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Ahoy,

a thing that has annoyed me about the rules of spell preperation is this bit:

Quote:
As with arcane spells, at the time of preparation any spells cast within the previous 8 hours count against the number of spells that can be prepared.

Source: d20pfsrd

because it basically renders this bit obsolete:
Quote:
A divine spellcaster chooses and prepares spells ahead of time, but unlike a wizard, does not require a period of rest to prepare spells. Instead, the character chooses a particular time of day to pray and receive spells.

as the morning is the only choosable time without severely gimping yourself (unless, of course, your party adventures primarily at night and rests at day, at which point the afternoon becomes the only choosable time)

Now I might be in a position soon to houserule this, but I wanted to ask: Is there a particular (maybe balance-related) reason for the recent casting limit? Will I break anything if I abandon it?

THanks in advance.


Ahoy,

I've come across a part of the stealth rules in Pathfinder:

Quote:
Creating a Diversion to Hide: You can use Bluff to allow you to use Stealth. A successful Bluff check can give you the momentary diversion you need to attempt a Stealth check while people are aware of you.

However I could not find a reference to this anywhere so I ask myself: How does this work? What kind of action is the bluff check? What is the DC (does the recipient roll Sense Motive, as usual for bluff)? What kind of conditions and/or modifications apply to the corresponding Stealth-Check?

Does anyone have further information or experience on how to handle this?

All the best.