Don't forget the Scourge Aasimar are not only bursting out damage, but they are resistant to the damage done. Everyone takes 1/2 lvl radiant damage except you who takes 1/4. They are monsters, but I wouldn't say they are OP. Top end of the balance scale since their 2 main racial abilities are 1/LR and don't last long.
Protector Aasimar gains a Fly speed with their lv3 feature. Scourge Aasimar has no Fly speed, and Fallen Aasimar has flightless wings like the text say. No fly speed, no fly, no glide.
No, Aasimar are the only "half-angel" race in 5e (who are always "half-human") ... They are descended from humans with a touch of the power of Mount Celestia, the divine realm of many lawful good deities.
To do so, replace your subrace benefits, including the ability score increase, with those of a fallen aasimar. Similarly, if your fallen aasimar turns to good, your DM might allow you to become a protector or scourge aasimar. ... So then, Fallen Aasimar can't be good, and "should" be evil.
The aasimar fill a variety of different roles, depending on the campaign setting. In many settings, celestial blood is a shortcut to an indication of exceptional virtue or destiny, making an aasimar sort of a watered-down demigod, or a saint-to-be.
Aasimar are born to serve as champions of the gods, their births hailed as blessed events. They are a people of otherworldly visages, with luminous features that reveal their celestial heritage. Aasimar are placed in the world to serve as guardians of law and good....Aasimar (Race)
Like other half-breeds, aasimar did not feel, as a whole, beholden to any one god or pantheon, but many aasimar worshiped the Mulhorandi pantheon and a large proportion of the race was descended from the goodly gods of Mulhorand.
Scourge aasimar are charged by the powers of good to guard the weak, to strike at evil wherever it arises, and to stand vigilant against the darkness. From a young age, a protector aasimar receives advice and directives that urge to stand against evil.
Which Classes Work With Aasimar?
Yasha Nydoorin is a protector (formerly fallen) aasimar barbarian. She is played by Ashley Johnson.
Aasimars may be born from the union of the half-celestial with another mortal being. The possibility of an aasimar birth continues to many generations after that union, even when two mortals have children, so long as one of the mortals is a direct descendant of the half-celestial.
Tieflings and aasimar are diluted by human blood (and slippery human morality), so they might become vampiric.
Make it cannon; in your world Aasimar do (not) grow facial hair.
Aasimar names are varied, but many share a similar melodic and guttural feel. Both first and last names tend to be 2-3 syllables long, but longer names do occur as well.
Age: Aasimar mature at the same rate as humans, but they can live up to 160 years.
Physical Description: Aasimars look mostly human except for some minor physical trait that reveals their unusual heritage. ... Typical aasimar features include hair that shines like metal, jewel-toned eyes, lustrous skin color, or even glowing, golden halos.
no. they are not angels any more than tieflings are devils. Aasimar bear within their souls the light of the heavens.
If you are an aasimar warlock you did something to fall from the grace of your god before becoming a warlock. With a feypact the fairy is just as likely to lead you further off the path of redemption as it is to accidentally lead you to redemption.
Note: The smallest documented humanoid. The stout halfling (Player's Handbook 109) has a minimum height of 2 ft. 10 in.
According to the Basic Rules/PHB, dragonborn in general don't have tails at all: Dragonborn look very much like dragons standing erect in humanoid form, though they lack wings or a tail.
As the Dovahkiin, the Dragonborn can absorb the souls of the dragons which he or she kills. In my experience, the Dragonborn doesn't necessarily hate the dragons, but they do hate how much their bones and scales weigh. this is D&D not skyrim.
However, mostly all Dragonborn have wings, with the exception of some Wingless that are born that lack them.
Dragons have dark vision and flight. Dragonborn could gain darkvision like every other race within 5th edition. Another possibility is a fly speed, or something like a temporary flight ability, such as flight that must land by the end of the turn.