ainbimagh said:That's an easy one.
he sees ambiguity because he wants to print it off and show it to his DM saying, See it stops magic missiles!
Leave the dimestore psychology to someone who can pull it off with some panache.
Like most rules questions, it came up in play, but I don't game with any DMs who are swayed by a print off. Since it's an epic game, it's not like Shield spells and Brooches of Shielding are hard to come by, and when you're high enough to have both Infinite Deflection and Exceptional Deflection, the question is more academic than anything else.
I was curious if anyone else had run into this rare quandry in gameplay, and how they answered it.
As far as I can see, nobody has actually thought about it, before. The feat, plus Infinite Deflection, makes you immune to rays, orbs and any spell that requires a ranged touch attack, but strangely, it doesn't give you any benefit against Magic Missiles because ... that's a spell.
I don't find the logic that's not an "attack" particularly compelling, either.
A magic missile is a targeted ranged attack spell. The feat is not confined to ONLY ranged touch spells, but it also includes ranged touch spells. It's a spell that's stopped by Shield, Minor Globe of Invulnerability and putting it under the category of "any" doesn't seem like too much of a stretch to me, since we're talking about an epic feat against a first level spell.