Greenfield
Adventurer
As I've mentioned before, we have a "game within the game" we play at my table, called "The stupidest rule I've ever heard of." I have a new contender.
In Pathfinder, when creating magic items, you can skip a prerequisite for the creation by accepting a 5 point penalty on the Spellcraft check (or whatever Skill check is called for.)
The section on creating items that describes "prerequisites" says that it's mainly the spell needed to go into the item.
So any Wizard can write a scroll of a spell they don't know and have no source for, then turn around and copy it into his/her spellbook.
Even if I want a spell effect that isn't in the book.
I guess that kind of bypasses any kind of "Research new spells" rules, doesn't it?
In Pathfinder, when creating magic items, you can skip a prerequisite for the creation by accepting a 5 point penalty on the Spellcraft check (or whatever Skill check is called for.)
The section on creating items that describes "prerequisites" says that it's mainly the spell needed to go into the item.
So any Wizard can write a scroll of a spell they don't know and have no source for, then turn around and copy it into his/her spellbook.
Even if I want a spell effect that isn't in the book.
I guess that kind of bypasses any kind of "Research new spells" rules, doesn't it?
