What level would this homebrew Comatose spell be?
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I have converted a Pathfinder side quest to D&D 5E and given my players a journal with a few spells in it. One of the spells is this:
Comatose: Target PC (or random if not targeted) must make a DC 18 Fortitude save or fall comatose for 1d6 days. A restoration spell is required to wake the PC any earlier than that.
I attempted to bring this inline with the D&D 5E system by changing the following aspects (highlighted)
Comatose: Target any creature (or random if not targeted) must make a DC 13 Constitution save or fall unconscious for 1d6 days. A restoration spell is required to wake the PC any earlier than that.
There doesn't currently seem to be any casting restrictions on using the spells in this book, and to date I have ruled any PC can cast the spells as long as they know the secret command words which they unlocked during a quest.
However, it feels a little.... dangerous. I don't like the following about this situation:
- There is no "down time" on use of the spell.
- It can be cast by anyone, even without proper magic.
- I allowed them to target all creatures with these spells, maybe it should be just PCs.
What level would this spell be when compared to other spells in D&D?
dnd-5e spells homebrew conversion
add a comment |
up vote
15
down vote
favorite
I have converted a Pathfinder side quest to D&D 5E and given my players a journal with a few spells in it. One of the spells is this:
Comatose: Target PC (or random if not targeted) must make a DC 18 Fortitude save or fall comatose for 1d6 days. A restoration spell is required to wake the PC any earlier than that.
I attempted to bring this inline with the D&D 5E system by changing the following aspects (highlighted)
Comatose: Target any creature (or random if not targeted) must make a DC 13 Constitution save or fall unconscious for 1d6 days. A restoration spell is required to wake the PC any earlier than that.
There doesn't currently seem to be any casting restrictions on using the spells in this book, and to date I have ruled any PC can cast the spells as long as they know the secret command words which they unlocked during a quest.
However, it feels a little.... dangerous. I don't like the following about this situation:
- There is no "down time" on use of the spell.
- It can be cast by anyone, even without proper magic.
- I allowed them to target all creatures with these spells, maybe it should be just PCs.
What level would this spell be when compared to other spells in D&D?
dnd-5e spells homebrew conversion
2
Please do not answer in comments.
– mxyzplk♦
Nov 14 at 16:28
What is the casting time on your 5e version of comatose?
– Rubiksmoose
Nov 14 at 16:32
thanks everyone for helping me to improve this question and not downvoting me to oblivion immediately.
– GPPK
Nov 15 at 9:38
add a comment |
up vote
15
down vote
favorite
up vote
15
down vote
favorite
I have converted a Pathfinder side quest to D&D 5E and given my players a journal with a few spells in it. One of the spells is this:
Comatose: Target PC (or random if not targeted) must make a DC 18 Fortitude save or fall comatose for 1d6 days. A restoration spell is required to wake the PC any earlier than that.
I attempted to bring this inline with the D&D 5E system by changing the following aspects (highlighted)
Comatose: Target any creature (or random if not targeted) must make a DC 13 Constitution save or fall unconscious for 1d6 days. A restoration spell is required to wake the PC any earlier than that.
There doesn't currently seem to be any casting restrictions on using the spells in this book, and to date I have ruled any PC can cast the spells as long as they know the secret command words which they unlocked during a quest.
However, it feels a little.... dangerous. I don't like the following about this situation:
- There is no "down time" on use of the spell.
- It can be cast by anyone, even without proper magic.
- I allowed them to target all creatures with these spells, maybe it should be just PCs.
What level would this spell be when compared to other spells in D&D?
dnd-5e spells homebrew conversion
I have converted a Pathfinder side quest to D&D 5E and given my players a journal with a few spells in it. One of the spells is this:
Comatose: Target PC (or random if not targeted) must make a DC 18 Fortitude save or fall comatose for 1d6 days. A restoration spell is required to wake the PC any earlier than that.
I attempted to bring this inline with the D&D 5E system by changing the following aspects (highlighted)
Comatose: Target any creature (or random if not targeted) must make a DC 13 Constitution save or fall unconscious for 1d6 days. A restoration spell is required to wake the PC any earlier than that.
