Harzel
Adventurer
I would allow it because, as others have said, it used up resources and it's cool.
I had a similar thought - that the transformation of the arrow into a lightening bolt would cause it to lose properties (even magical ones) that it had as an arrow. However, the part of the spell description quoted (a ranged weapon attack using a piece of ammunition drawn from the quiver) would actually make me inclined to allow it, because the attack definitely did use a piece of ammunition drawn from the quiver. It is the next part of the spell description that would make me hesitate: "The spell’s magic ends onthe piece of ammunition when it hits or misses." That indicates that the magic is carried by the ammo itself rather than being associated in a more general way with the attack. That said, I'd still allow it.
Would this extend to, say, Cone of Cold and Fireball cast on the same area in the same round?
I sympathize to some extent - you want the world to operate in a consistent and believable fashion - but I think it's possible to find a narration that makes it work. The icy mote at the tip of the lightening bolt plunges into the creature, freezing its core while electricity courses through its body and flames ravage its exterior.
Next question: If I coat the tip of the arrow with poison, does that work, too?![Devious :] :]](http://www.enworld.org/forum/images/smilies/devious.png)
Flame arrow: When a target is hit by a ranged weapon attack using a piece of ammunition drawn from the quiver, the target takes an extra 1d6 fire damage.
When the arrow transforms into a lightning bolt, the original piece of ammunition drawn from the quiver never hits the target. I wouldn't allow it to stack.
I had a similar thought - that the transformation of the arrow into a lightening bolt would cause it to lose properties (even magical ones) that it had as an arrow. However, the part of the spell description quoted (a ranged weapon attack using a piece of ammunition drawn from the quiver) would actually make me inclined to allow it, because the attack definitely did use a piece of ammunition drawn from the quiver. It is the next part of the spell description that would make me hesitate: "The spell’s magic ends onthe piece of ammunition when it hits or misses." That indicates that the magic is carried by the ammo itself rather than being associated in a more general way with the attack. That said, I'd still allow it.
I also wouldn't allow fire and cold to add on the same weapon attack. Rather they would subtract.
Would this extend to, say, Cone of Cold and Fireball cast on the same area in the same round?
That's how I would call it, but I have a bug for realism.
I sympathize to some extent - you want the world to operate in a consistent and believable fashion - but I think it's possible to find a narration that makes it work. The icy mote at the tip of the lightening bolt plunges into the creature, freezing its core while electricity courses through its body and flames ravage its exterior.
Next question: If I coat the tip of the arrow with poison, does that work, too?
![Devious :] :]](http://www.enworld.org/forum/images/smilies/devious.png)