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Description

Every D&D party has that one character who brings a sword, one who brings a spellbook… and one who brings unresolved childhood issues and a willingness to fist-fight a dragon.

Welcome to the Pugilist. Today we explore a popular D&D homebrew martial class fueled by bad decisions, Moxie points, and the medically concerning belief that exhaustion is just another resource pool.

If the Barbarian is rage and the Monk is discipline, the Pugilist is: "I didn't hear no bell."

Show Notes 

In this episode of the RPGBOT.Podcast, the hosts dive into a detailed overview of the Pugilist class in Dungeons & Dragons 5e, a popular homebrew martial character class created by Benjamin Huffman known for gritty street-fighter flavor and unconventional resource management.

The discussion begins with the class fantasy: a bare-knuckle brawler inspired equally by boxing legends and tavern disasters. Unlike traditional D&D martial classes, the Pugilist 5e mechanics revolve around Moxie points, a flexible combat resource used for survivability, control, and burst damage rather than spells or rage.

The hosts analyze how the class converts risk into power through its signature exhaustion-based gameplay design. Instead of avoiding exhaustion like most characters in a tabletop RPG, the Pugilist weaponizes it — gaining resistances, bonuses, and survivability through abilities such as Dig Deep and Bloodied but Unbowed. This creates a unique resource management strategy in D&D combat where players intentionally flirt with collapse for tactical advantage.

A major portion of the conversation compares the Pugilist to other martial classes, examining damage scaling in D&D 5e, balance concerns, and how improvised weapons and grappling expand combat options. The class excels at battlefield control: shoving, grappling, and repositioning enemies while converting failed rolls into successes through Swagger-style mechanics.

The hosts also discuss community reception of the class and how its design still maintains strong mechanical identity. Ultimately, the Pugilist demonstrates that a well-designed homebrew D&D class can be both flavorful and mechanically interesting — even when its primary strategy is punching reality until it cooperates.

Key Takeaways