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A longbow (1d8, 150/600 range), and a shortbow (1d6, 80/320 range) benefit from "Extra Attack".

A light crossbow (1d8, 80/320 range), or a hand crossbow (1d6, 30/120 range), do not benefit from "Extra Attack".

A light crossbow is worse in terms of range, and damage (with Extra Attack) than the longbow. A light crossbow is on par for range with the shortbow, and worse for damage (with Extra Attack).

I understand that with Crossbow Expert Feat, you can make 3 attacks with hand crossbows at still a very short range of 30 feet.


Mechanically, I don't see any benefit to a light crossbow if you have an Extra Attack. Is there some benefit to using a light crossbow I am missing?

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  • \$\begingroup\$ I think this question is adequately scoped now. It is quite similar to my own question: What is the utility of the magic item Unbreakable Arrow? \$\endgroup\$ Commented Oct 1, 2020 at 16:36
  • \$\begingroup\$ History speaks to stories, so some of the historic motivation can speak to longbows vs. crossbows. The crossbows were more expensive, complex, and thus easy to control. In Europe the longbow gave the English the ability to have many archers. That means that if someone wanted to attack within England using a longbow it was harder to identify the culprit. In d&d I could see tyrants loving crossbows as well. A mutant hybrid of bellows, blowgun, and atlatl might make a very deadly underwater ranged weapon. \$\endgroup\$ Commented Oct 4, 2020 at 20:56

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Lack of martial weapon proficiency

Just by their stats, a longbow does seem strictly better than a light crossbow.

However, longbows are martial weapons, and light crossbows are simple weapons. (PHB, p. 149)

As a result, some classes/races will not be able to use longbows effectively due to their lack of proficiency with martial weapons - in particular classes without Extra Attack often lack martial weapon proficiency.

As an example, a Human Rogue cannot wield a longbow with proficiency (barring feats). For this character, a light crossbow is one damage die better than a shortbow (which is also a simple weapon). Since they are a Rogue, they do not get Extra Attack, and so the fact that the shortbow can benefit from Extra Attack while the crossbow cannot (Loading property) does not come into play.

It's worth noting that a character who does have martial weapon proficiencies will likely be choosing between a heavy crossbow (which does more damage per attack) and a longbow (which works with Extra attack).

Underwater combat

Crossbows are better weapons than longbows underwater, due to their lack of disadvantage.

From the rules on underwater combat (PHB p.198):

A ranged weapon attack automatically misses a target beyond the weapon’s normal range. Even against a target within normal range, the attack roll has disadvantage unless the weapon is a crossbow, a net, or a weapon that is thrown like a javelin (including a spear, trident, or dart).

Small characters

Longbows and heavy crossbows both possess the Heavy property:

Small creatures have disadvantage on Attack rolls with heavy Weapons. A heavy weapon’s size and bulk make it too large for a Small creature to use effectively.

As a result, small characters will not want to use this kind of weapon, and would choose a shortbow or light crossbow (depending on their class, as above) instead.

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    \$\begingroup\$ It might also be relevant to mention that longbows and heavy crossbows have the heavy property rendering them less than ideal for Small characters. \$\endgroup\$
    – Someone_Evil
    Commented Oct 1, 2020 at 17:08
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    \$\begingroup\$ The fact that bows require martial proficiency may be a (very abstract) way of representing the real-life fact that bows take considerable training and practice (and, IRL, strength) to use with any precision. Whereas crossbows can be used by just about anyone, e.g. conscripted soldiers, and still be effective. \$\endgroup\$
    – PJRZ
    Commented Oct 2, 2020 at 8:00
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    \$\begingroup\$ @PJRZ also the longbow needs to bet built with the wearers strength in mind. In real life you cant be expected to even draw a warbow without some bow specific muscle training. \$\endgroup\$
    – joojaa
    Commented Oct 3, 2020 at 6:17
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Long Bows are Martial Weapons, and so require Martial Weapon proficiency. Light Crossbows are Simple Weapons, and so more classes have access to them. If you have access to both, then you normally also have access to the Heavy Crossbow, which deals D10 damage.

The classes who have access to only the light crossbow generally don't get Extra Attack (eg Warlock, Rogue, Wizard), so the downside doesn't manifest.

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There are a lot of specific mechanical advantages, and a handful of less concrete potential advantages:

Crossbows do more damage than equivalent bows.

The correct comparison here is a shortbow to a light crossbow and a longbow to a heavy crossbow, because then you're comparing stuff with equivalent proficiency requirements (you can't get a longbow or heavy crossbow if you're only proficient with simple weapons, and there's no reason to chose a simple weapon if you're proficient with martial weapons). The crossbow does better damage in both cases, at the cost of weighing more and only being able to make one attack per turn without taking a specific feat. The heavy crossbow additionally has a shorter range than it's equivalent bow.

This leads to a rather easy set of decisions to decide on what ranged weapon to pick:

  • If you're pure STR based for combat, you pick javelins (because they actually let you use STR due to being thrown weapons not ranged weapons).
  • If you only have simple weapon proficiency, you probably don't get Extra Attack, and therefore the crossbow is worth taking if you need damage and can tolerate the other implications of the Loading property (and if not, you grab a shortbow).
  • If you have martial weapon proficiency and you get Extra Attack and are a primary ranged focus, you pick a longbow.
  • If you have martial weapon proficiency and do not get Extra Attack or aren't a primary ranged focus, you pick a heavy or hand crossbow depending on whether you want a free hand or not.

Crossbows work better than bows underwater

Bows have disadvantage underwater, crossbows do not (and this is actually more realistic than it sounds). So if you're paying a campaign with lots of sailing or something similar, crossbows are a better choice than bows.

Hand Crossbows are light one-handed weapons

This has a few implications that make the hand crossbow special. In particular:

  • You can dual-wield hand crossbows if you want to, or you can wield a melee weapon and a hand crossbow.
  • Bards can use a hand crossbow as a ranged weapon and still keep a hand free for spellcasting (or playing music). In theory so can paladins and rangers, but they have better options.

Additionally, there may be some less tangible RP related benefits to one or the other

This gets into GM specific territory, but one weapon or the other may have implications for social interactions, certain weapons may be easier to conceal (most GMs I know give you a penalty for trying to conceal a longbow or heavy crossbow because they're rather large), and some may be easier to find depending on where you are.

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  • \$\begingroup\$ College of Swords Bards only have simple weapon proficiency but get extra attack. Also monks. \$\endgroup\$ Commented Oct 2, 2020 at 12:53
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    \$\begingroup\$ @ThomasMarkov Standard bards in 5e get hand crossbows as a specific weapon proficiency (alongside longswords, rapiers, and shortswords, as opposed to generic martial weapon proficiency). They don't get one as starting equipment though unless players are buying their starting equipment instead of using the standard selection. See PHB page 52 \$\endgroup\$ Commented Oct 2, 2020 at 13:01
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    \$\begingroup\$ "You can dual-wield hand crossbows if you want to, or you can wield a melee weapon and a hand crossbow." - yes, but it's not easy to keep that up since reloading requires a free hand. \$\endgroup\$
    – Oak
    Commented Oct 2, 2020 at 17:43
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    \$\begingroup\$ @Oak Indeed, though I do know some people who took the same historical approach that was taken with single shot handguns of having a bunch of them and pulling out a new one for each shot. Not optimal of course, but hilarious for flavor... \$\endgroup\$ Commented Oct 2, 2020 at 21:42

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