There doesn't currently seem to be any casting restrictions on using the spells in this book, and to date I have ruled any PC can cast the spells as long as they know the secret command words which they unlocked during a quest.
However, it feels a little.... dangerous. I don't like the following about this situation:
- There is no "down time" on use of the spell.
- It can be cast by anyone, even without proper magic.
- I allowed them to target all creatures with these spells, maybe it should be just PCs.
What level would this spell be when compared to other spells in D&D?
dnd-5e spells homebrew conversion
dnd-5e spells homebrew conversion
edited Nov 15 at 11:36
Sdjz
10.3k34992
10.3k34992
asked Nov 14 at 15:21
GPPK
1,048627
1,048627
2
Please do not answer in comments.
– mxyzplk♦
Nov 14 at 16:28
What is the casting time on your 5e version of comatose?
– Rubiksmoose
Nov 14 at 16:32
thanks everyone for helping me to improve this question and not downvoting me to oblivion immediately.
– GPPK
Nov 15 at 9:38
add a comment |
2
Please do not answer in comments.
– mxyzplk♦
Nov 14 at 16:28
What is the casting time on your 5e version of comatose?
– Rubiksmoose
Nov 14 at 16:32
thanks everyone for helping me to improve this question and not downvoting me to oblivion immediately.
– GPPK
Nov 15 at 9:38
2
2
Please do not answer in comments.
– mxyzplk♦
Nov 14 at 16:28
Please do not answer in comments.
– mxyzplk♦
Nov 14 at 16:28
What is the casting time on your 5e version of comatose?
– Rubiksmoose
Nov 14 at 16:32
What is the casting time on your 5e version of comatose?
– Rubiksmoose
Nov 14 at 16:32
thanks everyone for helping me to improve this question and not downvoting me to oblivion immediately.
– GPPK
Nov 15 at 9:38
thanks everyone for helping me to improve this question and not downvoting me to oblivion immediately.
– GPPK
Nov 15 at 9:38
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
up vote
45
down vote
accepted
This spell is more powerful than almost any other spell in 5e, and thus should not be allowed in its current state
With the exception of wish, this might be the most powerful spell in the game if implemented the way you have it right now. If you had to pick a spell level right here and now with no modifications make it 9th level because that is the highest that 5e goes so far. However, I think this spell goes beyond the power of basically every other spell and thus should be changed or removed from the game. Some reasons for this are as follows:
It only has one save to literally defeat an enemy completely
Imagine your PCs fighting against your BBEG. Each person can cast this spell every turn with no downsides. If there is a bard in the party they can even make it more likely that the creature fails. If the BBEG fails and is alone the PCs won the battle. After the BBEG is unconscious, the PCs can cast it continually to make BBEG keep failing the save and essentially unconscious forever.
Compare this to the 8th level spell power word stun:
A creature you can see is stunned if it has 150 hit points or less. Otherwise, nothing happens. The target can make a Constitution save at the end of its turns, being freed on a success.
This spell has multiple limitations to it including a HP limit, and a save at the end of each turn to wake up and it is still a very powerful 8th level spell. Your spell is currently much much more powerful than this.
It has a short casting time
Imprisonment is another spell (9th level) with a somewhat similar effect, but arguably this spell is even more powerful than it.
As one of its effects imprisonment has slumber which says:
The target falls asleep and can't be awoken. The special component for this version of the spell consists of rare soporific herbs.
However, it has several limiting factors. The main one is that imprisonment has a 1 minute casting time. This makes it very difficult to cast in battle (that is 10 full rounds of doing nothing but casting the spell) and thus less likely to be used to completely shut down an opponent in the midst of a fight. The spell also requires very expensive and rare components to cast and also has multiple conditions that can end the spell.
It requires a very specific type of healing to reverse
In the example above, even if BBEG is not alone they need allies with very specific restoration magic to help (and a PC with counterspell could even mess up this way to help). If none of their allies have restoration magic, they might as well be alone because there is no way for them to help. In 5e similar spells and effects generally have other ways to reverse them going from minor (using an action to wake something up) up to major (dispel magic, wish). Combined with only one save the fact that the only way to reverse this is specific magic makes this extremely potent.
