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The mounted combatant feat (PHB 168) allows someone to "force an attack targeted at your mount to target you instead."

Suppose I am playing on a grid. Let E be enemies without reach/ranged weapons. M be the spaces a large mount occupies. And R be the space I occupy while riding the mount.

\$\begin{array}{|l|l|r|} \hline \text{E} & \\ \hline \text{E} & \text{M} & \text{R}\\ \hline \text{E} & \text{M} & \text{M} \\ \hline \end{array} \$

What happens when I redirect an attack with mounted combatant but I am outside the reach of their weapon on a grid?

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    \$\begingroup\$ I closed your question as I felt I was asking effectively the same thing as the marked one. If you feel your question is sufficiently different from that one, please explain why in a comment or edit to your question. Thank you! \$\endgroup\$ Jul 6, 2020 at 12:49
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    \$\begingroup\$ @medix2 no that's fine. I tried tried to find duplicates but kept getting pathfinder stuff. \$\endgroup\$
    – kent
    Jul 6, 2020 at 20:23

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5e is not designed for playing on a grid; those rules are tacked-on and incomplete. Several previous editions and spin-offs have all handled this situation by having you share your mount's space; you don't physically become Large, but between being centered (roughly) on your mount and the motion of both yourself and your mount in combat, you can target from and be targeted in any square the mount occupies. That's probably the best way to resolve that for Fifth Edition as well.

If your DM rules otherwise and allows you to occupy the square of your choice, you must be in range of an attack to redirect it to yourself, otherwise the redirection fails and the original target continues to be struck. No other attack redirection ability I'm aware of (including Drunken Master and Goblin Boss) allows you to redirect an attack to someone out of range; likely that line was left out of Mounted Combatant because you and your mount are by definition, in the same place.

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The 5E mounted combat rules have quite a few incomplete parts that can lead to inconsistencies like this when combined with strict RAW in grid-based play. Similar to gatherer818's answer, my go-to solution is to treat the combined mount/rider as a single Large creature for most targetting, movement and range rules. This also has some bad edge cases for area effects centred on the rider, but those seem less common for mounted combat: In my experience, characters that specialise in mounted combat tend to less access to medium-distance auras/areas of 10 or 15 feet, which is where the obvious power boost for becoming Large would be. The Paladin aura boost I even view as appropriate and thematic.

Using your interpretation of the rider taking a separate space on the mount, it is worth going back to basics and recalling that it is only a convenient representation to make the game playable. Characters don't really take turns in fight, movement is really simultaneous, but initiative and turn-based rules are used to break things down into useful units for the game. Similarly, with the rider position solution you present, the character is not really occupying the right rear flank of a somewhat squarish horse, instead you are using that representation to show "this is where the fight is" around one key character.

Bearing that in mind, you want a simple ruling that matches the narrative of skilled rider maneuvering to protect their mount. I find it reasonable here to temporarily drop worrying about the specific location of the rider, just for this one attack, and allow the re-direct to occur regardless of reach - i.e. the enemy's attack is rolled against the rider ignoring what reach rules would tell you on the map. This patches one annoying issue with the approach of tracking the rider position, which is otherwise sound and fixes some other edge cases.

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  • \$\begingroup\$ Aren't paladins (which have 10ft auras) more likely to be mounted because they have find steed and find greater steed? Otherwise solid points, especially the squarish horse. \$\endgroup\$
    – kent
    Jul 6, 2020 at 8:33
  • \$\begingroup\$ @kent: Yes they are, good point. However, I find the power boost appropiate in that case, so don't think of it as a problem. \$\endgroup\$ Jul 6, 2020 at 8:36

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