...
For a start, they'll cast no shadow. To go further, perhaps they would have a curious uniformity of illumination to their features, no part of them appearing to be especially well illuminated or in shadow. A particularly bright point of illumination, such as a lantern, might be visible shining through their body if they were in front of it.
You are over thinking this. But at my table is would says.Hi, community, I would like to see how See Invisibility works for you regarding knowing that something is invisible.
The Situation: My bard has See Invis running and we encounter a wizard cabal. My companions don't see the skulking invisible mage by the statue, but I do.
My immediate reaction is to warn them about the invisible guy... but then I begin to ponder: why would I? As far as I'm concerned, the mage is not invisible, so is not worthy of any suspicion! So, unless the party swaps notes quickly and I describe the position of each wizard I see -
Bard: "Five wizards, huh. Must be a convention or something."
Rest of Party: "Five???"
- the rest of the party won't benefit from my (unknowing) knowledge until they confirm which one they can't see by cross-checking.
How would it work at your table?
To be fair the way invisibility and see invisibility is cheesy. Invisibility gives advantage on attacks made by and disadvantage to attacks made against. This doesn't go away under see invisibility.One of the main points of See Invisibility is to foil the invisibility spell - I'm not going to let it then deceive the caster on whether something is invisible or not. That seems pretty cheesy on a DM's part.
We are looking at the 2014 rules not 2024 (where things with that are even more messed up).To be fair the way invisibility and see invisibility is cheesy. Invisibility gives advantage on attacks made by and disadvantage to attacks made against. This doesn't go away under see invisibility.
From the 2014 rules on hiding:If an invisible creature is just hanging out in a corner not trying to hide he is just automatically 'spotted'?