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*Dungeons & Dragons
The good, bad, and ugly of the Wish spell
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<blockquote data-quote="KingAcarius" data-source="post: 7311867" data-attributes="member: 6929464"><p><strong>The beauty of words</strong></p><p></p><p>In the campaign that has now evolved into a different type of campaign recently, we ended things with a tournament of sorts. The winner of the tournament would get a wish spell. Granted this campaign really started off as the most basic Mission you can come up with, but we push that way past its limits and extended it for longer than it should have. But my characters greatest ambition was to become a God or demigod. He started off as a human sorcerer criminal. But then recently changed to a human cleric with the war domain. So when the time came for the wish to be given to the winner, it was my characters time to shine. I worded the spell as lawyerly as humanly possible. I was following the god of fire and revolution Sargonnis. The exact wording of the spell was I wish that my God Sargonnis would come down and personally give me a Divine Spark. And I rolled pretty high so my DM had no choice but to say that the Avatar of my God came down and presented me with a Divine spark from him. As long as you word it correctly there should be no reason why there would be any misconceptions or technicality is that the DM could impose on your wish. But since I had ascended to be a demigod I didn't get any of the physical drawbacks of the wish spell.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="KingAcarius, post: 7311867, member: 6929464"] [b]The beauty of words[/b] In the campaign that has now evolved into a different type of campaign recently, we ended things with a tournament of sorts. The winner of the tournament would get a wish spell. Granted this campaign really started off as the most basic Mission you can come up with, but we push that way past its limits and extended it for longer than it should have. But my characters greatest ambition was to become a God or demigod. He started off as a human sorcerer criminal. But then recently changed to a human cleric with the war domain. So when the time came for the wish to be given to the winner, it was my characters time to shine. I worded the spell as lawyerly as humanly possible. I was following the god of fire and revolution Sargonnis. The exact wording of the spell was I wish that my God Sargonnis would come down and personally give me a Divine Spark. And I rolled pretty high so my DM had no choice but to say that the Avatar of my God came down and presented me with a Divine spark from him. As long as you word it correctly there should be no reason why there would be any misconceptions or technicality is that the DM could impose on your wish. But since I had ascended to be a demigod I didn't get any of the physical drawbacks of the wish spell. [/QUOTE]
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The good, bad, and ugly of the Wish spell
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