navipax.blogg.se

Bouncing spell due to failed touch attack
Bouncing spell due to failed touch attack












bouncing spell due to failed touch attack

You have learned how to release most, but not all, of a spell's potential when you cast it. Your magical energies cling to enemies, interfering with their spellcasting. You cause creatures to be disoriented when you affect them with a spell that has the sonic descriptor. You cause creatures to take extra damage when you affect them with a spell that has the acid or fire descriptor. Other near identical spells, don't have a target line, however, or else target the caster instead (but still result in touch attacks against others).You've trained to cast spells underwater. If he hits, but has the spell effect negated by SR, does he get a second attack against another enemy within reach? What if he missed the first attack and SR wasn't an issue? Is frostbite even a valid spell? It has a target line that specifies a single target. My magus, as part of his spellstrike, casts a bouncing frostbite and whacks an enemy with his ensorcelled sword. Maybe some examples will help bring focus: It's one of them "wordings all mashed up" feats, and that makes it difficult to determine exactly what it was and was not supposed to work with. There is no such thing as a legal spell choice for this feat.Īgain, I'm sure that's not the intent, but that's the way it reads to me.

bouncing spell due to failed touch attack

Aren't all target spells, spells that AFFECT someone? It has to target someone, but it cannot be a spell that affects someone. Later on, the feat literally says "Spells that affect a target in any way may not be redirected in this manner." That strikes me as directly contradictory to the first sentence. The feat also doesn't seem to include text specifically stating the spell has to target a target, and that it must target only a single target. Note that this, technically speaking, does not prevent one from using it on multiple target spells (since if one single target in the sell is unaffected you just move it to another single target). The first sentence says what it does: If a single target is unaffected, move the effect to a different single target. A bouncing spell uses up a spell slot one level higher than the spell's actual level. Spells that affect a target in any way (including a lesser effect from a successful saving throw) may not be redirected in this manner.

bouncing spell due to failed touch attack

The redirected spell behaves in all ways as if its new target were the original target for the spell. You can direct a failed spell against a different target.īenefit: Whenever a bouncing spell targeting a single creature has no effect on its intended target (whether due to spell resistance or a successful saving throw) you may, as a swift action, redirect it to target another eligible creature within range.














Bouncing spell due to failed touch attack