Who gets teleported when a Glyph of Warding with Teleportation in it is triggered?
up vote
4
down vote
favorite
I am a player in a campaign vs campaign game (players versus players), and was trying to find a way to defend my evil wizard tower. One idea was to create an unavoidable trap to teleport players out of a building.
If I imbue the spell Teleport into Glyph of Warding using a 7th level spell slot, when it triggers:
will I be teleported to a location set earlier, or
will who / whatever triggers it be teleported to the location set earlier?
dnd-5e spells teleportation traps
add a comment |
up vote
4
down vote
favorite
I am a player in a campaign vs campaign game (players versus players), and was trying to find a way to defend my evil wizard tower. One idea was to create an unavoidable trap to teleport players out of a building.
If I imbue the spell Teleport into Glyph of Warding using a 7th level spell slot, when it triggers:
will I be teleported to a location set earlier, or
will who / whatever triggers it be teleported to the location set earlier?
dnd-5e spells teleportation traps
Related: rpg.stackexchange.com/questions/101157/…
– Rykara
Dec 6 at 18:14
Geekdude3, if you meant player versus player, then I am unclear what "campaign vs campaign" was referring to. I edited in player versus player, I think you'll want to edit out "campaign vs campaign" since I think they mean the same thing. Right?
– KorvinStarmast
Dec 6 at 19:25
By “campaign vs campaign” do you mean a DM is running multiple groups and your group is competing with another? I don’t think it’s important to the question, but that wording is going to confuse possible answer-providers, so it’s good to make sure all your readers understand the question.
– SevenSidedDie♦
Dec 6 at 19:50
Our party is the antagonist in the other parties story
– Geekdude3
Dec 6 at 20:39
add a comment |
up vote
4
down vote
favorite
up vote
4
down vote
favorite
I am a player in a campaign vs campaign game (players versus players), and was trying to find a way to defend my evil wizard tower. One idea was to create an unavoidable trap to teleport players out of a building.
If I imbue the spell Teleport into Glyph of Warding using a 7th level spell slot, when it triggers:
will I be teleported to a location set earlier, or
will who / whatever triggers it be teleported to the location set earlier?
dnd-5e spells teleportation traps
I am a player in a campaign vs campaign game (players versus players), and was trying to find a way to defend my evil wizard tower. One idea was to create an unavoidable trap to teleport players out of a building.
If I imbue the spell Teleport into Glyph of Warding using a 7th level spell slot, when it triggers:
will I be teleported to a location set earlier, or
will who / whatever triggers it be teleported to the location set earlier?
dnd-5e spells teleportation traps
dnd-5e spells teleportation traps
edited Dec 6 at 19:22
KorvinStarmast
73.3k17227401
73.3k17227401
asked Dec 6 at 17:53
Geekdude3
1108
1108
Related: rpg.stackexchange.com/questions/101157/…
– Rykara
Dec 6 at 18:14
Geekdude3, if you meant player versus player, then I am unclear what "campaign vs campaign" was referring to. I edited in player versus player, I think you'll want to edit out "campaign vs campaign" since I think they mean the same thing. Right?
– KorvinStarmast
Dec 6 at 19:25
By “campaign vs campaign” do you mean a DM is running multiple groups and your group is competing with another? I don’t think it’s important to the question, but that wording is going to confuse possible answer-providers, so it’s good to make sure all your readers understand the question.
– SevenSidedDie♦
Dec 6 at 19:50
Our party is the antagonist in the other parties story
– Geekdude3
Dec 6 at 20:39
add a comment |
Related: rpg.stackexchange.com/questions/101157/…
– Rykara
Dec 6 at 18:14
Geekdude3, if you meant player versus player, then I am unclear what "campaign vs campaign" was referring to. I edited in player versus player, I think you'll want to edit out "campaign vs campaign" since I think they mean the same thing. Right?
– KorvinStarmast
Dec 6 at 19:25
By “campaign vs campaign” do you mean a DM is running multiple groups and your group is competing with another? I don’t think it’s important to the question, but that wording is going to confuse possible answer-providers, so it’s good to make sure all your readers understand the question.
– SevenSidedDie♦
Dec 6 at 19:50
Our party is the antagonist in the other parties story
– Geekdude3
Dec 6 at 20:39
Related: rpg.stackexchange.com/questions/101157/…
– Rykara
Dec 6 at 18:14
Related: rpg.stackexchange.com/questions/101157/…
– Rykara
Dec 6 at 18:14
Geekdude3, if you meant player versus player, then I am unclear what "campaign vs campaign" was referring to. I edited in player versus player, I think you'll want to edit out "campaign vs campaign" since I think they mean the same thing. Right?
