Excellent. That makes me correct about interrupting the teleport and strolling across the room for my ready action. Thanks for acknowledging that.
Where in hell did you read that in my sentence ? If you choose to walk you walk. That's all. If you are rushing to avoid an AoE, you are definitely NOT walking, even with a simple move.
Who cares. They are irrelevant to what I'm saying.
"and in particular people using readied actions to try to get out of an area of effect" is irrelevant to what yoiu are saying ? That is very bizarre.
What? I'm clearly talking about during the portion after the trigger happens. Tell me again what else I can do besides move? Can I attack? Can I do another action? Or can I do no action but move for those 6 seconds while the instantaneous teleport is waiting to happen?
And, pray tell, which six seconds are we talking about ? Six seconds is an entire round, for all participants. Even if the character is waiting for the teleport to happen to rush away, he might already have made a full move 3 seconds away, and there might even be remaining time after the teleport happens and before it's his turn again.
So in HIS six seconds, he will have moved twice his speed, not even mentioning bonus and "free" actions. And in the six seconds of the caster, he will have already performed one move, and will actually be able to perform at least 2 more moves.
So whichever time frame you are considering, in six seconds, the character will have performed at least 2 if not 3 moves, plus other actions.
This, in turn, meaning that he will NOT have walked, since his velocity will have been at least two, and maybe 3 or more that of a walk.
Why are you assuming I moved first? You don't get to tell me what my PC does. My PC did not move before readying the action to move. All he did was stroll for 6 seconds and move 30 feet at a walking pace.
Again, if YOU choose to walk, it's your problem, but nothing in the rules, EVER, says that taking your move action is walking. And nothing precludes someone rushing 30 feet as a readied action, rather the contrary in fact, it's the exact essence of a readied action.
If by whole conversation you mean none of it, you would be correct. I never once claimed to force people to only walk during a round.
But you are, you are telling that, because a move is a walk, it's impossible to move fast during a readied action. You are basically forcing people who are moving to do it as a walking speed to try to backward justify the impossibility to move blindingly fast as a readied action.
Unfortunately, the rules support just that, moving 30 feet as a simple reaction in the middle of someone else's turn,
whatever they are doing, and, as proven, a move in combat is not a walk, the velocity is at least twice that of a walk.