Artoomis said:If an effect (non-instantaneous) cannot be affacted by Dispel Magic, it says so specifcally.
If a curse cannot be removed by "Remove Curse" it says so specifically.
If a spell's non-instantaneous effects remain in a Antimagic Field, it says so specifically (generally, a instantaneous spell leaves behind a non-magical effect).
By precendent, if a spell meets all the criteria for Break Enchantment (that is, Feeblemind), thatn it must exclude Break Enchantment by name if the exclusion is truly valid.
Do any non-instantaneous effects (that presumably can be dispelled, since they don't mention it) but with other means of removal, use the "effect remains until xyz" wording?
For example, stoneskin doesn't say "stoneskin remains until the duration expires or it absorbs x damage", it says "Once the spell has prevented x damage, it is discharged."
I'm not trying to take the other side here, I just think that if there were another spell worded like Feeblemind, it would help to sort the situation out.
EDIT:
The closest I've found is Glitterdust. Glitterdust "cannot be removed." If BE doesn't work on feeblemind, than Dispel Magic doesn't work on Glitterdust, which seems a little wierder, but isn't the end of the world.
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gnfnrf
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