Maxperson
Morkus from Orkus
Armed with a katana I'm sure.Aaargh. But that will force a mention of gnomes and rapiers, and then [MENTION=6799753]lowkey13[/MENTION] will appear.
Armed with a katana I'm sure.Aaargh. But that will force a mention of gnomes and rapiers, and then [MENTION=6799753]lowkey13[/MENTION] will appear.
There doesn't have to be a combat action for combat to start. Two sides see each other and initiative is rolled before anyone gets to move. The flyer was not hidden and was holding a visible wand, so he would not be able to just unilaterally get an action without anyone else being able to act.
The way you are fighting for this flyer to succeed and for the caster to not have been able to do anything, makes me think that you are the flying trying to get away with the wand of orcus at the expense of the rest of the party.
Initiative is the mechanic used to determine who does things first. If my character wants to move 20' up to someone pull out a dagger and stab them, initiative is rolled BEFORE I get to do any of that. Sure that is all things I can accomplish on a single turn, but the other person may get to act before I do them. Whenever there is a question of timing, it is better to do it in turns with initiative for the exact reason of determining order.
I don't follow the logic of that applied here.
Why would the wizard go into initiative unless the knight flew into the room? The knight's action is the antecedent. Without the knight moving first, there would be no reason to cast dispel magic.
I asked this before because I really want to listen and figure it out:
If a PC takes a stated action such as taking a dash action from a hidden location and decides to move quickly instead of super stealthily past a potentially hostile group, does the encounter (in this case the party seeing the wand fly in) trigger initiative rolls or does the dashing PC get to finish his stated action before initiative begins?
That's a playstyle call. Some DMs will call for the check, or at least ask if the PC is going to be stealthy. Other DMs like me will just treat the PC as not being stealthy unless the player states that the PC is being stealthy.Page 189 of PHB states, "If neither side tries to be stealthy, they automatically notice each other."
The eldritch knight did turn invisible but didn't ask for a stealth check (Is that something the DM should have asked him to do?).
Does noticing a high-flying wand (and potenially the invisible flyer) mean combat begins immediately?
As noted in other posts. You don't have to make the perception check. The dispel can target the effect.If it does and the wizard wins, could she do both a perception check on there being an invisible creature (a Search action?) and cast Dispel Magic (an action) before the flyer is out of the room?
Other DMs like me will just treat the PC as not being stealthy unless the player states that the PC is being stealthy...As noted in other posts. You don't have to make the perception check. The dispel can target the effect.
Thank you for the thoughtful responses.
One question: if you as a DM wouldn't ask the knight who took time to turn off invisible for a stealth check, why would you assume the wizard is targeting the fly effect instead of the flying wand?
You can draw an analogy with a situation that's more clear-cut: If a PC wants to attack someone who doesn't expect it (either because the PC is hidden, or because they don't think the PC is hostile), then you roll initiative before the attack roll instead of giving the PC a free shot outside of the initiative order. Anyone who rolls higher than the PC, in that case, doesn't know what's going to happen and essentially loses their first turn (which is considered an acceptable loss in order to make the game playable, much like not being able to delay your initiative). At least nominally, the PC will get a free shot in essence, because the enemies will be surprised and just stand around on their first turns.I asked this before because I really want to listen and figure it out:
If a PC takes a stated action such as taking a dash action from a hidden location and decides to move quickly instead of super stealthily past a potentially hostile group, does the encounter (in this case the party seeing the wand fly in) trigger initiative rolls or does the dashing PC get to finish his stated action before initiative begins?
I wouldn't assume. The wizard would tell me what is being targeted. If for some reason the player said something like, "I dispel it!", I'd ask for what they meant by "it". Usually the player says something more like, "I dispel the wand!" or "I dispel invisibility near the wand!", etc.