the Jester
Legend
I would rule Absolutely Not.
Wish allows him to emulate the spell in question, but he's still casting wish.
Wish allows him to emulate the spell in question, but he's still casting wish.
The "must be able to cast X spell" is essentially using a Limited/Wish to successfully research an Arcane version of the divine spell, so should be allowable given the number of existing Arcane/Divine cross-over spells; provided the level is within the spell's normal limits. This is a simple, straight-forward request without side-effects.
Likewise I could see the "must be able to cast X LEVEL divine spells" working, however such a use would most likely be accomplished by swapping existing Wizard levels with the divine levels neccessary to cast such spells, drastically reducing his effectiveness as a wizard.
Well, you can WISH for anything, but if it's not one of the listed options, you do so at your own peril (and the DM's mercy)Could a character WISH for a Feat? (not an extra one, but to change feats)
Could a character WISH for a level or experience? Some minor Artifacts like a BoVD, BoED and then the other alignment based books (in EPH I THINK) can allow you to gain a level in a divine or arcane spellcasting class of your choice upon finishing reading them.
To fulfill a prerequisite, you must have the ability, power, spell etc. as part of your normal build. For example, if a (3.5E) barbarian has a strength of 18 and can rage for another 4, he is not eligible for a PrC that has a minimum strength requirement of 22. If the PrC requires you to have the Deflect Arrows feat, you cannot fulfill that by buying a magic item that grants you access to the feat - you have to actually have the feat.
I totally agree that it is 100% your call as DM ... but I think some of the people on here could come up with scenarios that would make you regret opening this particular can of worms...
No. Prerequisites need to be stable, relatively permanent abilities. I don't even allow Precocious Apprentice to work for 2nd level prereqs, although that one could go either way.
Well, you can WISH for anything, but if it's not one of the listed options, you do so at your own peril (and the DM's mercy)![]()
The wish is also a DM's playground to make things 'interesting'
In this case should you want to allow the wizard to cast the divine spell grant it as a 1/day ability.
But unknown to them this spell is being drawn from Vecna's power drawing its attention on the unfortunate wizard.
But on a more serious note i think it safer not to and DumbPaladin's example is most apt.
I disagree. You could use the item that grants Deflect Arrows to gain access to the PrC but if you ever lost the item (stolen, sundered, taken off for a bath etc...) you would lose all the class features of the PrC until you regained the item or took the feat to fill the Pre Req.
No. You must be able to cast X (or X-level), not be able to cast a completely different spell that can rearrange reality to conform to the idea of your having cast X (or an X-level spell).With any PrC that has a requirement of "must be able to cast X spell" or "must be able to cast X level divine spells", etc, could the Limited Wish or Wish fulfill that requisite, as it does allow a Wizard of sufficient level to cast that spell, albeit as a 7th or 9th level spell, respectively?
I'm using this should the opportunity present itself.- WISHing for experience: depending on my mood this either doesn't do anything or will summon one or more enemies to your location - kill them all and you will gain the level![]()
I suffered from such a problem with an Ogre who had the Weapon of Legacy Stormchaser's Cudgel. You needed a required STR to even use it to get on the Legacy path, and my DM thought all I needed was a Belt of Giant Strength and everything would be okay. I obviously wasn't going to stand for such a thing, because I wanted a bit of consistency with what the rules are supposed to be.AFAIK temporary increases or from spells, or permanent magic items aren't 'inherent' qualities. I believe by RAW those dont allow to make prerequisites, albeit you could certainly rule that way if you wanted. I personally believe a PC ought to have all the feats/stats/casting requirements/skill ranks as inherent qualities, not anything apart of their equipment or ongoing magic before seeing if they qualify for a prestige class.