• NOW LIVE! Into the Woods--new character species, eerie monsters, and haunting villains to populate the woodlands of your D&D games.

D&D 5E Similacrum and Wish

He's absolutely right. And you don't have to play with him either.

There are always going to be times when a DM and player don't mesh. Different people have different play styles and what is fun and rewarding for them.

That's not a reflection one way or another on the DM or player. Just like some people like gross raw fish sushi, it's a matter of taste.
 

log in or register to remove this ad

The simulacrum is by definition an NPC (since it is obviously not a PC). That said, the spell clearly defines your level of control over the simulacrum.

However, there is no RAW reason that a simulacrum cannot cast Wish. Wish is "the mightiest spell a mortal creature can cast." Meaning that if you are mortal, Wish is the maximum limit. It does not mean that you must be mortal in order to cast Wish. For example, genies are not mortal but some can nonetheless cast Wish.

Personally, I treat the simulacrum as if it were the caster for purposes of casting spells. Meaning that if the simulacrum casts Simulacrum it will cease to be (because it is treated as being you, and you cannot have more than one Simulacrum at a time). It also means that you can't circumvent the 33% chance by having your simulacrum cast a non-standard Wish for you (although I don't have that result in automatic inability to be unable to cast Wish again; rather, your monkeying with the fabric of reality has resulted in the forces of Law taking notice who will be sending an Inevitable who will seek to resolve the situation which could result in a quest or the loss of Wish).

Ultimately though, what the DM says, goes.
 

The simulacrum is by definition an NPC (since it is obviously not a PC). That said, the spell clearly defines your level of control over the simulacrum.

However, there is no RAW reason that a simulacrum cannot cast Wish. Wish is "the mightiest spell a mortal creature can cast." Meaning that if you are mortal, Wish is the maximum limit. It does not mean that you must be mortal in order to cast Wish. For example, genies are not mortal but some can nonetheless cast Wish.

Personally, I treat the simulacrum as if it were the caster for purposes of casting spells. Meaning that if the simulacrum casts Simulacrum it will cease to be (because it is treated as being you, and you cannot have more than one Simulacrum at a time). It also means that you can't circumvent the 33% chance by having your simulacrum cast a non-standard Wish for you (although I don't have that result in automatic inability to be unable to cast Wish again; rather, your monkeying with the fabric of reality has resulted in the forces of Law taking notice who will be sending an Inevitable who will seek to resolve the situation which could result in a quest or the loss of Wish).

Ultimately though, what the DM says, goes.

I would rule the same way. The simulacrum is neither beast nor humanoid, it's an illusion.

I also rule that "the statistics of the creature it duplicates" is the statistics of the caster after the casting is complete so you don't get "free" spells. It's a cool spell and still quite powerful under the right circumstances, no need for addition exploits.
 

You know that one popular post of using simulacrum and wish to get infinite clones?


My DM is arguing that Simulacrums are considered NPC's and that he controls them. He believes that since they're NPC's, even if i have wish prepared, they shouldn't be able to cast it. My issue here is that no where in the spell description does it say that Simulacrums are NPC's, and even if they are, Wish only requires the caster to be mortal, NPC or otherwise. Who's in the right here?

Your DM.
 

Into the Woods

Remove ads

Top