irdeggman pointed out something I thought was interesting in the Rules Compendium (p. 92):
You fail a spot check to see a hidden creature. The creature does nothing and you make another spot check in it's location (or multiple spot checks or take 20).
Would you give the creature +20 on his hide check(s) as if it were invisible (or +20 to it's original hide)?
Or would you make it normal opposed rolls (or rolls vs. the original hide)?
Or give the 'spotter' a bonus to subsequent spot checks?
Or give the 'hider' a bonus against subsequent spot checks?
Something else?
So how do you 'see' this:If you're successfully hidden with respect to another creature, that creature is flat-footed with respect to you. That creature treats you as if you were invisible.
You fail a spot check to see a hidden creature. The creature does nothing and you make another spot check in it's location (or multiple spot checks or take 20).
Would you give the creature +20 on his hide check(s) as if it were invisible (or +20 to it's original hide)?
Or would you make it normal opposed rolls (or rolls vs. the original hide)?
Or give the 'spotter' a bonus to subsequent spot checks?
Or give the 'hider' a bonus against subsequent spot checks?
Something else?
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