Theconiel |
6 people marked this as FAQ candidate. |
I have seen multiple threads on the top;ic, but there seems to be no definitive answer.
If I cast Glitterdust on an opponent, and the opponent then become invisible, does the Glitterdust cause him to remain visible?
Some treat the Glitterdust as if it were a light source (although nothing in the spell description says it sheds light) and say that the enemy remains visible.
Others treat the Glitterdust as if it were clothing or an attended object, and say it becomes invisible when the Invisibility spell is cast.
EDIT: I saw nothing in the CRB FAQ on the subject.
Byakko |
If the recipient is a creature carrying gear, that vanishes, too.
items picked up disappear if tucked into the clothing or pouches worn by the creature
A cloud of golden particles covers everyone and everything in the area... All within the area are covered by the dust, which cannot be removed and continues to sparkle until it fades.
It's a huge stretch to try and claim invisibility could defeat glitterdust. The "particles" are a magical effect, not gear. And they can't be picked up and tucked into clothing.
I'm kinda surprised this keeps coming up, actually.
dragonhunterq |
2 people marked this as a favorite. |
Some treat the Glitterdust as if it were a light source (although nothing in the spell description says it sheds light) and say that the enemy remains visible.Others treat the Glitterdust as if it were clothing or an attended object, and say it becomes invisible when the Invisibility spell is cast.
Both explanations are wrong. It is neither a light source nor is it clothing/an attended object.
It is a magical effect that does exactly what it says it does.No FAQ really required, just needs people to stop making stuff up.
Theconiel |
In fairness, every GM I know has ruled that Invisibility cast after Glitterdust does cause the metallic coating to disappear.
If I threw a bag of flour onto my opponent, who then cast Invisibility, the flour would disappear along with him, yes? Flour is neither clothing nor an attended object.
The reasoning behind the ruling is that while the dust was magically conjured into being, it is not magical itself, as evidenced by the fact that it is not subject to spell resistance. It should therefore be treated just the same as any other non-magical substance coating the enemy.
It seems to me that RAW can be used to justify either ruling.
Berinor |
The reasoning behind the ruling is that while the dust was magically conjured into being, it is not magical itself, as evidenced by the fact that it is not subject to spell resistance. It should therefore be treated just the same as any other non-magical substance coating the enemy.
The stuff is still magical - the lack of SR means that its interaction isn't directly. If it weren't magical it wouldn't be subject to dispel or probably even have a duration limited in that way. (edit: think blank tentacles)
In a situation where I was interested in maximizing realism and was willing to complicate things for it, I might allow reapplication of invisibility to work for stationary objects but say that motion would cause some of the glitter to kick off and re-outline. It's not really within the rules, but I mention it to give a sense for where our opinions differ on the in-world reason I think foiling new invisibility is the right interpretation.
KenderKin |
Mostly this keeps coming up because of invisible trolls. The trolls want to remain invisible yet they cannot, and trolls get angry about glitterdust.
I used to have this one come up when my druid cast fairy fire at the beginning of encounters. Nothing makes a caster more angry than invisibility not working.....
Saldiven |
2 people marked this as a favorite. |
The reasoning behind the ruling is that while the dust was magically conjured into being, it is not magical itself, as evidenced by the fact that it is not subject to spell resistance. It should therefore be treated just the same as any other non-magical substance coating the enemy.
That reasoning doesn't make any sense.
If that were the case, then none of the spells that aren't subject to spell resistance would be magical, either (such as Control Plants, Disable Construct, and Mage Armor). Obviously, that's not the case.
People are overthinking this. The spell does exactly what it says it does, nothing less, nothing more. For the duration of the spell, invisible creatures are outlined. There is no caveat for whether the invisibility occurred before or after the casting of Glitterdust. The effect of the spell is not "gear" by any reasonable interpretation. It is conjured magically, lasts a fixed amount of time, disappears at the end of the time, and cannot be removed by anything short of magical suppression. There is no way to interact with it. You can't pick it up. You can't put it down. It has no weight or value.
Theconiel |
Mostly this keeps coming up because of invisible trolls. The trolls want to remain invisible yet they cannot, and trolls get angry about glitterdust.
I used to have this one come up when my druid cast fairy fire at the beginning of encounters. Nothing makes a caster more angry than invisibility not working.....
If your implication is that my starting this thread was "trolling" then I am a bit offended. I started this thread because I have seen the rule interpreted both ways, and I was hoping for clarification, or at least consensus. I considered both rulings reasonable under RAW.
And neither I nor anyone I know has ever had any question about Faerie Fire. It is clearly a light source.
Rub-Eta |
I really don't think the glitter should become invisible:
Everything else worn or held by the character gets invivisble if they're under the invisibility spell. Everything pick up gets invisible if they're under the invisibility spell.
But the glitter dust does not turn invisible when you apply it. I don't see how it could stay visible when applied after the invisibility spell (which it does) but not when it's applied before the spell is cast.
KenderKin |
KenderKin wrote:If your implication is that my starting this thread was "trolling" then I am a bit offended.Mostly this keeps coming up because of invisible trolls. The trolls want to remain invisible yet they cannot, and trolls get angry about glitterdust.
How can you the OP be invisible?
Xaimum Mafire |
A cloud of golden particles covers everyone and everything in the area, causing creatures to become blinded and visibly outlining invisible things for the duration of the spell. All within the area are covered by the dust, which cannot be removed and continues to sparkle until it fades. Each round at the end of their turn blinded creatures may attempt new saving throws to end the blindness effect.
Any creature covered by the dust takes a –40 penalty on Stealth checks.
Since Invisibility gives you a +40 to Stealth, I think it's pretty obvious that casting Invisibility over Glitterdust doesn't make you invisible.
_Ozy_ |
Even if you rule that glitterdust become invisible it still glitter, i.e. it reflect ambient light and disperse it. That will give avay the position fo the invisible person.
Well, no, invisible objects, by definition, don't reflect light. Reflected light is how you see things. Invisible glitterdust wouldn't reflect light anymore than an invisible mirror, or invisible clothes.
That said, Glitterdust does what it says it does, outlines invisible creatures so they can be seen.