Icy Rays is:
Target: One or two creatures. Attack: Int vs. Ref, one attack per target. Hit: 1d10 + Int, and immobilize.
The flavor text says "You fire two bolts..."
If I target one creature (with "two bolts"), do I:
A. Roll 1 attack roll, and if I hit, do 1d10+int (because it's only "one attack per target");
B. Roll 1 attack roll, and if I hit, do 1d10+int twice (because I'm hitting with two bolts, but only roll "one attack per target"); or
C. Roll 2 attack rolls, and each that hits does 1d10+int, but both to the same target?
Under the RAW, I think the answer is A, but that seems a bit weak. What's really confusing me here is the combination of "one or two targets" with "one attack roll per target", when compared to the flavor text of "two bolts". Is this really designed to prevent wizards from using both bolts against the same target and "doubling up" on damage or chance to hit?
Target: One or two creatures. Attack: Int vs. Ref, one attack per target. Hit: 1d10 + Int, and immobilize.
The flavor text says "You fire two bolts..."
If I target one creature (with "two bolts"), do I:
A. Roll 1 attack roll, and if I hit, do 1d10+int (because it's only "one attack per target");
B. Roll 1 attack roll, and if I hit, do 1d10+int twice (because I'm hitting with two bolts, but only roll "one attack per target"); or
C. Roll 2 attack rolls, and each that hits does 1d10+int, but both to the same target?
Under the RAW, I think the answer is A, but that seems a bit weak. What's really confusing me here is the combination of "one or two targets" with "one attack roll per target", when compared to the flavor text of "two bolts". Is this really designed to prevent wizards from using both bolts against the same target and "doubling up" on damage or chance to hit?