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3 people marked this as FAQ candidate. |

School conjuration (summoning); Level antipaladin 1, bard 1, cleric/oracle 1, sorcerer/wizard 1, summoner 1, witch 1
CASTING
Casting Time 1 round
Components V, S, F/DF (a tiny bag and a small candle)EFFECT
Range close (25 ft. + 5 ft./2 levels)
Effect 1d3 summoned creatures
Duration 1 round/level (D)
Saving Throw none; Spell Resistance noDESCRIPTION
This spell functions as summon monster I, except you can summon 1d3 Tiny or smaller animals, such as bats, lizards, monkeys, rats, ravens, toads, or weasels. The summoned animals must all be the same type of creature. As with animals summoned with summon monster I, you may apply one alignment-appropriate template to these animals.Section 15: Copyright Notice: Pathfinder Roleplaying Game Ultimate Magic.
I got the cool idea a few weeks ago from one of the rules forums here that you could summon a skunk:
XP 100
N Tiny animal
Init +2; Senses low-light vision, scent; Perception +5DEFENSE
AC 14, touch 14, flat-footed 12 (+2 Dex, +2 size)
hp 3 (1d8-1)
Fort +1, Ref +4, Will +1OFFENSE
Speed 30 ft.
Melee bite +4 (1d3-4), 2 claws +4 (1d2-4)
Ranged spray +4 touch (musk)
Space 2-1/2 ft.; Reach 2-1/2 ft.
Special Attacks muskSTATISTICS
Str 3, Dex 15, Con 9, Int 2, Wis 12, Cha 6
Base Atk +0; CMB +0; CMD 6
Feats Weapon Finesse
Skills Perception +5SPECIAL ABILITIES
Musk (Ex)
Up to twice per day, a skunk can spray a stream of noxious musk at a single target within 10 feet as a standard action. With a successful ranged touch attack, the creature struck by this spray must make a DC 11 Fortitude save or be nauseated for 1d4 rounds and then sickened for 1d4 minutes by the horrific stench. A successful save reduces the effect to only 1d4 rounds of being sickened. A creature cannot use the scent ability as long as it is affected by this musk. The save DC is Constitution-based, and includes a +2 racial bonus.Section 15: Copyright Notice: Bestiary 3
In my local Society group there is a gnome bard that said he used this combination before. He just had to bring a copy of Bestiary 3. The rationale being that there are so many tiny sized animals in Pathfinder that not all of them could be listed within this one spell (and so that as more were developed, they could be included). Not even all the tiny sized animals in Bestiary 1 are listed, such as hawk, which is certainly legal.
Mark Moreland addressed a question asking whether or not an expanded list for Summon Monster would ever come out, to which his reply was "no", but I believe this is a separate question. There is no "list" for Summon Minor Monster, only the phrase "tiny or smaller animals, such as..."
I've checked the Additional Resources page and FAQ and can't find anywhere that it states this combination could not be used.
Any chance there could be an official response?

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No an official response, but in PFS when using spells that have that wording "such as..." you will encounter table variation for anything except the provided list.
I would say that you should stick to:
bats
lizards
monkeys
rats
ravens
toads
weasels
This is similar to the spell bestow curse where it says "you can also invent your own curse" but in PFS you have to pick from the three in the list or you are running into GM fiat.

John Pryor |
It seems to me that under the RAW concept, skunks should be allowed. The list in the spell description is preceded by "such as" which clearly makes them examples rather than the exclusive list. To look at it another way, summoning a group of skunks, is, I would argue, on a par with color spray. It has longer range than color spray and is disabling, but not as badly as a knockout spell like color spray, and the save DC is only 11. I will admit that I'm not the DM, but IMO forbidding skunks is unreasonably restrictive. I can see it would be annoying to a DM to have a group of say goblins nauseated and sickened, but truly, that's no worse than having them knocked out by color spray. Just my 2 cents' worth.

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I don't think anyone's making the argument that summoning skunks is overpowered - it's just that given the inherent amount of variation in PFS (different GMs, players, and circumstances at each table), one of the base principles of the campaign is to limit variation when possible. This way we don't need to worry about an obscure corner case when they publish stats for a Corgi in Bestiary 5 and its overwhelming cuteness aura interacts strangely with the Kineticist's Hurl Cute Creatures SLA.

John Pryor |
Hmmmm.... Not sure I've seen the principle of limiting variation anywhere; do you have a source reference? I'll grant that that makes the life of a DM easier. Given the number of variations that are possible in classes, for example, my first reaction is I'm not sure such a thing as a variation limiting principle applies. Regardless, I think RAW trumps it. The other principle that I think should apply, although I've never seen it anywhere, is that every spell should have at least some usability/applicability. If Summon Minor is limited to bats, lizards, monkeys, rats, ravens, toads, or weasels, off the top of my head I cannot conceive of any use anyone would ever have for the spell. Just a vanity spell, so you can say Ta Dah, watch my monkeys?? Why bother to publish it? I also think you would see what you see with any of the Summon Monster or Summon Nature's Ally spells: within a few months everyone will summon exactly the same 2-3 creatures, determined by effectiveness, and then the variation vanishes.