don't get many spell slots in the first place and my party already has better full casters.
    – DnDDjinni
    Nov 11 at 21:02










  • Good plan. I'll drop the high damage in favor of tanking. I can have short rest recharged spell slots for my divine smite when I need a damage boost. My only problem with that is that I could cast shadow blade and deal consistent damage with 2d8+DEX as long as the spell persists rather than attacking normally and smiting the more powerful foes, which uses a whole spell slot. I have to pick my spell slot usage carefully. Otherwise, this is pretty helpful.
    – DnDDjinni
    Nov 12 at 4:02






  • 1




    My new plan is to take 2 levels of Paladin and 3 levels of Warlock by level 5. Then I can continue to Paladin 5/Warlock 3, this way even if shadow blade is the slightly less effective option, I wouldn't have to deal with it for too long. (I know the concentration is an issue, but Shadow Blade was a big part of his character concept. My DM reskinned it to look like a "Radient Blade".)
    – DnDDjinni
    Nov 12 at 4:23










1




1




I'm going for DEX based. I'm wearing medium armor and a shield. Shadow blade is the my main method of drawing agro from the enemies as a "priority target number 1". Blade pact would mean I can't get Gift of the Ever Living Ones for max healing.
– DnDDjinni
Nov 11 at 21:01






I'm going for DEX based. I'm wearing medium armor and a shield. Shadow blade is the my main method of drawing agro from the enemies as a "priority target number 1". Blade pact would mean I can't get Gift of the Ever Living Ones for max healing.
– DnDDjinni
Nov 11 at 21:01






1




1




Also I don't plan to function as a main caster. I don't get many spell slots in the first place and my party already has better full casters.
– DnDDjinni
Nov 11 at 21:02




Also I don't plan to function as a main caster. I don't get many spell slots in the first place and my party already has better full casters.
– DnDDjinni
Nov 11 at 21:02












Good plan. I'll drop the high damage in favor of tanking. I can have short rest recharged spell slots for my divine smite when I need a damage boost. My only problem with that is that I could cast shadow blade and deal consistent damage with 2d8+DEX as long as the spell persists rather than attacking normally and smiting the more powerful foes, which uses a whole spell slot. I have to pick my spell slot usage carefully. Otherwise, this is pretty helpful.
– DnDDjinni
Nov 12 at 4:02




Good plan. I'll drop the high damage in favor of tanking. I can have short rest recharged spell slots for my divine smite when I need a damage boost. My only problem with that is that I could cast shadow blade and deal consistent damage with 2d8+DEX as long as the spell persists rather than attacking normally and smiting the more powerful foes, which uses a whole spell slot. I have to pick my spell slot usage carefully. Otherwise, this is pretty helpful.
– DnDDjinni
Nov 12 at 4:02




1




1




My new plan is to take 2 levels of Paladin and 3 levels of Warlock by level 5. Then I can continue to Paladin 5/Warlock 3, this way even if shadow blade is the slightly less effective option, I wouldn't have to deal with it for too long. (I know the concentration is an issue, but Shadow Blade was a big part of his character concept. My DM reskinned it to look like a "Radient Blade".)
– DnDDjinni
Nov 12 at 4:23






My new plan is to take 2 levels of Paladin and 3 levels of Warlock by level 5. Then I can continue to Paladin 5/Warlock 3, this way even if shadow blade is the slightly less effective option, I wouldn't have to deal with it for too long. (I know the concentration is an issue, but Shadow Blade was a big part of his character concept. My DM reskinned it to look like a "Radient Blade".)
– DnDDjinni
Nov 12 at 4:23














up vote
4
down vote













Viable, but not good



Abilities



You will be very MAD, needing Str 13 for multiclassing, Dex 16+ for attacking, Con 14+ for survival, and some Cha 14+ for casting.

By going with Str as primary, you can dump Dex completely, gaining +1 AC in the process, and losing some initiative.



Patron



Healing Light is great for two reasons:




  1. It is like Healing Word, can be used to bring back unconcious allies without having to spend a whole turn on it

  2. It is not a spell like Healing Word, so you can use full action spells in the same round


Neither of which matters for you, you want to use it on yourself, which takes away more than half of its usefulness, and you don't intend to cast spells as actions mostly.



I would recommend Hexblade for damage or Fiend for survivability instead.



Invocations



Pact of the Chain is great for scouting, but Gift of the Ever Living Ones is mediocre at best. Agonizing Blast is also not for you, as you want to stay close. If Eldritch Blast is just a backup option for flying enemies for example, you should not waste your few invocations on it.



If you do not have darkvision, Devil's Sight is great, also Relentless Hex is an easy way to keep up with elusive enemies.



Damage



You want to use Green-Flame Blade until you get Extra Attack from Paladin, but Paladin 2/Warlock 9 does not get Extra Attack. You are much better off with Palading 6/Warlock 5 in terms of sustainable damage, and the great Aura of Protection.



Survivability



If you take the Defense Fighting Style, wear the heavies armor available, and plan on using a shield, you do not have to worry much about your HP, so Healing Light is not really a must.






share|improve this answer





















  • +1, good point about the MAD, I've added it to my answer. : )
    – Dan B
    Nov 14 at 14:36










  • Good advice and great points.
    – Davo
    Nov 14 at 15:02















up vote
4
down vote













Viable, but not good



Abilities



You will be very MAD, needing Str 13 for multiclassing, Dex 16+ for attacking, Con 14+ for survival, and some Cha 14+ for casting.