– KorvinStarmast
Dec 6 at 19:25
Geekdude3, if you meant player versus player, then I am unclear what "campaign vs campaign" was referring to. I edited in player versus player, I think you'll want to edit out "campaign vs campaign" since I think they mean the same thing. Right?
– KorvinStarmast
Dec 6 at 19:25
By “campaign vs campaign” do you mean a DM is running multiple groups and your group is competing with another? I don’t think it’s important to the question, but that wording is going to confuse possible answer-providers, so it’s good to make sure all your readers understand the question.
– SevenSidedDie♦
Dec 6 at 19:50
By “campaign vs campaign” do you mean a DM is running multiple groups and your group is competing with another? I don’t think it’s important to the question, but that wording is going to confuse possible answer-providers, so it’s good to make sure all your readers understand the question.
– SevenSidedDie♦
Dec 6 at 19:50
Our party is the antagonist in the other parties story
– Geekdude3
Dec 6 at 20:39
Our party is the antagonist in the other parties story
– Geekdude3
Dec 6 at 20:39
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
up vote
7
down vote
accepted
Teleport cannot be placed in a Glyph of Warding
In the spell description for Glyph of Warding, the paragraph regarding placing spells inside the Glyph says this, emphasis mine:
Spell Glyph. You can store a prepared spell of 3rd level or lower in the glyph by casting it as part of creating the glyph. The spell must target a single creature or an area. The spell being stored has no immediate effect when cast in this way...
The spell Teleport, as written, targets "you and up to eight willing additional creatures of your choice", meaning that it is not eligible to be placed in the Glyph.
Traps laid by the DM can do whatever you require them to do
If you're a DM, you should be made aware that while a player creating a Glyph with this effect is prohibited, as DM, you're not required to strictly adhere to the rules set by any individual spell. Call it "Sigil of Arcana", a custom spell that doesn't have this specific limitation, and set it down in a room of the dungeon you're building. Or just make a Teleportation Trap that can be disarmed with Dispel Magic at a DC of 17 (or being cast as a 7th level spell), and forget making it a specific spell at all. You can create the effect you're going for without needing to reconfigure two spells that as-written won't quite do what you need them to do.
As a Player, you need a different spell
Teleportation Circle
Teleportation Circle is an obvious candidate, since it only requires a circle drawn onto the ground, and a Permanent Circle set up somewhere else. It has a smaller radius than Teleport though, meaning you'll be able to target fewer creatures with it. There's also considerable debate over whether Teleportation Circle strictly obeys the constraints for Glyph of Warding or not.
Misty Step
You might be able to get clever by using lots of Glyph of Warding's in the same place. Place a window (no glass or other obstructions) that has visibility of an area outside the tower no more than 30 feet away. Cast Glyph of Warding with your chosen trigger condition, casting Misty Step as the spell to activate, targeting that point with the Misty Step spell each time you do so. Then write conditions for these glyphs:
- On the First Person to enter this room, trigger when that creature sees that all their allies within 20 feet of the room have entered the room.
- On the Second Person to enter this room, trigger when that creature sees that all their allies within 20 feet of the room have entered the room.
- On the Third Person....
This method has a few obvious loopholes:
- Spies, Secret Agents, etc. might be prematurely teleported out
- Blind Characters won't trigger the glyph on themselves
- Other possible work-arounds for this trap
- 30 feet might still be quite close to the room they teleported from
But it should work provided you create enough glyphs to handle an entire enemy party.
Dimension Door/Thunder Step
Same as above, except you need to resolve the debate over whether these spells' abilities to "bring an extra willing creature" interferes with the spell's ability to be put in a Glyph of Warding. I would generally rule it doesn't, but the DM may not feel the same way. If they do rule in your favor, Thunder Step increases the range to 90 feet, Dimension Door increases the range to 500 feet and eliminates the need for line-of-sight.
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
You can't create a teleport glyph
The Spell Glyph option from glyph of warding requires...
The spell [to] target a single creature or an area.
Teleport targets:
You and up to eight willing creatures of your choice that you can see within range.
As such, teleport is not a valid spell for glyph of warding.
There doesn't seem to be many alternatives
Of all of the teleportation spells in the game, only dimension door appears to have a single target.
