jlhorner1974
First Post
*ROTFLMAO* 

Still, I contend that the "incorporeal touch attack" wording is poor and easily misinterpreted.
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Obviously, or we wouldn't be having this discussion
Yeah, but isn't it weird that everyone who had different opinions at the beginning of this thread has basically already agreed on how it should work, without a Sage ruling?
Hypersmurf said:
Oh, come on. You know better than that.
The wording could be clear as day, and we could still build a four-page thread arguing about it
(cf Perform skill...)
-Hyp.
What? Blasphemer! Destroy the infidel!Hypersmurf said:
Not yet - I still disagree with Auraseer about how GT weapons work![]()
In short, Mage Armor does protect against a spectre's touch. (The wording is a little awkward, since he says "the latter" with an unclear antecedent. But by the context, it's clear that he means an incorporeal touch attack is different from a normal touch attack.)Hi there. I have a question about incorporeal touch attacks, such as that of a spectre.
Should this be read as an incorporeal "touch attack," or as an "incorporeal touch" attack? That is, does it follow the rules for incorporeal attacks (which can be stopped by ghost touch armor), or the rules for touch attacks (which ignore armor altogether)?
It's the latter--that's why it's called an incorporeal touch attack. If incorporeal creatures made touch attacks, the game would call their attacks touch attacks.
All the incorporeal creatures in the Monster Manual appear to have "incorporeal touch" attacks. If these are treated as touch attacks, is there any such thing as an incorporeal attack that *isn't* a touch attack?
A manifested ghost using a ghost touch weapon is incorporeal, but can make normal attacks, and see previous answer.
Originally posted by the Sage
A manifested ghost using a ghost touch weapon is incorporeal, but can make normal attacks