Lord Pendragon said:So KD,
Wizard A is under the effects of Mind Blank, as well as Shapechange (taking the form of a dragon).
Wizard B casts True Seeing. What does he see? Does Mind Blank mean he sees a dragon?
Yes. He would see the Dragon with his everyday regular "normal sight".
His True Seeing would not show him the natural form of the creature.
Hence, he would see a dragon and nothing more.
If he had Darkvision and True Seeing up, he would see the Dragon with the Darkvision because Darkvision is not a Divination spell.
Lord Pendragon said:I've never gotten a campaign to 9th-level spells yet, so I haven't had to make this call. I've always fallen into the "subset of Divination" category, but recently I've considered ruling that in the above situation, Wizard B wouldn't see anything at all. i.e. the Mind Blank doesn't negate True Seeing, but renders one invisible to divinations. The savvy spellcaster, then, would know something was wrong, though not perhaps what, at first.
Why?
If the divination does not show anything different, how does the spellcaster know the difference between it not showing anything different because there is nothing there to be seen and it not showing anything different because it is being foiled?
Now, if a Wizard is 100 feet from the Dragon and casts Clairvoyance (which divines a normal view at a distance) in the area of the Dragon, then he would have two views: dragon and no dragon.
But, True Seeing does not do this.
The problem I have with the subset of Divination ruling is that:
a) Divination spells by definition are supposed to gather information.
b) Where do you draw the line with them?