Dimension door let's you teleport...
yourself from your current location to any other spot within [500 feet].
However, it also lets you...
bring one willing creature of your size or smaller who is carrying gear up to its carrying capacity.
... and I'm unsure if that counts as targeting an additional creature.
If it can be place in a spell glyph, it would target the glyph-triggering player:
If the spell has a target, it targets the creature that triggered the glyph.
However, it is unclear if you can specify the destination prior to triggering the glyph (probably worth it's own question if you're curious).
@Rubiksmoose added. Thanka
– David Coffron
Dec 6 at 18:25
I am actually a player in a campaign vs campaign game, and was trying to find a way to defend my evil wizard tower
– Geekdude3
Dec 6 at 18:27
@Geekdude3 added that information to the question. Will revise
– David Coffron
Dec 6 at 18:29
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
This is not a valid use of Glyph of Warding
Glyph of Warding requires:
Spell Glyph: You can store a prepared spell of 3rd level or lower by casting it as part of creating the glyph. The spell must target a single creature or an area. The spell being stored has no immediate effect.
Per Jeremy Crawford on a related topic (twinning spells as a sorcerer), if a requirement of a spell or ability requires a single target, a spell must be able to target only a single target. Because Teleport can target more than one creature (and does not specify an area), it is not a valid spell to use in conjunction with Glyph of Warding.
One way your answer might be more helpful would be if you could find a way to solve what appears to be OP's actual problem: " I was considering using it as an unavoidable trap to teleport players out of a building." Up to you of course, this answers the question fine as is.
– Rubiksmoose
Dec 6 at 18:54
add a comment |
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3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
7
down vote
accepted
Teleport cannot be placed in a Glyph of Warding
In the spell description for Glyph of Warding, the paragraph regarding placing spells inside the Glyph says this, emphasis mine:
Spell Glyph. You can store a prepared spell of 3rd level or lower in the glyph by casting it as part of creating the glyph. The spell must target a single creature or an area. The spell being stored has no immediate effect when cast in this way...
The spell Teleport, as written, targets "you and up to eight willing additional creatures of your choice", meaning that it is not eligible to be placed in the Glyph.
Traps laid by the DM can do whatever you require them to do
If you're a DM, you should be made aware that while a player creating a Glyph with this effect is prohibited, as DM, you're not required to strictly adhere to the rules set by any individual spell. Call it "Sigil of Arcana", a custom spell that doesn't have this specific limitation, and set it down in a room of the dungeon you're building. Or just make a Teleportation Trap that can be disarmed with Dispel Magic at a DC of 17 (or being cast as a 7th level spell), and forget making it a specific spell at all. You can create the effect you're going for without needing to reconfigure two spells that as-written won't quite do what you need them to do.
As a Player, you need a different spell
Teleportation Circle
Teleportation Circle is an obvious candidate, since it only requires a circle drawn onto the ground, and a Permanent Circle set up somewhere else. It has a smaller radius than Teleport though, meaning you'll be able to target fewer creatures with it. There's also considerable debate over whether Teleportation Circle strictly obeys the constraints for Glyph of Warding or not.
Misty Step
You might be able to get clever by using lots of Glyph of Warding's in the same place. Place a window (no glass or other obstructions) that has visibility of an area outside the tower no more than 30 feet away. Cast Glyph of Warding with your chosen trigger condition, casting Misty Step as the spell to activate, targeting that point with the Misty Step spell each time you do so. Then write conditions for these glyphs:
- On the First Person to enter this room, trigger when that creature sees that all their allies within 20 feet of the room have entered the room.
- On the Second Person to enter this room, trigger when that creature sees that all their allies within 20 feet of the room have entered the room.
- On the Third Person....
This method has a few obvious loopholes:
- Spies, Secret Agents, etc. might be prematurely teleported out
- Blind Characters won't trigger the glyph on themselves
- Other possible work-arounds for this trap
- 30 feet might still be quite close to the room they teleported from
But it should work provided you create enough glyphs to handle an entire enemy party.
Dimension Door/Thunder Step
Same as above, except you need to resolve the debate over whether these spells' abilities to "bring an extra willing creature" interferes with the spell's ability to be put in a Glyph of Warding. I would generally rule it doesn't, but the DM may not feel the same way. If they do rule in your favor, Thunder Step increases the range to 90 feet, Dimension Door increases the range to 500 feet and eliminates the need for line-of-sight.
add a comment |
up vote
7
down vote
accepted
Teleport cannot be placed in a Glyph of Warding
In the spell description for Glyph of Warding, the paragraph regarding placing spells inside the Glyph says this, emphasis mine:
Spell Glyph. You can store a prepared spell of 3rd level or lower in the glyph by casting it as part of creating the glyph. The spell must target a single creature or an area. The spell being stored has no immediate effect when cast in this way...
