[RPG] Should a PC get XP for assisting outside of combat

combatdnd-5eexperience-pointssplitting-the-party

Related, but about a PC not participating at all in a combat: Do people get XP for battles they weren't in?

Generally, experience points for a combat encounter are divided equally among the participants.

If a PC does not participate directly in a combat, but significantly contributes to the success of the party in another way, should they count as part of the combat party for the purposes of awarding XP?

For example:

  • A PC scouts out the party that the PC's are planning to attack and relays back essential intelligence that allows the rest of the PC's to win the combat, but then the scout PC goes on another scouting mission or does something else rather than join the actual fight.
  • A PC provides equipment, buffs, money, logistical support, diversionary tactics, or other resources to those who end up participating in the combat, but withdraws before the first round of "combat" begins. For example, a PC turns themselves in to the Town Guard and confesses to an offense. While the Town Guard is occupied in processing the PC into jail, the rest of his party attacks Town Hall.

Are these kinds of PC's actually considered participants in the combat, even though they did not actually swing a weapon, cast an offensive spell, etc.? That is, these are PC's that contributed, but did not specifically have any "combat rounds" where they had opportunities to take combat actions, roll dice, be wounded, etc.

If whether these roles count for XP is dependent on criteria, what differentiates an XP-worthy support role versus a non-XP-worthy support role? Could it, as @NautArch alluded to, involve whether the support PC risks their life or endures a substantial risk of being drawn into a literal round of combat (even though they successfully avoid it)? It would be more plausible, I think, to award XP to a PC who pilots a scout balloon over enemy territory and risks being shot at (even though he ends up not being shot at because the enemy does not see him as a sufficient threat because reasons), than it would be to award it to a PC who stays at home and casts buff spells on those going out.

The real life equivalents of the characters that I'm talking about here are essential elements of any real-life military, militia, or law-enforcement group – they are the drivers, transport pilots, dispatchers, mechanics, radio operators, cargo loaders, intelligence analysts, scouts, code breakers, etc. who enable the literal people with boots on the ground to accomplish their job.

MivaScott's mention of a heist analogy is also apt. The mastermind brooding in his basement, the hacker across town cracking gate passwords, the lookouts perched on rooftops, the getaway drivers stationed on dark street corners, and the mole at police headquarters cutting the brake lines on the police cruisers are all risking something by participating even though they might not be the ones literally rolling initiative against bank guards, jewelry store workers, etc.

Best Answer

Per the SRD (pg 258); Emphasis mine

Experience Points

The number of experience points (XP) a monster is worth is based on its challenge rating. Typically, XP is awarded for defeating the monster, although the GM may also award XP for neutralizing the threat posed by the monster in some other manner.

The GM can award XP just for being part of the plan. They do not have to get the same amount, but they should get credit where credit is due.

  • The thief that is a distraction to a group of guards neutralized their threat just by making them be somewhere else.
  • The barbarian across town that blew up a building as a distraction.
  • The bard that bribed the guards days before so they wouldn't put up a fight.

See also: Are there alterantive ways to gain xp?