Even non-spellcasters can cast it
In its current state this "spell" is not really even a spell since it can be done by non-spellcasters. This makes this spell incredibly powerful beyond even any other listed spell. You have to take an entire feat just to get a couple low level spells. Gaining access to this uber-spell without any kind of requirements is insanely overpowered.
It can be spammed infinitely
Casting this spell doesn't take any kind of resource (like a spell slot) or limits (like times per day), so there is absolutely no reason for someone not to try to cast this each turn. Why try and do anything else when you have such a powerful ability with no cost?
This ability needs some serious fixing
As written, this ability is out of the realm of any other feature in 5e. Some of the bullits above are not overpowered on their own, but when you take them all together you get a feature that is incredibly powerful.
You need to make some serious changes to it as soon as possible to correct the issues I have laid out above. Even with limits, this ability is likely going to be incredibly powerful.
As it is now it now this ability is literally game-breakingly powerful.
1
If I had to modify the spell, I'd think it would be enough to prevent non-spellcasters from using it (that should be obvious, in my opinion), grant an additional saving throw every round for several rounds, and make the target immune to it for a minute or two if they succeed on any of their saves. They can even keep the days of being comatose if the creature fails all its saves. That way you can have a spell that will probably (~95%) put a commoner in a days-long coma, but at worst is likely (~5%) to disable a powerful enemy for a round.
– Obie 2.0
Nov 15 at 7:59
Well, you might also have to play around with the save DC a bit for that.
– Obie 2.0
Nov 15 at 8:07
I think it might be time to rework this spell, or remove it from the game. Thanks for your advice.
– GPPK
Nov 15 at 9:37
add a comment |
up vote
14
down vote
At least 9th, definitely above 8th
This spell is strictly more powerful than the 8th level spell, Power Word Stun:
A creature you can see is stunned if it has 150 hit points or less. Otherwise, nothing happens. The target can make a Constitution save at the end of its turns, being freed on a success.
Power Word Stun is effectively a free stun for 1 round, then repeated con saves against being incapacitated for future rounds.
As @Sdjz mentioned, it is comparable to the slumber effect of the 9th level Imprisonment spell, where the target falls asleep and cannot be awoken, but Imprisonment requires customized material components and has a 1 minute casting time.
Your spell is a single con save against being unconscious and incapacitated for essentially forever. A savvy party can have every party member spam this spell against any PC for as long as they can, because a single save failure means an instant win. Thus, it is substantially more powerful than Power Word Stun, and arguably more powerful than Imprisonment too.
4
@NautArch against a lone enemy though it is an instawin button. Especially since there are many ways to assist in the creature failing that one save.
– Rubiksmoose
Nov 14 at 15:53
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
45
down vote
accepted
This spell is more powerful than almost any other spell in 5e, and thus should not be allowed in its current state
With the exception of wish, this might be the most powerful spell in the game if implemented the way you have it right now. If you had to pick a spell level right here and now with no modifications make it 9th level because that is the highest that 5e goes so far. However, I think this spell goes beyond the power of basically every other spell and thus should be changed or removed from the game. Some reasons for this are as follows:
It only has one save to literally defeat an enemy completely
Imagine your PCs fighting against your BBEG. Each person can cast this spell every turn with no downsides. If there is a bard in the party they can even make it more likely that the creature fails. If the BBEG fails and is alone the PCs won the battle. After the BBEG is unconscious, the PCs can cast it continually to make BBEG keep failing the save and essentially unconscious forever.
Compare this to the 8th level spell power word stun:
A creature you can see is stunned if it has 150 hit points or less. Otherwise, nothing happens. The target can make a Constitution save at the end of its turns, being freed on a success.
This spell has multiple limitations to it including a HP limit, and a save at the end of each turn to wake up and it is still a very powerful 8th level spell. Your spell is currently much much more powerful than this.
It has a short casting time
Imprisonment is another spell (9th level) with a somewhat similar effect, but arguably this spell is even more powerful than it.
As one of its effects imprisonment has slumber which says:
The target falls asleep and can't be awoken. The special component for this version of the spell consists of rare soporific herbs.
