Greenfield
Adventurer
What they can't do is make the attack roll needed to actually hit with the burning wood, the rock off the cliff, or the kettle of boiling water. Even a touch attack is still an attack.
The highlighted section or similar text appears several times throughout the rules, and appear to be the only real definition of "attended". The underlined portion seems to suggest a broader interpretation than yours might be in order. </edit 2>SRD said:(object): The spell can be cast on objects, which receive saving throws only if they are magical or if they are attended (held, worn, grasped, or the like) by a creature resisting the spell, in which case the object uses the creature’s saving throw bonus unless its own bonus is greater. (This notation does not mean that a spell can be cast only on objects. Some spells of this sort can be cast on creatures or objects.) A magic item’s saving throw bonuses are each equal to 2 + one-half the item’s caster level.
Absolutely. Or push a rock off a high ledge, or tip over a kettle of boiling oil in a castle siege, etc.
What they can't do is make the attack roll needed to actually hit with the burning wood, the rock off the cliff, or the kettle of boiling water. Even a touch attack is still an attack.
In the example in our game, the piece of burning wood was dropped upon an unconscious, negative HP but stable enemy. There was no attack roll to make, it simply carried the equivalent of a torch (holding a non-burning side of the wood) and dropped it onto the person. gravity over a non-moving individual assured the wood would land upon the person. Assuming the fire did 1 point of damage by itself un-stabilized the opponent, reducing it by 1 each round.Y'all are dumm.
Unseen servant can attack by NOT attacking something. For example it can carry a vial of some terribly corrosive poison or somesuch and crush it next to the offending party.
Your suicidal Servant can carry remotely detonated bombs in a sly and thoughtful way.
What about yanking arrows out of a quiver and scattering them to the wind? Arrows do not meet the criteria for being attended objects (they are neither grasped, touched, nor worn if they are within a quiver... and for that matter... if you want to be very generous with an interpretation... neither is a sword in its scabbard).
What they can't do is make the attack roll needed to actually hit with the burning wood, the rock off the cliff, or the kettle of boiling water. Even a touch attack is still an attack.
Absolutely. Or push a rock off a high ledge, or tip over a kettle of boiling oil in a castle siege, etc.
Unseen servant can attack by NOT attacking something. For example it can carry a vial of some terribly corrosive poison or somesuch and crush it next to the offending party.
Besides, how would you rule whether the US was able to crush the vial? To do that you have to top the hardness and HP of the vial, and that's done based on damage dealt from an attack. And since the US can't make an attack, even on an inanimate object...