Ok, thanks. I was hoping that was the case, but you seemed to indicate otherwise.Infiniti2000 said:I can understand why
Would you take issue with a DM viewing FoM's unfettering of movement while in water as making it 'very-air-like' for the purposes of flight?If there were a very-air-like-substance, would I just use the flying rules? Probably. If it were a little different, I might induce some modifiers, or whatever.
Well, you definitely can while on the Elemental plane of water (and you can't really get more watery than that imho). I don't see what might make that plane different than normal water, and I don't see anything actually contradicting this, i.e. the rules don't actually say "you can't use flying while in water".You cannot 'fly' in water, period
I'm guessing that most of the initial authors are on this side. We already have clear statements from Skip Williams and the writer of the MotP. Similar, previous editions of AD&D allowed the fly spell to be used underwater. As I said: I have no personal preference here, I'm just trying to follow the Rules As Expected. Your personal preference does not influence my decision as much as those references do, and the rules quote (and reasoning) you provided didn't seem as strong to me as you possibly believe them to be.
That was a weird side discussion (based on the MotP only). I got the feeling that the writer of the MotP was only thinking of non-winged flight when he wrote "Those with fly speeds can fly at half their normal rate, and their maneuverability is reduced one grade", but that is just speculation. I personally would be unlikely to allow winged flight in water at all (even on the Elemental plane of water) unless FoM was being used.I believe in the other thread (I'm not gonna reread it to verify) we talked about some real-life birds using their wings in the water
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