On page 125 of my Rules Compendium, it states that the spell Feather Fall is now an immediate action because it can be taken when it's not your turn. In the 3.5 PHB, it was a free action, and it has always been played as a free action in previous editions as well.
When you look at the definition of immediate actions on Pg 7 of the Rules Compendium, however, the last line of the Immediate Action paragraph states: You can't use an Immediate Action when you're flat-footed.
That seems to imply that if the bad guys surprise you on a mountain path and bull rush you off the ledge, you would not be able to cast Feather Fall because you're flat-footed from surprise. Heck, you're flat-footed even if they beat you in initiative and don't surprise you.
Is this a mistake in the Rules Compendium, or did they just seriously change Feather Fall as a spell? You can fall quite a distance in 6 seconds.
When you look at the definition of immediate actions on Pg 7 of the Rules Compendium, however, the last line of the Immediate Action paragraph states: You can't use an Immediate Action when you're flat-footed.
That seems to imply that if the bad guys surprise you on a mountain path and bull rush you off the ledge, you would not be able to cast Feather Fall because you're flat-footed from surprise. Heck, you're flat-footed even if they beat you in initiative and don't surprise you.
Is this a mistake in the Rules Compendium, or did they just seriously change Feather Fall as a spell? You can fall quite a distance in 6 seconds.