DavyGreenwind
Just some guy
But when they step out in front of you and wave, they are obviousGenerally it’s not obvious when there’s something invisible in your line of sight. That’s kinda the point of invisibility.
But when they step out in front of you and wave, they are obviousGenerally it’s not obvious when there’s something invisible in your line of sight. That’s kinda the point of invisibility.
There is a cat who visits our yard frequently who, when it sees me, ducks it's head into the bushes.The key thing to keep in mind as that we only ever THINK were hiding.![]()
For example, if a PC sneaks up to a sleeping nobel and slits their throat, I wouldn't have them roll an attack, I'd set a DC for them to do so without waking them up. If they succeed, the target is dead, if the fail, roll initiative.
impossible to see without the use of magic.
Because it’s what the rules say. If the intent is not for it to be interpreted that way, then it shouldn’t be written that way. It would be trivially easy to include a “you are no longer In sufficient cover or obscuration” clause to the list of things that end the condition, so I can only assume that the choice not to do so was intentional. Or if it wasn’t intentional and somehow slipped through despite three rounds of playtest feedback, they should issue errata to correct it as quickly as possible.
The rules don’t say that. If they did, I wouldn’t have this problem with them.
The spell shouldn’t end in that case, the creature with the special sense should just ignore the effects of the condition. Which is how the condition works as-written. I think the invisible condition is fine as-written, the problem is that the hide action shouldn’t grant the invisible condition, because it shouldn’t work the same way the invisibility spell does.
Yes, so since invisibility and hiding work differently, they should have different mechanics.
But situationally. If you are hidden and the conditions which are causing you to be hidden change, you are no longer hidden. Because you’re not actually invisible, you are just currently not being observed.
I don't think this is correct. You can still hide from enemies that can see invisible no problem, like high-level demons, in more than one edition. It is true that functionally there is a substantial overlap, and at certain level intervals invisibility comes on top, but they are not the same thing, nor should they be, and one cannot assume one is always better than the other.Piggy backing off that, this might actually be a bit of a stealth nerf to the invisibility spell. In the history of D&D, the invisibility spell has been superior to hiding/stealth in every possible way.
Would I prefer that the rule spell out that if you leave cover, or otherwise are somehow seen, that the condition ends? Maybe. But if I pop out of cover with one guard with their back to me and another staring at me, I'd prefer to get advantage on the one rather than loose the condition because one of the guards did see me.Except the rules do say that. Because the specific rules you quoted very specifically tell me when that condition ends. And its not when I leave 3/4 cover.
If a spell gives me an effect....and says it ends if I use athletics check DC 15 as an action....I don't suddenly assume a dexterity saving throw will also get rid of the effect or a perception check or a religion check, etc. The effect ends when the condition that are specified tell me the effect ends, its just that simple.
So then what is the correct interpretation?
Is it as soon as I leave cover....because then why on god's green earth wouldn't it just say that when it lists all these other very specific conditions?
It can't just be line of sight, because 3/4 cover doesn't block line of sight, so stealth wouldn't actually be possible in 3/4 cover.
Are you supposed to use passive perception, because that is now just a tiny block not even connected to the rules on hiding.
We all agree that the current situation the RAW suggest is patently absurd, but the problem is, it doesn't suggest what the true RAI is either.
One of the things about being hidden is that like charmed or frightened it is relative - there's a creature you are hidden from.But if I pop out of cover with one guard with their back to me and another staring at me, I'd prefer to get advantage on the one rather than loose the condition because one of the guards did see me.
Quick poll.
Which do you like better.
- Stealth breaks at the end of your turn if you don't have cover / concealment
it doesn’t stop working, it just means it does not apply to those creatures. If there were two guards, one with blindsight and one without, the second one still would not see the invisible character
and moving, standing alone should not be enough![]()