You're forgetting that if you left one unprepared yesterday, eg. then had a long rest, you could, at any time during the day after the long rest, prepare it.
This is true, but unnecessary.
You're forgetting that if you left one unprepared yesterday, eg. then had a long rest, you could, at any time during the day after the long rest, prepare it.
Tell your DM he's wrong.In a recent game the DM asked what my caster did when he woke up.
He got up, relieved himself, got dressed, prepared and ate breakfast, and then started to prepare his spells. But it didn't work because apparently I needed to prepare spells immediately after completing a long rest.
This is pretty much what I meant by "acknowledge it's a house rule". I think the more restrictive ruling will be most folks' default interpretation. Whether or not you consider it a house rule or not isn't really an issue, for me, just that you should have appropriate expectations when dealing with others.If you and your group like to be able to prepare spells later in the day after leaving a few "open slots", then it certainly does not break the game. Enjoy. You don't need our permission.
However, if you went to a convention and dropped into a game with a DM you didn't know, I wouldn't expect your ruling to hold. Contrary to what people are saying, the rules are not silent on this point. They are explicit.
"You prepare the list of cleric spells that are available for you to cast... When you do so, choose a number of cleric spells equal to your Wisdom modifier + your cleric level (minimum of one spell)... "
You choose that specific number of spells at the time you prepare them. You don't choose less than Wis+lvl, you choose exactly THAT many.
I believe he did read what you said.
And then he refuted it.
As others have already posted, the one opportunity to change your list of prepared spells is right after a long rest.
You do it any other time, you're expanding upon the PHB. An excellent house rule, but not what a straightforward reading gives you.
In a recent game the DM asked what my caster did when he woke up.
He got up, relieved himself, got dressed, prepared and ate breakfast, and then started to prepare his spells. But it didn't work because apparently I needed to prepare spells immediately after completing a long rest.
You're forgetting that if you left one unprepared yesterday, eg. then had a long rest, you could, at any time during the day after the long rest, prepare it.
What happens if you do not change them? They remain the same ones you previously prepared. A long rest doesn't un-prepare them. Sleeping doesn't un-prepare them. Having cast spells using all your spell slots the previous day doesn't un-prepare them. Spells remain prepared, until you change them to other spells. So...