D&D 3E/3.5 Plane-Shifter 3.5

Tock Chandler

First Post
This could be a very dumb question but my wife just called and I don't have time to read up on it before submitting. Is there a conversion for the PlaneShifter PrC from Manual of the Planes to 3.5? Specifically, do the "Spells per day" become "spellcaster level"?
 

log in or register to remove this ad

Most of the errata for the Manual of the Planes deals with Planar Critters, Spells, and Petitioners; the only change made to the Planeshifter PrC in 3.5e has to do with their "Morphic Stability" class feature.
 

Cage-Rattler said:
Most of the errata for the Manual of the Planes deals with Planar Critters, Spells, and Petitioners; the only change made to the Planeshifter PrC in 3.5e has to do with their "Morphic Stability" class feature.

So a wizard 10/Planeshifter 10 has a lot of 5th level spells, but no sixth or beyond? Am I reading this right?
 

Tock Chandler said:
So a wizard 10/Planeshifter 10 has a lot of 5th level spells, but no sixth or beyond? Am I reading this right?

No, you're not reading it correctly. A wizard 10/planeshifter 10 has the spellcasting ability of a 17th-level wizard: enough for 9th-level spells.

EDIT: To clarify, the Spells Per Day includes seven entries of "+1 level of existing class" - so at 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 6th, 7th, 8th and 10th level, the character's effective wizard level increases by 1. It works just like the arcane archer and arcane trickster in core.
 

Khuxan said:
No, you're not reading it correctly. A wizard 10/planeshifter 10 has the spellcasting ability of a 17th-level wizard: enough for 9th-level spells.

EDIT: To clarify, the Spells Per Day includes seven entries of "+1 level of existing class" - so at 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 6th, 7th, 8th and 10th level, the character's effective wizard level increases by 1. It works just like the arcane archer and arcane trickster in core.

Ah! Muchas gracias, man, that's good news.
 

Remove ads

Top