I was working on a Monk in Pathfinder and carefully reading the entries when this occurred to me.
It states that as long as you have one or more ki points in your ki pool you can make a ki strike. There's no cost associated with using a ki strike, but ki abilities require a swift action to use unless otherwise stated. Is a ki strike only an attack action and thus can't be used in a flurry of blows?
I've always seen it used, and used it myself, as simply replacing the unarmed strike in whatever fashion it gets used, with no expenditure of additional resources such as using your swift action. I trust that this is the correct way of using it, but I would like to know for sure.
So does a ki strike require a swift action to use?
Is a ki strike a standard attack and thus can't be used with flurry? Or does it replace any/every unarmed attack you make?
Best Answer
Ki Strikes are part of the Attack Action.
Let me explain why.
This is the original text from the Core Rulebook, let me bold the important parts:
There is no mention of what kind of action is a ki strike, so the rules say it should be a standard action, but since it does mention that his unarmed attacks are treated as , we conclude that Ki Strikes are part of the Attack Action. They dont take any kind of action, they are simply a special unarmed strike that has some ki, making it magical somehow.
I split the text in two parts so we can easily see the differences in the mechanics, notice bellow how three uses, all those that spend ki points, are said to use swift actions, and how they are on another paragraph.
We can sum up that the following abilities are Swift Actions and use up 1 Ki Point: