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Sep 12 2008, 10:09 PM
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#76
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Moving Target ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 189 Joined: 5-September 08 Member No.: 16,312 |
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Sep 12 2008, 10:49 PM
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#77
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Moving Target ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 400 Joined: 8-September 08 From: St. Louis, UCAS Member No.: 16,329 |
Last I checked, one can't look through astral shadows, so any solid object that isn't living can't be seen through, right? Regardless of whether or not you can look through it with normal vision, If you are outside the car with the windows up, the shadows they create can't be seen through and you can't look into the vehicle. It's a lot like Ultrasound. a solid object is a deal breaker and can't be seen through. That's why tinted windows are used in motorcades. In the real, you can't look through and target, and you can't target from outside because the windows are up. Safe politician, until you destroy the window and then target him that way.
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Sep 12 2008, 10:59 PM
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#78
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Moving Target ![]() ![]() Group: Dumpshocked Posts: 748 Joined: 22-April 07 From: Vermont Member No.: 11,507 |
Some targeting notes:
In every game I have played in since 1989, it was just assumed that a ranged spell could be cast as a touch spell. I cannot find anything that either supports or contradicts this in the SR4 rules. So in my campaigns you could cast area spells such as light and clean at the tip of your finger with no penalty regardless of visual conditions. As for mirrored/tinted windows: IIRC, they blocked astral perception as well as they blocked sight. So casting into a vehicle or room from the wrong side of such a window was not possible. (We certainly played it that way.) BUT, page 114 of Street Magic does read: Determining cover works the same way on the astral plane as it does in the physical world (see pp. 140–141, SR4). Shadows of physical objects in the astral plane may be drab and insubstantial, but they are still opaque and can prevent targeting. Items that are transparent or mirrored in the real world (like a car window) simply impair visibility as astral shadows. Since there are no ranged weapons on the astral plane and spell targeting depends on seeing your target, hiding behind physical shadows works as well as hiding behind a vibrant aura.The Astral Visibility table on the same page includes "Shadow Clutter: –1 to –4", so it seems that per RAW a one way window only inhibits astral targeting rather than blocking it. Based on that, all high security vehicles (and buildings) in my games now use fully opaque armoured plates in place of windows, with high-res displays on the inside that let you see whatever you could have through a normal window via sensor input, while blocking all incoming spells. (Security mages riding shotgun have mage-sight goggles built into the vehicle so they can cast out of the vehicle if desired.) |
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Sep 12 2008, 11:06 PM
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#79
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Moving Target ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 400 Joined: 8-September 08 From: St. Louis, UCAS Member No.: 16,329 |
Thanks for the specific passage.
I always love it when someone quotes the material. It's so much more helpful than arguing back and forth. |
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Sep 12 2008, 11:12 PM
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#80
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Grand Master of Run-Fu ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Dumpshocked Posts: 6,840 Joined: 26-February 02 From: Tir Tairngire Member No.: 178 |
QUOTE In every game I have played in since 1989, it was just assumed that a ranged spell could be cast as a touch spell. I cannot find anything that either supports or contradicts this in the SR4 rules. So in my campaigns you could cast area spells such as light and clean at the tip of your finger with no penalty regardless of visual conditions. I've always played with that rule as well. Was that an official ruling, or just a common house rule? |
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Sep 13 2008, 01:16 AM
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#81
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Dragon ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 4,664 Joined: 21-September 04 From: Arvada, CO Member No.: 6,686 |
Wow, I think I'll be "changing" the cars in my games also, but keeping that in mind for Missions and the like.
Some questions for the Devs: Do permanent spells effects begin when the spell is cast or when they become permanent? If its when they become permanent, why do only 2 spells specify that in their descriptions? When sustaining a permanent spell waiting for it to become permanent, does the magician take a -2 sustaining penalty for other actions taken? Can a permanent spell that is still being sustained be dispelled by another mage using counterspelling? Can you use an appropriate sustaining focus to sustain a permanent spell until permanent? |
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Sep 13 2008, 01:49 AM
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#82
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Immortal Elf ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Validating Posts: 7,999 Joined: 26-February 02 Member No.: 1,890 |
I've always played with that rule as well. Was that an official ruling, or just a common house rule? Pretty sure it was just a common house rule. Especially since Touch was considered a penalty; the assumption in the rules is that you wouldn't ever want to Touch your target rather than LOS them. |
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Sep 13 2008, 04:06 PM
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#83
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Running Target ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 1,058 Joined: 4-February 08 Member No.: 15,640 |
Then the question is can you use yourself as a target when you cast a spell and receive no penalty? Lets say you cast light not as touch, but you use yourself as a target. Could you cast light, clean, or powerball on yourself in a dark room and take no penalty instead of using it as a touch spell? I mean you know where your hand is in a sense.
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Sep 13 2008, 05:20 PM
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#84
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Dragon ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 4,664 Joined: 21-September 04 From: Arvada, CO Member No.: 6,686 |
Then the question is can you use yourself as a target when you cast a spell and receive no penalty? Lets say you cast light not as touch, but you use yourself as a target. Could you cast light, clean, or powerball on yourself in a dark room and take no penalty instead of using it as a touch spell? I mean you know where your hand is in a sense. Light? No. Clean? No. Powerball? No. Why? They're all area spells, and target an area. You could powerBOLT yourself just fine though. |
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Sep 13 2008, 06:15 PM
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#85
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Grand Master of Run-Fu ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Dumpshocked Posts: 6,840 Joined: 26-February 02 From: Tir Tairngire Member No.: 178 |
Well, you *could* powerball yourself. Since under the touch rule, you always have LOS to yourself, it would act just like a powerbolt with extra drain. (In fact, don't you always have LOS to yourself? I can't honestly recall.)
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Sep 13 2008, 06:21 PM
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#86
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Dragon ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 4,664 Joined: 21-September 04 From: Arvada, CO Member No.: 6,686 |
Well, you *could* powerball yourself. Since under the touch rule, you always have LOS to yourself, it would act just like a powerbolt with extra drain. (In fact, don't you always have LOS to yourself? I can't honestly recall.) No, you can't, powerball isn't targeting on a person, but an area, so you can't powerball YOURSELF as it targets an area, and YOU are not an area. Powerbolt on the other hand works fine, because I do believe you have LOS on yourself always. |
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Sep 13 2008, 06:28 PM
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#87
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Moving Target ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 189 Joined: 5-September 08 Member No.: 16,312 |
It may target an area, but if you are in said area, and are always considered to have LOS on yourself (which I think makes sense), you should hurt like everyone else that you can see in said area.
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Sep 13 2008, 06:34 PM
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#88
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Dragon ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 4,664 Joined: 21-September 04 From: Arvada, CO Member No.: 6,686 |
It may target an area, but if you are in said area, and are always considered to have LOS on yourself (which I think makes sense), you should hurt like everyone else that you can see in said area. You still would take visibility penalties for casting it, because you have to target the area, not yourself. Powerbolt on the other hand, would not take visibility penalties for casting on yourself, as you unimpeded LOS to the target (yourself) |
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Sep 13 2008, 06:39 PM
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#89
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Grand Master of Run-Fu ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Dumpshocked Posts: 6,840 Joined: 26-February 02 From: Tir Tairngire Member No.: 178 |
I think you're being a bit pedantic on this one.
When you cast a AoE direct combat spell, you are targeting a center point. The spell goes out from there; but you only get the ones you can see. You don't have to specify a person, you can specify a center point. In this case, the center point is yourself. And since you can't see anyone else, you can't hurt them with the powerball. You can fry yourself, but the spell doesn't fizzle or become more difficult because you're centering it on yourself. |
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Sep 13 2008, 06:59 PM
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#90
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Running Target ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 1,251 Joined: 11-September 04 From: GA Member No.: 6,651 |
Some questions for the Devs: Do permanent spells effects begin when the spell is cast or when they become permanent? If its when they become permanent, why do only 2 spells specify that in their descriptions? When sustaining a permanent spell waiting for it to become permanent, does the magician take a -2 sustaining penalty for other actions taken? Can a permanent spell that is still being sustained be dispelled by another mage using counterspelling? Can you use an appropriate sustaining focus to sustain a permanent spell until permanent? I'm not a dev but I'd like to mention that unless spells with a permanent duration are specifically excepted from the rules they follow the same rules for sustaining until they are permanent. Ditto that their effects occur immediately unless specifically excepted. [BBB, p194]: "Permanent spells must be sustained for a short time, after which their effects become “natural� and no longer require magic or concentration to maintain. The time required to make a spell’s effects permanent is equal to twice the Drain Value in Combat Turns." |
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Sep 13 2008, 07:01 PM
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#91
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Running Target ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 1,058 Joined: 4-February 08 Member No.: 15,640 |
Well my thinking is that there are a lot of meta magics that use you as a central point for what you do (such as cleansing.) Or you know if you want a normal spell... detect enemies. What is to say that you can't use an area effect spell on yourself? You cleanse the area around you, or you target yourself to cast light on. Effecting other things/people is probably where it gets hazy, but I don't see why you would take a -6 if you cast light on yourself and then tried to clean the air around you using again yourself as the target point.
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Sep 13 2008, 07:21 PM
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#92
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Dragon ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 4,664 Joined: 21-September 04 From: Arvada, CO Member No.: 6,686 |
I'm not a dev but I'd like to mention that unless spells with a permanent duration are specifically excepted from the rules they follow the same rules for sustaining until they are permanent. Ditto that their effects occur immediately unless specifically excepted. [BBB, p194]: "Permanent spells must be sustained for a short time, after which their effects become “natural� and no longer require magic or concentration to maintain. The time required to make a spell’s effects permanent is equal to twice the Drain Value in Combat Turns." See the Magic Action thread for why I posted these questions. Theres an on going discussion. Keep it to that thread, we don't need it spilling over anymore. Well my thinking is that there are a lot of meta magics that use you as a central point for what you do (such as cleansing.) Or you know if you want a normal spell... detect enemies. What is to say that you can't use an area effect spell on yourself? You cleanse the area around you, or you target yourself to cast light on. Effecting other things/people is probably where it gets hazy, but I don't see why you would take a -6 if you cast light on yourself and then tried to clean the air around you using again yourself as the target point. First, cleansing uses counterspelling and follows its own rules, not the spellcasting rules, bad comparison. Detect enemies you cast on yourself, and then the spell is able to detect the enemies from there. You don't cast it on an area. SR4, 173, "Area Spells: Some spells target areas or points in space; in this case the caster must be able to see the center of the area affected. All visible targets within the area are afected; area spells can afect more than one target at a time." Is why you can't cast it on yourself, because you have to see the center of the area you are affecting. |
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Sep 13 2008, 07:49 PM
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#93
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Grand Master of Run-Fu ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Dumpshocked Posts: 6,840 Joined: 26-February 02 From: Tir Tairngire Member No.: 178 |
QUOTE First, cleansing uses counterspelling and follows its own rules, not the spellcasting rules, bad comparison. Detect enemies you cast on yourself, and then the spell is able to detect the enemies from there. You don't cast it on an area. SR4, 173, "Area Spells: Some spells target areas or points in space; in this case the caster must be able to see the center of the area affected. All visible targets within the area are afected; area spells can afect more than one target at a time." Is why you can't cast it on yourself, because you have to see the center of the area you are affecting. OK, then. If we're discussing the Touch rule being canon, then you always hhave LOS to yourself. So, you *could* cast an area spell without penalty, on the area you're occupying. Even without that, you can still argue that you have LOS to yourself, or at least the back of your eyelids. |
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Sep 13 2008, 09:45 PM
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#94
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Dragon ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 4,664 Joined: 21-September 04 From: Arvada, CO Member No.: 6,686 |
While we're at it, lets decide this... if you are in a lit room, and have 3 people behind you, but cast powerball centered on the back of your eyelids are they effected?
Now, same situation, the room is 100% dark. No light at all. Can you still see the area between your eyes and your eyelids? Can you still cast without penalty? |
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Sep 13 2008, 10:00 PM
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#95
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Running Target ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 1,058 Joined: 4-February 08 Member No.: 15,640 |
If you can cast spells on yourself, why can't you cast something that has an area of effect on yourself? It's dark and you can't see yourself when you cast detect enemies, but you don't take a -6. If you have a spell that requires touch how can you cast it if you can't see your hands? Why is it suddenly that you know where your hand is and you have to take a -6 to cast at it? If you powerball yourself when there are people behind them you will not hit them, but can you still hit yourself? Most people don't blast themselves with AOE spells, which is probably why it was created that way (to balance the game,) but to use yourself as the epicenter of a spell I think should be possible w/o taking a -6. Just like you were casting a spell that is centered on yourself. Detect enemies might not be AOE, but then again it does have AOE effects. You cast it on yourself and suddenly the "effects" extend beyond your person. How is it not an AOE spell centered on your person? I mean yes they are two different things, but still you are kinda casting a spell that has an -area of effect- and it is centered on yourself.
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Sep 13 2008, 11:00 PM
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#96
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Dragon ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 4,664 Joined: 21-September 04 From: Arvada, CO Member No.: 6,686 |
Touch is Different than LOS. I can't find anywhere in the books that says you can cast a LOS as a touch spell. You can cast detect enemies on yourself fine, because you are touching yourself. You can not powerball yourself because it requires LOS, and you dont have unimpeded LOS (in our dark room example) to the area you are casting on.
