PS, check out the latest question on the ustilagor.
Knight Otu said:
I'd view it more as "finding" an object in a heap of other objects - the smaller it is, the less likely you are to find it (the original ability was based on a Scry skill check for a reason).
I suppose we could make it a Concentration check ala the Remote Viewing power...
I couldn't find anything in the
scying spell,
remote viewing power, or Scry skill that had anything to do with the size of the creature/object to be viewed. However, I will acquiesce that a size modifier may be appropriate, although I cannot fathom why it would matter whether or not the mind worm could fit in the target body of water for the check to be successful. So, I have made an attempt at rewriting the power, and tell me what you think of this:
Probe Worms (Su): A mind worm can create a probe worm as a standard action and dismiss it as a free action, and may have up to 4 of these worms active at any time. A probe worm is a tiny wormlike thing constructed of crackling red energy. The probe worm appears on any reflective surface that the mind worm is able to see with any of its senses or through scrying, (? and can move to any point along the surface instantaneously?). A probe worm may make melee attacks at opponents up to 15 feet away from the reflective surface it appears on, dealing force damage and Constitution drain, and on a successful critical hit may use its far swallow ability. Each probe worm has an AC of 20 and 40 hit points, and when destroyed it cannot be replaced for a full week.
To allow passage for the probe worms, a mind worm must succeed on a DC 20 caster level check. If the reflective surface is on another plane, the DC increases by 10. If the reflective surface is a body of water that is not connected to the water the mind worm is in, the DC increases by 2. The DC also increases by 2 for every size category that the surface is smaller than Gargantuan (the surface cannot be smaller than Tiny). To be the target of this ability, a surface must be a flat mirror, clear glass, a still pool of water, or a flat piece of shiny metal.