Magic Rub
First Post
kreynolds said:You referrenced it in the first place. Look...
I mean your referrence to the Screaming weapon from the FRCS. My spell example was to illustrate the [sonic] discriptor being countered by the silience spell
kreynolds said:You referrenced it in the first place. Look...
IceBear said:I liked Caliban's interepation on sonic weapons working. Sound waves require a medium to transmit their energy and the silence is stopping it from moving through the air. However, the weapon itself would probably be vibrating and that would be the cause of the extra damage (like Vibroswords out of Shadowrun)
IceBear
Magic Rub said:
I mean your referrence to the Screaming weapon from the FRCS. My spell example was to illustrate the [sonic] discriptor being countered by the silience spell
Jalon Odessa said:Just a couple of quick questions for those of you interpreting Silence to prevent sonic damage (the logical conclusion of which being that 'sound' and 'sonic damage' are interchangeable) -
- Would casting Protection from Elements[Sonic] on a character render them deaf?
- Given that your interpretation effectively transforms Silence into 'Negate Sonics in a 15 Foot Radius', would you allow energy substitution (or a researched spell) to create 'Negate Electricity in a 15 Foot Radius', or 'Negate Cold in a 15 Foot Radius', at second level?
Another question - if I cast invisibility on a door, could I see what was on the other side?![]()
kreynolds said:
I agree. But we aren't talking about a wizard making himself immune to sonic energy and allowing him to hurl sonicballs out of the field. We are talking about a 3rd level wizard negating a much higher level spell cast from even a 20th level wizard. It just makes Silence seem too overpowered, and the way I always understood areas of magical silence functioned was this: Elemental energy sonic attacks still hurt like hell, but the silenced area cancels out any secondary effects, such as deafness, etc.
S'mon said:BTW I appreciate that you are polite to people you disagree with
kreynolds said:
That isn't always the case, so don't give me any more credit than I deserve, and when it comes to whether or not I'm polite, I'm afraid I shift from one to the other far too often to deserve any credit at all. I appreciate the gesture though.![]()