Hyp, could you explain the last entry to me?
"The text on page 289 in the DUNGEON MASTER’s Guide
says a supernatural ability cannot be dispelled. Table 8-1 on
the next page, however, says it can. Which one is right? If
supernatural abilities cannot be dispelled, can they be
removed or countered in other ways? What would happen,
for example, if a medusa turns my character to stone? Can
anything restore my character?
The table is wrong. While you cannot dispel a supernatural
ability with the dispel magic spell, you can remove or reverse
its effects on an area, object (but not one in the supernatural
ability user’s possession), or creature (but not the ability user
itself) in other ways. For instance, the petrified victim in your
example can be restored through a break enchantment spell or a
stone to flesh spell. Supernatural effects are not subject to
counterspelling, but some of them can be countered in other
ways if they have the right descriptor (or if they duplicate spells
with the right descriptor). For example, the darkmantle’s
supernatural darkness ability duplicates the 2nd-level darkness
spell, which has the darkness descriptor. This ability counters
and dispels any light effect of its level or lower, and the 3rdlevel
daylight spell (which counters and dispels all darkness
effects of its level or lower) negates the darkness created by a
darkmantle’s darkness ability.
Likewise, spells such as dispel evil can remove
supernatural enchantment effects if they duplicate spells that
can otherwise be dispelled. For example a dispel evil spell will
remove a vampire’s dominate person effect from a victim.
Similarly spells that block mental control, such as protection
from evil or magic circle against evil, suppress the effects of a
vampire’s dominate person ability, as noted in their spell
descriptions."
- 3.5 Main FAQ.
I've had party members dominated by SU abilities and the like, before. It was bad. I don't think I understand this passage very well. When, exactly, can you use spells to remove the effects of SU abilities?