By going with Str as primary, you can dump Dex completely, gaining +1 AC in the process, and losing some initiative.



Patron



Healing Light is great for two reasons:




  1. It is like Healing Word, can be used to bring back unconcious allies without having to spend a whole turn on it

  2. It is not a spell like Healing Word, so you can use full action spells in the same round


Neither of which matters for you, you want to use it on yourself, which takes away more than half of its usefulness, and you don't intend to cast spells as actions mostly.



I would recommend Hexblade for damage or Fiend for survivability instead.



Invocations



Pact of the Chain is great for scouting, but Gift of the Ever Living Ones is mediocre at best. Agonizing Blast is also not for you, as you want to stay close. If Eldritch Blast is just a backup option for flying enemies for example, you should not waste your few invocations on it.



If you do not have darkvision, Devil's Sight is great, also Relentless Hex is an easy way to keep up with elusive enemies.



Damage



You want to use Green-Flame Blade until you get Extra Attack from Paladin, but Paladin 2/Warlock 9 does not get Extra Attack. You are much better off with Palading 6/Warlock 5 in terms of sustainable damage, and the great Aura of Protection.



Survivability



If you take the Defense Fighting Style, wear the heavies armor available, and plan on using a shield, you do not have to worry much about your HP, so Healing Light is not really a must.






share|improve this answer





















  • +1, good point about the MAD, I've added it to my answer. : )
    – Dan B
    Nov 14 at 14:36










  • Good advice and great points.
    – Davo
    Nov 14 at 15:02













up vote
4
down vote










up vote
4
down vote









Viable, but not good



Abilities



You will be very MAD, needing Str 13 for multiclassing, Dex 16+ for attacking, Con 14+ for survival, and some Cha 14+ for casting.

By going with Str as primary, you can dump Dex completely, gaining +1 AC in the process, and losing some initiative.



Patron



Healing Light is great for two reasons:




  1. It is like Healing Word, can be used to bring back unconcious allies without having to spend a whole turn on it

  2. It is not a spell like Healing Word, so you can use full action spells in the same round


Neither of which matters for you, you want to use it on yourself, which takes away more than half of its usefulness, and you don't intend to cast spells as actions mostly.



I would recommend Hexblade for damage or Fiend for survivability instead.



Invocations



Pact of the Chain is great for scouting, but Gift of the Ever Living Ones is mediocre at best. Agonizing Blast is also not for you, as you want to stay close. If Eldritch Blast is just a backup option for flying enemies for example, you should not waste your few invocations on it.



If you do not have darkvision, Devil's Sight is great, also Relentless Hex is an easy way to keep up with elusive enemies.



Damage



You want to use Green-Flame Blade until you get Extra Attack from Paladin, but Paladin 2/Warlock 9 does not get Extra Attack. You are much better off with Palading 6/Warlock 5 in terms of sustainable damage, and the great Aura of Protection.



Survivability



If you take the Defense Fighting Style, wear the heavies armor available, and plan on using a shield, you do not have to worry much about your HP, so Healing Light is not really a must.






share|improve this answer












Viable, but not good



Abilities



You will be very MAD, needing Str 13 for multiclassing, Dex 16+ for attacking, Con 14+ for survival, and some Cha 14+ for casting.

By going with Str as primary, you can dump Dex completely, gaining +1 AC in the process, and losing some initiative.



Patron



Healing Light is great for two reasons:




  1. It is like Healing Word, can be used to bring back unconcious allies without having to spend a whole turn on it

  2. It is not a spell like Healing Word, so you can use full action spells in the same round


Neither of which matters for you, you want to use it on yourself, which takes away more than half of its usefulness, and you don't intend to cast spells as actions mostly.



I would recommend Hexblade for damage or Fiend for survivability instead.



Invocations



Pact of the Chain is great for scouting, but Gift of the Ever Living Ones is mediocre at best. Agonizing Blast is also not for you, as you want to stay close. If Eldritch Blast is just a backup option for flying enemies for example, you should not waste your few invocations on it.



If you do not have darkvision, Devil's Sight is great, also Relentless Hex is an easy way to keep up with elusive enemies.



Damage



You want to use Green-Flame Blade until you get Extra Attack from Paladin, but Paladin 2/Warlock 9 does not get Extra Attack. You are much better off with Palading 6/Warlock 5 in terms of sustainable damage, and the great Aura of Protection.



Survivability



If you take the Defense Fighting Style, wear the heavies armor available, and plan on using a shield, you do not have to worry much about your HP, so Healing Light is not really a must.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Nov 12 at 13:48









András

25.3k1091184




25.3k1091184












  • +1, good point about the MAD, I've added it to my answer. : )
    – Dan B
    Nov 14 at 14:36










  • Good advice and great points.
    – Davo
    Nov 14 at 15:02


















  • +1, good point about the MAD, I've added it to my answer. : )
    – Dan B
    Nov 14 at 14:36










  • Good advice and great points.
    – Davo
    Nov 14 at 15:02
















+1, good point about the MAD, I've added it to my answer. : )
– Dan B
Nov 14 at 14:36




+1, good point about the MAD, I've added it to my answer. : )
– Dan B
Nov 14 at 14:36












Good advice and great points.
– Davo
Nov 14 at 15:02




Good advice and great points.
– Davo
Nov 14 at 15:02


















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