Read your spellbooks
Read your spellbooks
Read your spellbooks
Sensory Deprivation Wizard
It's only permanent if the target critically fails. Which puts all of the wording into question.
blindness/deafness is a 1e spell which is permanent no matter what
Ah! Whenever I'm talking to people about Pathfinder, it's always 2e. Sorta like people saying D&D and meaning 5(.5)e.
D&D 3.5:
Blindness/Deafness Necromancy Level: Brd 2, Clr 3, Sor/Wiz 2 Components: V Casting Time: 1 standard action Range: Medium (100 ft. + 10 ft./level) Target: One living creature Duration: Permanent (D) Saving Throw: Fortitude negates Spell Resistance: Yes
You pretty much destroy their eyes or ears. There's a spell that undoes the damage
So can wizards quietly cast spells in a stealthy manner? Want to know if I ever get isekai'd into a pathfinder world.
Come on, Wiz. You have Glitterdust and Stinking Cloud for crying out loud!
The final game of my favorite series of all time, Quest for Glory 5, you get a shrink spell. It does exactly what you think: It shrinks your enemies down to 50% their original size... and then when you cast it again, they flee when they get too small to do anything to you... and you can still cast it on them as they flee and shrink them down further and further.
I... just never used the spell. I mean I did want to maximize all of the skill level of my spells (but there is no discernable effect to the skill of that particular spell). It just felt really needlessly cruel. I imagined the enemies going on a Honey I Shrunk the Kids type adventure, only it is much shorter and extremely brutal...
what's the spell called i need it
It's Blindness/Deafness which has a duration of permanent (albeit dismissible by the caster)
Why would a DM be involved in a Pathfinder game though?
The Pathfinder video games are directly from the Pathfinder tabletop game, which is basically a different copyright of D&D. They would need a DM. I'm not sure what else you could be thinking.
Edit: DM = Dungeon Master (D&D), GM = Game Master (Pathfinder), as this user pointed out below.
They're called GMs in Pathfinder ;)
Dungeon Master is a DnD term, and trademarked by WotC.
GM is also used in GURPS, but the 5 guys here who have used it already know that.
And if they want someone to join them, they can always DM me.
Pathfinder is very different mechanically to dnd. It's like saying settlers of catan is a different copyright of carcassonne.
You might want to explain the joke, I thought you were just an arse before reading the replies :D
Nobody liked that