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Guest 6801328
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I think Steeldragons has a good argument, but the insistence that it must be the only answer strikes me as a little much. There are good arguments on both sides.
There's nothing difficult about it at all...You are hit by the Shocking Grasp...
Shocking Grasp specifically states you can not take reactions...hence, the reaction you need to set off Uncanny Dodge (or Shield, for that matter) is negated.
The answer, very clearly, is no. You can't. Because you are being hit, specifically, with Shocking Grasp. You can/are standing there going, "ZzzGGrrZzzAARRrrggZZZzzgggZZzZz." That is what your "reaction" is doing that turn.
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You mean except the explicit line in the description of the spell that states, immediately after "On a hit, the target takes d8 lightning damage," that the reaction does not, in fact, happen, "...and it can't take reactions until the end of its next turn."?
Aside from that, you are correct, "Nothing about shocking grasp says that order is modified."
This alleged "order things happen in all cases" is disrupted right at step number two "reaction happens"...because, wait...no it doesn't... Because "trigger happens" first (shocking grasp hit you) and the trigger states, for this particular spell/attack with this particular cantrip, you are just not going to get your reaction [until the end of your next turn].
Specific [shocking grasp description directly addressing this] overrules the generic [how reactions, usually/generally, work].
If that attack is a Shocking Grasp, it seems clearly, yes. What any other attack does is of no relevance here. The spell description specifically addresses this scenario.
IMO, this is clearly not the case. By this logic, Shield would not be able to negate the attack that triggers it. However, I believe it is fairly well established that Shield can deflect the attack that triggers it if the attack fails to hit the newly enhanced AC. You see that you are about to be hit and quickly throw up a Shield to deflect the attack. Doesn't matter if it is a longsword or taser cantrip.
There is absolutely no reason that Shocking Grasp would ignore Shield. You try to Shocking Grasp me. I throw a force field between us. You never touch me. So how exactly is my reaction negated when I wasn't tasered? It's an electric effect, not temporal.
Uncanny dodge has an identical trigger as Shield. As such, it is triggered before the Shocking Grasp effect is applied. You see that the attacker is about to hit and have a chance to interrupt it with your reaction. Then, if not negated, the effects of the hit are applied.
There is explicit wording in shield that it can prevent the attack from hitting at all. Uncanny dodge doesn't say that. On the other hand, it makes no sense to apply it only after applying the effects of the attack, because that would be a healing power.