| jinki |
Hi,
I have had a browse through the forums and can't find an answer to my problem.
I cast permanency on an object that was made invisible by another. We cast together, and got a permanently invisible..., say, Dagger. The dagger has been stolen from me and I know exactly where it is. It is in an NPCs belt. The value of this dagger to the NPC is in its invisibility, more to the point, the fact it is permanently invisible.
Now, to quickly remove the value of the item to this NPC, I was hoping to, as the original caster of the permanency, just decide to dispel my permanency, the dagger will then eventually become visible again as the invisibility will run out eventually.
Can I do this as simply as I am thinking?
I know as a wizard I can dispell any spell I cast, can I do this with permanency that I cast as easily?
Thanks in advance.
jinki
| Gauss |
Permanency can be dispelled. Cast Dispel Magic on the object (you will need to be able to see or touch the invisible object to target it) and if you are the caster of the spell being dispelled you will autosucceed.
If you cannot see or touch the invisibile object you cannot cast a targeted dispel magic against it. You will need an area dispel magic (ie: Greater Dispel Magic) if you cannot target the object.
Note: this is an odd situation where the GM allowed two spellcasters to collaborate on a permanency effect. As such that aspect (do you dispel the permanency or the entire effect) is up for debate.
- Gauss