However, it has several limiting factors. The main one is that imprisonment has a 1 minute casting time. This makes it very difficult to cast in battle (that is 10 full rounds of doing nothing but casting the spell) and thus less likely to be used to completely shut down an opponent in the midst of a fight. The spell also requires very expensive and rare components to cast and also has multiple conditions that can end the spell.
It requires a very specific type of healing to reverse
In the example above, even if BBEG is not alone they need allies with very specific restoration magic to help (and a PC with counterspell could even mess up this way to help). If none of their allies have restoration magic, they might as well be alone because there is no way for them to help. In 5e similar spells and effects generally have other ways to reverse them going from minor (using an action to wake something up) up to major (dispel magic, wish). Combined with only one save the fact that the only way to reverse this is specific magic makes this extremely potent.
Even non-spellcasters can cast it
In its current state this "spell" is not really even a spell since it can be done by non-spellcasters. This makes this spell incredibly powerful beyond even any other listed spell. You have to take an entire feat just to get a couple low level spells. Gaining access to this uber-spell without any kind of requirements is insanely overpowered.
It can be spammed infinitely
Casting this spell doesn't take any kind of resource (like a spell slot) or limits (like times per day), so there is absolutely no reason for someone not to try to cast this each turn. Why try and do anything else when you have such a powerful ability with no cost?
This ability needs some serious fixing
As written, this ability is out of the realm of any other feature in 5e. Some of the bullits above are not overpowered on their own, but when you take them all together you get a feature that is incredibly powerful.
You need to make some serious changes to it as soon as possible to correct the issues I have laid out above. Even with limits, this ability is likely going to be incredibly powerful.
As it is now it now this ability is literally game-breakingly powerful.
1
If I had to modify the spell, I'd think it would be enough to prevent non-spellcasters from using it (that should be obvious, in my opinion), grant an additional saving throw every round for several rounds, and make the target immune to it for a minute or two if they succeed on any of their saves. They can even keep the days of being comatose if the creature fails all its saves. That way you can have a spell that will probably (~95%) put a commoner in a days-long coma, but at worst is likely (~5%) to disable a powerful enemy for a round.
– Obie 2.0
Nov 15 at 7:59
Well, you might also have to play around with the save DC a bit for that.
– Obie 2.0
Nov 15 at 8:07
I think it might be time to rework this spell, or remove it from the game. Thanks for your advice.
– GPPK
Nov 15 at 9:37
add a comment |
up vote
45
down vote
accepted
This spell is more powerful than almost any other spell in 5e, and thus should not be allowed in its current state
With the exception of wish, this might be the most powerful spell in the game if implemented the way you have it right now. If you had to pick a spell level right here and now with no modifications make it 9th level because that is the highest that 5e goes so far. However, I think this spell goes beyond the power of basically every other spell and thus should be changed or removed from the game. Some reasons for this are as follows:
It only has one save to literally defeat an enemy completely
Imagine your PCs fighting against your BBEG. Each person can cast this spell every turn with no downsides. If there is a bard in the party they can even make it more likely that the creature fails. If the BBEG fails and is alone the PCs won the battle. After the BBEG is unconscious, the PCs can cast it continually to make BBEG keep failing the save and essentially unconscious forever.
Compare this to the 8th level spell power word stun:
A creature you can see is stunned if it has 150 hit points or less. Otherwise, nothing happens. The target can make a Constitution save at the end of its turns, being freed on a success.
This spell has multiple limitations to it including a HP limit, and a save at the end of each turn to wake up and it is still a very powerful 8th level spell. Your spell is currently much much more powerful than this.
It has a short casting time
Imprisonment is another spell (9th level) with a somewhat similar effect, but arguably this spell is even more powerful than it.
As one of its effects imprisonment has slumber which says:
The target falls asleep and can't be awoken. The special component for this version of the spell consists of rare soporific herbs.
However, it has several limiting factors. The main one is that imprisonment has a 1 minute casting time. This makes it very difficult to cast in battle (that is 10 full rounds of doing nothing but casting the spell) and thus less likely to be used to completely shut down an opponent in the midst of a fight. The spell also requires very expensive and rare components to cast and also has multiple conditions that can end the spell.
It requires a very specific type of healing to reverse
In the example above, even if BBEG is not alone they need allies with very specific restoration magic to help (and a PC with counterspell could even mess up this way to help). If none of their allies have restoration magic, they might as well be alone because there is no way for them to help. In 5e similar spells and effects generally have other ways to reverse them going from minor (using an action to wake something up) up to major (dispel magic, wish). Combined with only one save the fact that the only way to reverse this is specific magic makes this extremely potent.
Even non-spellcasters can cast it
In its current state this "spell" is not really even a spell since it can be done by non-spellcasters. This makes this spell incredibly powerful beyond even any other listed spell. You have to take an entire feat just to get a couple low level spells. Gaining access to this uber-spell without any kind of requirements is insanely overpowered.
It can be spammed infinitely
Casting this spell doesn't take any kind of resource (like a spell slot) or limits (like times per day), so there is absolutely no reason for someone not to try to cast this each turn. Why try and do anything else when you have such a powerful ability with no cost?
This ability needs some serious fixing
As written, this ability is out of the realm of any other feature in 5e. Some of the bullits above are not overpowered on their own, but when you take them all together you get a feature that is incredibly powerful.
You need to make some serious changes to it as soon as possible to correct the issues I have laid out above. Even with limits, this ability is likely going to be incredibly powerful.
As it is now it now this ability is literally game-breakingly powerful.
1
If I had to modify the spell, I'd think it would be enough to prevent non-spellcasters from using it (that should be obvious, in my opinion), grant an additional saving throw every round for several rounds, and make the target immune to it for a minute or two if they succeed on any of their saves. They can even keep the days of being comatose if the creature fails all its saves. That way you can have a spell that will probably (~95%) put a commoner in a days-long coma, but at worst is likely (~5%) to disable a powerful enemy for a round.
– Obie 2.0
Nov 15 at 7:59
Well, you might also have to play around with the save DC a bit for that.
– Obie 2.0
Nov 15 at 8:07
I think it might be time to rework this spell, or remove it from the game. Thanks for your advice.
– GPPK
Nov 15 at 9:37
add a comment |
up vote
45
down vote
accepted
up vote
45
down vote
accepted
This spell is more powerful than almost any other spell in 5e, and thus should not be allowed in its current state
With the exception of wish, this might be the most powerful spell in the game if implemented the way you have it right now. If you had to pick a spell level right here and now with no modifications make it 9th level because that is the highest that 5e goes so far. However, I think this spell goes beyond the power of basically every other spell and thus should be changed or removed from the game. Some reasons for this are as follows:
It only has one save to literally defeat an enemy completely
Imagine your PCs fighting against your BBEG. Each person can cast this spell every turn with no downsides. If there is a bard in the party they can even make it more likely that the creature fails. If the BBEG fails and is alone the PCs won the battle. After the BBEG is unconscious, the PCs can cast it continually to make BBEG keep failing the save and essentially unconscious forever.
Compare this to the 8th level spell power word stun:
A creature you can see is stunned if it has 150 hit points or less. Otherwise, nothing happens. The target can make a Constitution save at the end of its turns, being freed on a success.
This spell has multiple limitations to it including a HP limit, and a save at the end of each turn to wake up and it is still a very powerful 8th level spell. Your spell is currently much much more powerful than this.
It has a short casting time
Imprisonment is another spell (9th level) with a somewhat similar effect, but arguably this spell is even more powerful than it.
As one of its effects imprisonment has slumber which says:
The target falls asleep and can't be awoken. The special component for this version of the spell consists of rare soporific herbs.
However, it has several limiting factors. The main one is that imprisonment has a 1 minute casting time. This makes it very difficult to cast in battle (that is 10 full rounds of doing nothing but casting the spell) and thus less likely to be used to completely shut down an opponent in the midst of a fight. The spell also requires very expensive and rare components to cast and also has multiple conditions that can end the spell.
It requires a very specific type of healing to reverse
In the example above, even if BBEG is not alone they need allies with very specific restoration magic to help (and a PC with counterspell could even mess up this way to help). If none of their allies have restoration magic, they might as well be alone because there is no way for them to help. In 5e similar spells and effects generally have other ways to reverse them going from minor (using an action to wake something up) up to major (dispel magic, wish). Combined with only one save the fact that the only way to reverse this is specific magic makes this extremely potent.
Even non-spellcasters can cast it
In its current state this "spell" is not really even a spell since it can be done by non-spellcasters. This makes this spell incredibly powerful beyond even any other listed spell. You have to take an entire feat just to get a couple low level spells. Gaining access to this uber-spell without any kind of requirements is insanely overpowered.
It can be spammed infinitely
Casting this spell doesn't take any kind of resource (like a spell slot) or limits (like times per day), so there is absolutely no reason for someone not to try to cast this each turn. Why try and do anything else when you have such a powerful ability with no cost?
This ability needs some serious fixing
As written, this ability is out of the realm of any other feature in 5e. Some of the bullits above are not overpowered on their own, but when you take them all together you get a feature that is incredibly powerful.
You need to make some serious changes to it as soon as possible to correct the issues I have laid out above. Even with limits, this ability is likely going to be incredibly powerful.
As it is now it now this ability is literally game-breakingly powerful.
This spell is more powerful than almost any other spell in 5e, and thus should not be allowed in its current state
With the exception of wish, this might be the most powerful spell in the game if implemented the way you have it right now. If you had to pick a spell level right here and now with no modifications make it 9th level because that is the highest that 5e goes so far. However, I think this spell goes beyond the power of basically every other spell and thus should be changed or removed from the game. Some reasons for this are as follows:
It only has one save to literally defeat an enemy completely
Imagine your PCs fighting against your BBEG. Each person can cast this spell every turn with no downsides. If there is a bard in the party they can even make it more likely that the creature fails. If the BBEG fails and is alone the PCs won the battle. After the BBEG is unconscious, the PCs can cast it continually to make BBEG keep failing the save and essentially unconscious forever.
Compare this to the 8th level spell power word stun:
A creature you can see is stunned if it has 150 hit points or less. Otherwise, nothing happens. The target can make a Constitution save at the end of its turns, being freed on a success.
This spell has multiple limitations to it including a HP limit, and a save at the end of each turn to wake up and it is still a very powerful 8th level spell. Your spell is currently much much more powerful than this.
It has a short casting time
Imprisonment is another spell (9th level) with a somewhat similar effect, but arguably this spell is even more powerful than it.
As one of its effects imprisonment has slumber which says:
The target falls asleep and can't be awoken. The special component for this version of the spell consists of rare soporific herbs.
However, it has several limiting factors. The main one is that imprisonment has a 1 minute casting time. This makes it very difficult to cast in battle (that is 10 full rounds of doing nothing but casting the spell) and thus less likely to be used to completely shut down an opponent in the midst of a fight. The spell also requires very expensive and rare components to cast and also has multiple conditions that can end the spell.
It requires a very specific type of healing to reverse
In the example above, even if BBEG is not alone they need allies with very specific restoration magic to help (and a PC with counterspell could even mess up this way to help). If none of their allies have restoration magic, they might as well be alone because there is no way for them to help. In 5e similar spells and effects generally have other ways to reverse them going from minor (using an action to wake something up) up to major (dispel magic, wish). Combined with only one save the fact that the only way to reverse this is specific magic makes this extremely potent.
Even non-spellcasters can cast it
In its current state this "spell" is not really even a spell since it can be done by non-spellcasters. This makes this spell incredibly powerful beyond even any other listed spell. You have to take an entire feat just to get a couple low level spells. Gaining access to this uber-spell without any kind of requirements is insanely overpowered.
It can be spammed infinitely
Casting this spell doesn't take any kind of resource (like a spell slot) or limits (like times per day), so there is absolutely no reason for someone not to try to cast this each turn. Why try and do anything else when you have such a powerful ability with no cost?
This ability needs some serious fixing
As written, this ability is out of the realm of any other feature in 5e. Some of the bullits above are not overpowered on their own, but when you take them all together you get a feature that is incredibly powerful.
You need to make some serious changes to it as soon as possible to correct the issues I have laid out above. Even with limits, this ability is likely going to be incredibly powerful.
As it is now it now this ability is literally game-breakingly powerful.
edited Nov 14 at 17:03
answered Nov 14 at 16:15
Rubiksmoose
45.8k6229350
45.8k6229350
1
If I had to modify the spell, I'd think it would be enough to prevent non-spellcasters from using it (that should be obvious, in my opinion), grant an additional saving throw every round for several rounds, and make the target immune to it for a minute or two if they succeed on any of their saves. They can even keep the days of being comatose if the creature fails all its saves. That way you can have a spell that will probably (~95%) put a commoner in a days-long coma, but at worst is likely (~5%) to disable a powerful enemy for a round.
– Obie 2.0
Nov 15 at 7:59
Well, you might also have to play around with the save DC a bit for that.
– Obie 2.0
Nov 15 at 8:07
I think it might be time to rework this spell, or remove it from the game. Thanks for your advice.
– GPPK
Nov 15 at 9:37
add a comment |
1
If I had to modify the spell, I'd think it would be enough to prevent non-spellcasters from using it (that should be obvious, in my opinion), grant an additional saving throw every round for several rounds, and make the target immune to it for a minute or two if they succeed on any of their saves. They can even keep the days of being comatose if the creature fails all its saves. That way you can have a spell that will probably (~95%) put a commoner in a days-long coma, but at worst is likely (~5%) to disable a powerful enemy for a round.
– Obie 2.0
Nov 15 at 7:59
Well, you might also have to play around with the save DC a bit for that.
– Obie 2.0
Nov 15 at 8:07
I think it might be time to rework this spell, or remove it from the game. Thanks for your advice.
– GPPK
Nov 15 at 9:37
1
1
If I had to modify the spell, I'd think it would be enough to prevent non-spellcasters from using it (that should be obvious, in my opinion), grant an additional saving throw every round for several rounds, and make the target immune to it for a minute or two if they succeed on any of their saves. They can even keep the days of being comatose if the creature fails all its saves. That way you can have a spell that will probably (~95%) put a commoner in a days-long coma, but at worst is likely (~5%) to disable a powerful enemy for a round.
– Obie 2.0
Nov 15 at 7:59
If I had to modify the spell, I'd think it would be enough to prevent non-spellcasters from using it (that should be obvious, in my opinion), grant an additional saving throw every round for several rounds, and make the target immune to it for a minute or two if they succeed on any of their saves. They can even keep the days of being comatose if the creature fails all its saves. That way you can have a spell that will probably (~95%) put a commoner in a days-long coma, but at worst is likely (~5%) to disable a powerful enemy for a round.
– Obie 2.0
Nov 15 at 7:59
Well, you might also have to play around with the save DC a bit for that.
– Obie 2.0
Nov 15 at 8:07
Well, you might also have to play around with the save DC a bit for that.
– Obie 2.0
Nov 15 at 8:07
I think it might be time to rework this spell, or remove it from the game. Thanks for your advice.
– GPPK
Nov 15 at 9:37
I think it might be time to rework this spell, or remove it from the game. Thanks for your advice.
– GPPK
Nov 15 at 9:37
add a comment |
up vote
14
down vote
At least 9th, definitely above 8th
This spell is strictly more powerful than the 8th level spell, Power Word Stun:
A creature you can see is stunned if it has 150 hit points or less. Otherwise, nothing happens. The target can make a Constitution save at the end of its turns, being freed on a success.
Power Word Stun is effectively a free stun for 1 round, then repeated con saves against being incapacitated for future rounds.
As @Sdjz mentioned, it is comparable to the slumber effect of the 9th level Imprisonment spell, where the target falls asleep and cannot be awoken, but Imprisonment requires customized material components and has a 1 minute casting time.
Your spell is a single con save against being unconscious and incapacitated for essentially forever. A savvy party can have every party member spam this spell against any PC for as long as they can, because a single save failure means an instant win. Thus, it is substantially more powerful than Power Word Stun, and arguably more powerful than Imprisonment too.
4
@NautArch against a lone enemy though it is an instawin button. Especially since there are many ways to assist in the creature failing that one save.
– Rubiksmoose
Nov 14 at 15:53
add a comment |
up vote
14
down vote
At least 9th, definitely above 8th
This spell is strictly more powerful than the 8th level spell, Power Word Stun:
A creature you can see is stunned if it has 150 hit points or less. Otherwise, nothing happens. The target can make a Constitution save at the end of its turns, being freed on a success.
Power Word Stun is effectively a free stun for 1 round, then repeated con saves against being incapacitated for future rounds.
As @Sdjz mentioned, it is comparable to the slumber effect of the 9th level Imprisonment spell, where the target falls asleep and cannot be awoken, but Imprisonment requires customized material components and has a 1 minute casting time.
Your spell is a single con save against being unconscious and incapacitated for essentially forever. A savvy party can have every party member spam this spell against any PC for as long as they can, because a single save failure means an instant win. Thus, it is substantially more powerful than Power Word Stun, and arguably more powerful than Imprisonment too.
4
@NautArch against a lone enemy though it is an instawin button. Especially since there are many ways to assist in the creature failing that one save.
– Rubiksmoose
Nov 14 at 15:53
add a comment |
up vote
14
down vote
up vote
14
down vote
At least 9th, definitely above 8th
This spell is strictly more powerful than the 8th level spell, Power Word Stun:
A creature you can see is stunned if it has 150 hit points or less. Otherwise, nothing happens. The target can make a Constitution save at the end of its turns, being freed on a success.
Power Word Stun is effectively a free stun for 1 round, then repeated con saves against being incapacitated for future rounds.
As @Sdjz mentioned, it is comparable to the slumber effect of the 9th level Imprisonment spell, where the target falls asleep and cannot be awoken, but Imprisonment requires customized material components and has a 1 minute casting time.
Your spell is a single con save against being unconscious and incapacitated for essentially forever. A savvy party can have every party member spam this spell against any PC for as long as they can, because a single save failure means an instant win. Thus, it is substantially more powerful than Power Word Stun, and arguably more powerful than Imprisonment too.
At least 9th, definitely above 8th
This spell is strictly more powerful than the 8th level spell, Power Word Stun:
A creature you can see is stunned if it has 150 hit points or less. Otherwise, nothing happens. The target can make a Constitution save at the end of its turns, being freed on a success.
Power Word Stun is effectively a free stun for 1 round, then repeated con saves against being incapacitated for future rounds.
As @Sdjz mentioned, it is comparable to the slumber effect of the 9th level Imprisonment spell, where the target falls asleep and cannot be awoken, but Imprisonment requires customized material components and has a 1 minute casting time.
Your spell is a single con save against being unconscious and incapacitated for essentially forever. A savvy party can have every party member spam this spell against any PC for as long as they can, because a single save failure means an instant win. Thus, it is substantially more powerful than Power Word Stun, and arguably more powerful than Imprisonment too.
edited Nov 14 at 16:23
answered Nov 14 at 15:41
Icyfire
52.3k10179296
52.3k10179296
4
@NautArch against a lone enemy though it is an instawin button. Especially since there are many ways to assist in the creature failing that one save.
– Rubiksmoose
Nov 14 at 15:53
add a comment |
4
@NautArch against a lone enemy though it is an instawin button. Especially since there are many ways to assist in the creature failing that one save.
– Rubiksmoose
Nov 14 at 15:53
4
4
@NautArch against a lone enemy though it is an instawin button. Especially since there are many ways to assist in the creature failing that one save.
– Rubiksmoose
Nov 14 at 15:53
@NautArch against a lone enemy though it is an instawin button. Especially since there are many ways to assist in the creature failing that one save.
– Rubiksmoose
Nov 14 at 15:53
add a comment |
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Please do not answer in comments.
– mxyzplk♦
Nov 14 at 16:28
What is the casting time on your 5e version of comatose?
– Rubiksmoose
Nov 14 at 16:32
thanks everyone for helping me to improve this question and not downvoting me to oblivion immediately.
– GPPK
Nov 15 at 9:38