The real answer here is say No and scare the party.
I love doing this.
“Oh, right, you have that plus-one from that amulet. So twenty-eight. Yeah, that does hit.”
(Monster AC is actually 14, but I’ll let them sweat for a round or two anyway.)
Laughs in Mage Armor, Shield, Cat’s Grace, Reduce Person, and Protection from Evil… but still yes.
The cool thing about PF2e is that this can still be a relevant question, because that roll may or may not be a crit, and the answer tells you something important.
It also may or may not be a hit. A Vampire Guardian is a Level 10 creature and has an AC of 29.
Ah, but that’s why they’re flanking! The Vampire Guardian is off-guard (I think that’s the new terminology? I’m still trying to get used it it) and has a -2 penalty to his AC!
it’s impolite to assume
I tend to always ask so the Bard at least has a chance to use Cutting Words. Same goes for Light Domain Clerics.
And time wizards, or silvery barbs, or whatever other interrupts and reactions the party may have in their back pocket :)
Joke’s on you, that wizard is a Bladesinger
Looks like I triggered someone’s PTSD. I’ve DMd for a Bladesinger before, I understand why you downvoted this
Level 9 Artillerist Artificer here, currently playing alongside a Bladesinger.
He either walks out of combat completely unscathed or gets oneshot by something that doesn’t target his AC. Our “tank”, a warforged Barbarian, recently died, and the bladesinger has already been resurrected twice.
My job in combat mainly consists of running around after him with my arcane protector out and spamming temp HP for him. I’ve considered asking our DM if I can switch subclasses to Armorer, in an attempt to fill the frontliner role more, but the main thing keeping me from bringing it up is having to see the look on his face when he realises that means our party will have two guys running around with 23+ AC.
I get this question from players, and it drives me just as nuts.
Probably not just a hit but a crit as well.
Thanks to UA warforged and generous magic item allowances (a staff of power and +2 shield I think were the relevant ones for AC) I had a wizard with 28 resting AC (33 with shield).