The spell Teleport, as written, targets "you and up to eight willing additional creatures of your choice", meaning that it is not eligible to be placed in the Glyph.
Traps laid by the DM can do whatever you require them to do
If you're a DM, you should be made aware that while a player creating a Glyph with this effect is prohibited, as DM, you're not required to strictly adhere to the rules set by any individual spell. Call it "Sigil of Arcana", a custom spell that doesn't have this specific limitation, and set it down in a room of the dungeon you're building. Or just make a Teleportation Trap that can be disarmed with Dispel Magic at a DC of 17 (or being cast as a 7th level spell), and forget making it a specific spell at all. You can create the effect you're going for without needing to reconfigure two spells that as-written won't quite do what you need them to do.
As a Player, you need a different spell
Teleportation Circle
Teleportation Circle is an obvious candidate, since it only requires a circle drawn onto the ground, and a Permanent Circle set up somewhere else. It has a smaller radius than Teleport though, meaning you'll be able to target fewer creatures with it. There's also considerable debate over whether Teleportation Circle strictly obeys the constraints for Glyph of Warding or not.
Misty Step
You might be able to get clever by using lots of Glyph of Warding's in the same place. Place a window (no glass or other obstructions) that has visibility of an area outside the tower no more than 30 feet away. Cast Glyph of Warding with your chosen trigger condition, casting Misty Step as the spell to activate, targeting that point with the Misty Step spell each time you do so. Then write conditions for these glyphs:
- On the First Person to enter this room, trigger when that creature sees that all their allies within 20 feet of the room have entered the room.
- On the Second Person to enter this room, trigger when that creature sees that all their allies within 20 feet of the room have entered the room.
- On the Third Person....
This method has a few obvious loopholes:
- Spies, Secret Agents, etc. might be prematurely teleported out
- Blind Characters won't trigger the glyph on themselves
- Other possible work-arounds for this trap
- 30 feet might still be quite close to the room they teleported from
But it should work provided you create enough glyphs to handle an entire enemy party.
Dimension Door/Thunder Step
Same as above, except you need to resolve the debate over whether these spells' abilities to "bring an extra willing creature" interferes with the spell's ability to be put in a Glyph of Warding. I would generally rule it doesn't, but the DM may not feel the same way. If they do rule in your favor, Thunder Step increases the range to 90 feet, Dimension Door increases the range to 500 feet and eliminates the need for line-of-sight.
add a comment |
up vote
7
down vote
accepted
up vote
7
down vote
accepted
Teleport cannot be placed in a Glyph of Warding
In the spell description for Glyph of Warding, the paragraph regarding placing spells inside the Glyph says this, emphasis mine:
Spell Glyph. You can store a prepared spell of 3rd level or lower in the glyph by casting it as part of creating the glyph. The spell must target a single creature or an area. The spell being stored has no immediate effect when cast in this way...
The spell Teleport, as written, targets "you and up to eight willing additional creatures of your choice", meaning that it is not eligible to be placed in the Glyph.
Traps laid by the DM can do whatever you require them to do
If you're a DM, you should be made aware that while a player creating a Glyph with this effect is prohibited, as DM, you're not required to strictly adhere to the rules set by any individual spell. Call it "Sigil of Arcana", a custom spell that doesn't have this specific limitation, and set it down in a room of the dungeon you're building. Or just make a Teleportation Trap that can be disarmed with Dispel Magic at a DC of 17 (or being cast as a 7th level spell), and forget making it a specific spell at all. You can create the effect you're going for without needing to reconfigure two spells that as-written won't quite do what you need them to do.
As a Player, you need a different spell
Teleportation Circle
Teleportation Circle is an obvious candidate, since it only requires a circle drawn onto the ground, and a Permanent Circle set up somewhere else. It has a smaller radius than Teleport though, meaning you'll be able to target fewer creatures with it. There's also considerable debate over whether Teleportation Circle strictly obeys the constraints for Glyph of Warding or not.
