Archived from groups: rec.games.frp.dnd (
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"Jeff Goslin" <autockr@comcast.net> wrote in message
news:QIednSP-3LSTagHfRVn-uA@comcast.com...
> "Symbol" <jb70@talk21.com> wrote in message
> news:ZpWdnYzbz5sy5gHfRVnytA@pipex.net...
> > You are still wrong though. A spell behaves as described in its
> > description. Feather Fall by implication (a lack of alternative
> > description) functions in a binary way. It either effects its target
or it
> > does not according the listed restrictions. That isn't an
interpretation
> > either, it is understanding the spell.
>
> The whole reason why this thread got started in the first place was
because
> it is most definitely NOT clear what happens when a spell fails
> mid-duration.
Yes in fact it is, which is why this thread is so stupidly pointless.
> Up until this point, NOBODY has quoted a verifiable rule that
> describes the OFFICIAL rule for what happens in that instance.
>
> The description of feather fall gives the limits of the spell's proper
> function(I just re-read it), but gives no indication of what would
happen if
> those limits were exceeded while the spell is being used, which is the
> entire thrust of this thread.
Which means that nothing happens when those limits are exceeded or it
would provide detail. Duh!
> I would honestly appreciate it if someone COULD find the official rule,
and
> not just an interpretation, NOT because I want to be either proven right
or
> proven wrong, but just so I *know* what the official party line is when
it
> comes to this sort of thing.
Why would there be an official rule to describe what happens to a spell
that does not affect its target?
> The de facto party line(as opposed to the
> official party line), from many folks here, is that the spell completely
> fails, and while that's perfectly valid for an interpretation, that's
all it
> is, an interpretation.
No, some people have merely confused the casting failure rule. An ongoing
spell would not fail, nor would it have any affect on something it can't
affect.
> So, maybe you can succeed where MSB has failed,
> maybe you can find the rule that he seems to believe so fervently is in
the
> rule books but can't find. If there IS a rule, I'll use it, but barring
> that, I'll have to use what most people seem to consider illogical,
> proportional degradation type of failure, rather than instant and
complete
> failure.
People are calling it idiotic because that is exactly what your approach
is. If there was proportional degradation it would appear in the rules.
Absence implies a boolean functionality. It really is just this simple and
disturbs me that so much conversation has been generated.