Jeff Wilder
First Post
Nail said:Does the "intent" arguement break down in the case of "accidentally" attacking someone?
Gimme a "for example"?
If you mean, "fireballing a room you truly think is empty, but it's not," no, it doesn't break down. The Sage(s) has ruled that such a fireball does not end invisibility.
I've given it quite a bit of thought, and I can't find a situation in which it breaks down, as long as you remember to judge from the wizard's POV in all cases.
The one possible problem -- and this is true in RL, too, in law -- lies in proving intent. In RL, proving intent is very difficult, which, for example, is why civil rights laws are not as strong as the drafters intended them to be. In a game, if you're a DM with metagaming players, you may run into players launching fireballs into empty rooms with "no intent" to hurt anyone within. But in D&D, unlike in RL law, it is both easier to spot such deceptions, and less troubling to make assumptions against the guy trying them, so it shouldn't really be a problem.
And if it turns out to be, just do what the law does in many cases ... equate extreme recklessness -- called acting with a "depraved heart" in law -- with intent.
BTW, Jeff, I admit I had to google the sponge joke. Eeew.![]()
Actually, that makes me feel better. I was worried it might be over the line, but I rationalized that anybody who wasn't supposed to get it wouldn't.
Seinfeld made the devices famous, BTW.
Jeff
Last edited: