I'm not particularly fond of this format. IMO, it makes finding information slower. The save and AoE lines were present also in AD&D (even though, it's often listed as 'special' and then you have to dig through the text anyway.)
The DMG had a whole, very clear and high quality, discussion on targetting objects.Excdept that, one spell said it could target objects (I forget which one now), but no others, and the targeting rules themselves distinguished between creatures and objects.... so alas, the rules specifically said you could not target objects unless it said so.
For me, style affects the way I think about a rule. So a proscribed, identikit "block", while easy to understand, makes me think about magic in a regimented, technical, numerical way, rather than an eclectic, arcane, poetic way. I don't like spellbooks to look like spreadsheets, no matter how easy it makes things.
I agree about the emotional feeling. I run a weekly game of AD&D 1e and the spells are very evocative and give a strong feeling.I definitely agree with this. Actually reading a spell description gives me a different emotional feeling about what I am doing than reading a straight statblock. [...]
Unearthed Arcana said:During the casting, the illusionist must call out to the subject or subjects, informing one or all that their final fate, indeed their doom, now is upon them.
The DMG had a whole, very clear and high quality, discussion on targetting objects.
At most you might say that the rules in the PHB, read without regard to the rules in the DMG, or common sense, or the history of the game, might imply that you could not target objects. Why anyone would prefer that reading to one which actually has regard to the excellent discussion in the DMG I don't know.
I guess that it really comes down to how each specific brain is 'wired'. For me, separating the information makes it muck quicker to access it.It strikes me that not having a separate line is easier for non-standard targets, otherwise spells really try and limit spell effects to that one line. It's an artificial limit.
It's also easier to read natural language, as you don't need to change your gaze from the text to the save or target line. All the information is in the same place.