UngeheuerLich
Legend
I think on the battlefield, you should leave pieces at the last known positions.I think you're referring to Theater of the Blind.
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I'll see myself out. With disadvantage.
I think on the battlefield, you should leave pieces at the last known positions.I think you're referring to Theater of the Blind.
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I'll see myself out. With disadvantage.
It though about this rule a lot. I think I would generalize it and add some "super (dis-) advantage".House Rule: If two combatants are fighting in darkness, or fog, and neither have special senses, they attack each other with disadvantage. (i.e. its a harder fight than normal lighting)
Rationale: Being unseen by your opponent while you can see them is the theory for attacks having advantage. I feel the "you have disadvantage if you cannot see your opponent" overrides the "advantage/disadvantage cancel rule".
Great post; countersigned.This distinction was a lot clearer in the 2014 rules,... etc.
This is what I do too, and what I did in 2014 5E.House Rule: If two combatants are fighting in darkness, or fog, and neither have special senses, they attack each other with disadvantage. (i.e. its a harder fight than normal lighting)
Rationale: Being unseen by your opponent while you can see them is the theory for attacks having advantage. I feel the "you have disadvantage if you cannot see your opponent" overrides the "advantage/disadvantage cancel rule".
Not sure if this has been mentioned yet, but for 5.24 this is incorrect. Unless the spell specifies you cannot see in that darkness (which the Darkness spell does specify), darkvision can now see in magical darkness.This came up in a game and made me realize the rules for attacking things you cannot see are weird.
This was discussed a lot for 5.0 but I don't think 5.5 fixed it, and this entire post is specific to 2024 rules: RAW, if you are attacking a target in Magical Darkness (such that darkvision is not in play)
It was the Darkness spell. But regardless, that's just an example.Not sure if this has been mentioned yet, but for 5.24 this is incorrect. Unless the spell specifies you cannot see in that darkness (which the Darkness spell does specify), darkvision can now see in magical darkness.
I was wondering if I had missed something or if there was any other distinction in the 2024 rules, which I'm taking by your post and others in this thread to be: no. Your explanation was helpful: ultimately it reinforced my thought from the 2nd page of this thread that being unseen should probably be different from being hidden, as it used to be. Thanks for talking it all through.This distinction was a lot clearer in the 2014 rules, when being invisible was an entirely separate condition from being hidden. ...
Indeed. Here's what I believe are my final version of two house rules as inspired by this thread:Our solution: blinded creatures make attack rolls with disadvantage. Full stop.