Misty Step
You might be able to get clever by using lots of Glyph of Warding's in the same place. Place a window (no glass or other obstructions) that has visibility of an area outside the tower no more than 30 feet away. Cast Glyph of Warding with your chosen trigger condition, casting Misty Step as the spell to activate, targeting that point with the Misty Step spell each time you do so. Then write conditions for these glyphs:
- On the First Person to enter this room, trigger when that creature sees that all their allies within 20 feet of the room have entered the room.
- On the Second Person to enter this room, trigger when that creature sees that all their allies within 20 feet of the room have entered the room.
- On the Third Person....
This method has a few obvious loopholes:
- Spies, Secret Agents, etc. might be prematurely teleported out
- Blind Characters won't trigger the glyph on themselves
- Other possible work-arounds for this trap
- 30 feet might still be quite close to the room they teleported from
But it should work provided you create enough glyphs to handle an entire enemy party.
Dimension Door/Thunder Step
Same as above, except you need to resolve the debate over whether these spells' abilities to "bring an extra willing creature" interferes with the spell's ability to be put in a Glyph of Warding. I would generally rule it doesn't, but the DM may not feel the same way. If they do rule in your favor, Thunder Step increases the range to 90 feet, Dimension Door increases the range to 500 feet and eliminates the need for line-of-sight.
Teleport cannot be placed in a Glyph of Warding
In the spell description for Glyph of Warding, the paragraph regarding placing spells inside the Glyph says this, emphasis mine:
Spell Glyph. You can store a prepared spell of 3rd level or lower in the glyph by casting it as part of creating the glyph. The spell must target a single creature or an area. The spell being stored has no immediate effect when cast in this way...
The spell Teleport, as written, targets "you and up to eight willing additional creatures of your choice", meaning that it is not eligible to be placed in the Glyph.
Traps laid by the DM can do whatever you require them to do
If you're a DM, you should be made aware that while a player creating a Glyph with this effect is prohibited, as DM, you're not required to strictly adhere to the rules set by any individual spell. Call it "Sigil of Arcana", a custom spell that doesn't have this specific limitation, and set it down in a room of the dungeon you're building. Or just make a Teleportation Trap that can be disarmed with Dispel Magic at a DC of 17 (or being cast as a 7th level spell), and forget making it a specific spell at all. You can create the effect you're going for without needing to reconfigure two spells that as-written won't quite do what you need them to do.
As a Player, you need a different spell
Teleportation Circle
Teleportation Circle is an obvious candidate, since it only requires a circle drawn onto the ground, and a Permanent Circle set up somewhere else. It has a smaller radius than Teleport though, meaning you'll be able to target fewer creatures with it. There's also considerable debate over whether Teleportation Circle strictly obeys the constraints for Glyph of Warding or not.
Misty Step
You might be able to get clever by using lots of Glyph of Warding's in the same place. Place a window (no glass or other obstructions) that has visibility of an area outside the tower no more than 30 feet away. Cast Glyph of Warding with your chosen trigger condition, casting Misty Step as the spell to activate, targeting that point with the Misty Step spell each time you do so. Then write conditions for these glyphs:
- On the First Person to enter this room, trigger when that creature sees that all their allies within 20 feet of the room have entered the room.
- On the Second Person to enter this room, trigger when that creature sees that all their allies within 20 feet of the room have entered the room.
- On the Third Person....
This method has a few obvious loopholes:
- Spies, Secret Agents, etc. might be prematurely teleported out
- Blind Characters won't trigger the glyph on themselves
- Other possible work-arounds for this trap
- 30 feet might still be quite close to the room they teleported from
But it should work provided you create enough glyphs to handle an entire enemy party.
Dimension Door/Thunder Step
Same as above, except you need to resolve the debate over whether these spells' abilities to "bring an extra willing creature" interferes with the spell's ability to be put in a Glyph of Warding. I would generally rule it doesn't, but the DM may not feel the same way. If they do rule in your favor, Thunder Step increases the range to 90 feet, Dimension Door increases the range to 500 feet and eliminates the need for line-of-sight.
edited Dec 6 at 19:03
answered Dec 6 at 18:14
Xirema
14.6k24290
14.6k24290
add a comment |
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
You can't create a teleport glyph
The Spell Glyph option from glyph of warding requires...
The spell [to] target a single creature or an area.
Teleport targets:
You and up to eight willing creatures of your choice that you can see within range.
As such, teleport is not a valid spell for glyph of warding.
There doesn't seem to be many alternatives
Of all of the teleportation spells in the game, only dimension door appears to have a single target.
Dimension door let's you teleport...
yourself from your current location to any other spot within [500 feet].