If the spell range is LOS, you must succeed at a visual perception test to see the target. If you succeed at that (with your -6 for full darkness) then yes, you can cast it. If you don't, you can't see it well enough. Is that a good enough compromise (and its in the rules too!) to settle this? Mage makes perception test at -6 to cast the spell, success means he can center it on himself, failure means he can't do it. If he does succeed, then he has to cast the spell with a -6 penalty as well. Detect enemies is a totally different category of spell, and detection spells have their own funky rules. |
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Sep 14 2008, 12:17 AM
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#97
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Moving Target ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 236 Joined: 17-October 07 Member No.: 13,735 |
Since we are having cool and interesting magic LOS discussions. Here is an interesting pondery. (If that is even a word)
Augmentation pg. 160 "Cyborgs are difficult to target with magic. The only living part of a jarhead—the brain—is encapsulated within the CCU which itself is enclosed within the drone body, where it is effectively safe from spell targeting." Street Magic pg. 160 "Note that full body armor does not “conceal� the person within and prevent them from being targeted." So, why does a drone body protect the brain from LOS and full body armor doesn't? I am not a proponent of Invulnerable Armor Monsters. I just want some kind of explaination. Or is this just ANOTHER example of "handwavium" ? If the brain is a separate thing from the body of the cyborg so much that it can't be targetted. I guess if one is to cast Invisibility on the cyborg, the body goes invisible and we see a floating brain there? |
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Sep 14 2008, 03:17 AM
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#98
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Grand Master of Run-Fu ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Dumpshocked Posts: 6,840 Joined: 26-February 02 From: Tir Tairngire Member No.: 178 |
While we're at it, lets decide this... if you are in a lit room, and have 3 people behind you, but cast powerball centered on the back of your eyelids are they effected? If they're behind you where you can't see them, they're not affected, no matter where you center the powerball. Here's one for you. If you cast a Fireball at your feet in a totally darkened room, do you take a -6 to the attack roll? QUOTE If the spell range is LOS, you must succeed at a visual perception test to see the target. If you succeed at that (with your -6 for full darkness) then yes, you can cast it. If you don't, you can't see it well enough. Is that a good enough compromise (and its in the rules too!) to settle this? Mage makes perception test at -6 to cast the spell, success means he can center it on himself, failure means he can't do it. If he does succeed, then he has to cast the spell with a -6 penalty as well. If the spell range is LOS, then that's fair and by the rules. However, the long-standing rule has been that Touch can stand in for LOS. Basically, that's the only difference between Death Touch and Manabolt. If the more-restrictive version of a spell can work, why can't the more powerful version work as well? Additionally, I can't find the rule that says a mage is always in touch range of himself. So, would you put a penalty on a geas-free mage, who wants to cast Heal on himself while tied up? |
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Sep 14 2008, 04:28 AM
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#99
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Moving Target ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 199 Joined: 11-September 05 Member No.: 7,729 |
QUOTE So, why does a drone body protect the brain from LOS and full body armor doesn't? A jarhead is a brain inside of a box (admittedly, a box with limbs, armor, and weapons). A person in full armor is wearing a particularly heavy set of clothes. The former can be dealt with in two ways. It's either a passenger inside of a vehicle with no windows. Or it's someone hiding inside of a container. Either way, the 'person' has total physical cover and your mage cannot establish LOS to target. The latter is handled just like any other clothed target. You don't lose LOS if someone's wearing a mask or a motorcycle helmet. You don't lose LOS if someone is wearing a burqa. You don't lose LOS if someone is wearing stormtrooper armor. It's a conceptual thing, which is how Shadowrun magic works. You could call that 'handwavium', if you wanted. But, honestly, the entire ruleset is based on nothing more or less than 'it works that way because that's how the devs say it works,' so unless it's completely inconsistant with everything else, I don't much see the distinction. |
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Sep 14 2008, 06:08 AM
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#100
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Dragon ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 4,664 Joined: 21-September 04 From: Arvada, CO Member No.: 6,686 |
If they're behind you where you can't see them, they're not affected, no matter where you center the powerball. Here's one for you. If you cast a Fireball at your feet in a totally darkened room, do you take a -6 to the attack roll? If the spell range is LOS, then that's fair and by the rules. However, the long-standing rule has been that Touch can stand in for LOS. Basically, that's the only difference between Death Touch and Manabolt. If the more-restrictive version of a spell can work, why can't the more powerful version work as well? Additionally, I can't find the rule that says a mage is always in touch range of himself. So, would you put a penalty on a geas-free mage, who wants to cast Heal on himself while tied up? Fireball, yes, I would say you have to succeed at a visual perception test at -6 to cast the spell, and then suffer the -6 on the casting of the spell also. "long-standing"? Quote then? Why can't the more powerful one work also? Because, thats how the rules were written. No, I wouldn't, because heal is a touch range spell, and at least part of the mage is touching another part of him. (One finger touching another for example). |
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