Galeazzo |
One of my players used the Curse of Magic Negation (UM) on a wizard. Since this spell procures a spellblight which gives a SR to the target I assumed that this SR applied to every spell, even those directed against him. My player stated that, since the spellblight interferes with the ability of the spellcaster to manipulate magic, this SR should be applied only to spells casted BY the target, not incoming spells against him.
According to the Negated spellblight in UM:
Quote:
Negated: A negated spellcaster has his ability to manipulate magical energies disrupted. He gains spell resistance equal to 10 plus twice the highest spell level he can cast. This spell resistance cannot be voluntarily lowered. In addition, anytime he casts a spell, he must make a caster level check (1d20 + caster level) against this spell resistance. On a successful check, the spell is completed and the spellcaster's spell resistance is removed until the start of his next turn. Failure indicates he failed to muster up enough magical energy to cast the spell, but the spell is not lost and may be attempted again. Any feats or abilities that aid in bypassing spell resistance help with this check.
I can see it can be interpreted in both ways (RAW/RAI) but my question is if this spell (Curse of Magic Negation) was meant to have a drawback for both the target and the caster. How do you normally rule it?