Ovinomancer
No flips for you!
I've already broken down the steps for casting spells in an earlier post:
This is an example in steps:
1. Declare I use Eldritch Blast
2. Use up the action type associated with Casting a Spell and Eldritch Blast (my action)
3. Use any material costs associated to casting the spell I have chosen and perform any other requirements for casting the spell.
4. Finish casting the spell (this is the last step where the spell can be counterspelled because after this you are resolving the effects of having successfully cast the spell)
5. Resolve the effects of the spell (in this case making x number of attacks as described in the spell effect section, say 2 attacks for this example)
Making an Attack
1. Declare target of attack 1
2. Figure out the modifiers if any for the attack
3. Resolve the attack (including damage and effects like forced movement for example)
1 Declare target of attack 2
2. Figure out the modifiers if any for the attack
3. Resolve the attack (including damage and effects like forced movement for example)
Read more: http://www.enworld.org/forum/showthread.php?473235-Warlock-and-Repelling-Blast/page8#ixzz3tGjARyK7
To be clear again, the fluff reasoning that you decide to use to explain why an instantaneous spell can't be dispelled is irrelevant.. all that matters is the rules say they can't be dispelled. They could have said "... because the moon is yellow." and it still wouldn't matter or change anything for how the rule works in practice. You can't use dispel, either in readied and held form or whatever against an instantaneous spell. However, you can use counterspell against them just fine.
Great, and thanks for that again. But I'd like an answer to this question, which is directly related to the above (and, in fact, takes the above as absolutely correct):
me said:I'll ask again, directly and clearly: what is your opinion on readied actions occurring between bolts from an eldritch blast?