I noticed this ruling in the latest Sage Advice:
Link: https://www.dndbeyond.com/sources/dnd/sae/sage-advice-compendium#SAC-Adventuring9
Now, here's part of the text of the Fear spell:
A Frightened creature takes the Dash action and moves away from you by the safest route on each of its turns unless there is nowhere to move. If the creature ends its turn in a space where it doesn’t have line of sight to you, the creature makes a Wisdom saving throw. On a successful save, the spell ends on that creature.
Does this mean all the frightened target has to do is look away from the caster or close its eyes at the end of its turn and it can make the saving throw?
The Frightened condition says “while the source of its fear is within line of sight.” Does that mean you have Disadvantage on attack rolls and ability checks even if the source is imperceptible but you have a clear line to its space?
No. If you can’t see something, it’s not within your line of sight. Speaking of “line of sight,” the game uses the English meaning of the term, which has no special meaning in the rules.Link: https://www.dndbeyond.com/sources/dnd/sae/sage-advice-compendium#SAC-Adventuring9
Now, here's part of the text of the Fear spell:
A Frightened creature takes the Dash action and moves away from you by the safest route on each of its turns unless there is nowhere to move. If the creature ends its turn in a space where it doesn’t have line of sight to you, the creature makes a Wisdom saving throw. On a successful save, the spell ends on that creature.
Does this mean all the frightened target has to do is look away from the caster or close its eyes at the end of its turn and it can make the saving throw?