However, it also lets you...
bring one willing creature of your size or smaller who is carrying gear up to its carrying capacity.
... and I'm unsure if that counts as targeting an additional creature.
If it can be place in a spell glyph, it would target the glyph-triggering player:
If the spell has a target, it targets the creature that triggered the glyph.
However, it is unclear if you can specify the destination prior to triggering the glyph (probably worth it's own question if you're curious).
@Rubiksmoose added. Thanka
– David Coffron
Dec 6 at 18:25
I am actually a player in a campaign vs campaign game, and was trying to find a way to defend my evil wizard tower
– Geekdude3
Dec 6 at 18:27
@Geekdude3 added that information to the question. Will revise
– David Coffron
Dec 6 at 18:29
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
You can't create a teleport glyph
The Spell Glyph option from glyph of warding requires...
The spell [to] target a single creature or an area.
Teleport targets:
You and up to eight willing creatures of your choice that you can see within range.
As such, teleport is not a valid spell for glyph of warding.
There doesn't seem to be many alternatives
Of all of the teleportation spells in the game, only dimension door appears to have a single target.
Dimension door let's you teleport...
yourself from your current location to any other spot within [500 feet].
However, it also lets you...
bring one willing creature of your size or smaller who is carrying gear up to its carrying capacity.
... and I'm unsure if that counts as targeting an additional creature.
If it can be place in a spell glyph, it would target the glyph-triggering player:
If the spell has a target, it targets the creature that triggered the glyph.
However, it is unclear if you can specify the destination prior to triggering the glyph (probably worth it's own question if you're curious).
@Rubiksmoose added. Thanka
– David Coffron
Dec 6 at 18:25
I am actually a player in a campaign vs campaign game, and was trying to find a way to defend my evil wizard tower
– Geekdude3
Dec 6 at 18:27
@Geekdude3 added that information to the question. Will revise
– David Coffron
Dec 6 at 18:29
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
up vote
2
down vote
You can't create a teleport glyph
The Spell Glyph option from glyph of warding requires...
The spell [to] target a single creature or an area.
Teleport targets:
You and up to eight willing creatures of your choice that you can see within range.
As such, teleport is not a valid spell for glyph of warding.
There doesn't seem to be many alternatives
Of all of the teleportation spells in the game, only dimension door appears to have a single target.
Dimension door let's you teleport...
yourself from your current location to any other spot within [500 feet].
However, it also lets you...
bring one willing creature of your size or smaller who is carrying gear up to its carrying capacity.
... and I'm unsure if that counts as targeting an additional creature.
If it can be place in a spell glyph, it would target the glyph-triggering player:
If the spell has a target, it targets the creature that triggered the glyph.
However, it is unclear if you can specify the destination prior to triggering the glyph (probably worth it's own question if you're curious).
You can't create a teleport glyph
The Spell Glyph option from glyph of warding requires...
The spell [to] target a single creature or an area.
Teleport targets:
You and up to eight willing creatures of your choice that you can see within range.
As such, teleport is not a valid spell for glyph of warding.
There doesn't seem to be many alternatives
Of all of the teleportation spells in the game, only dimension door appears to have a single target.
Dimension door let's you teleport...
yourself from your current location to any other spot within [500 feet].
However, it also lets you...
bring one willing creature of your size or smaller who is carrying gear up to its carrying capacity.
... and I'm unsure if that counts as targeting an additional creature.
If it can be place in a spell glyph, it would target the glyph-triggering player:
If the spell has a target, it targets the creature that triggered the glyph.
However, it is unclear if you can specify the destination prior to triggering the glyph (probably worth it's own question if you're curious).
edited Dec 6 at 18:44
answered Dec 6 at 18:14
David Coffron
32.5k3109225
32.5k3109225
@Rubiksmoose added. Thanka
– David Coffron
Dec 6 at 18:25
I am actually a player in a campaign vs campaign game, and was trying to find a way to defend my evil wizard tower
– Geekdude3
Dec 6 at 18:27
@Geekdude3 added that information to the question. Will revise
– David Coffron
Dec 6 at 18:29
add a comment |
@Rubiksmoose added. Thanka
– David Coffron
Dec 6 at 18:25
I am actually a player in a campaign vs campaign game, and was trying to find a way to defend my evil wizard tower
– Geekdude3
Dec 6 at 18:27
@Geekdude3 added that information to the question. Will revise
– David Coffron
Dec 6 at 18:29
@Rubiksmoose added. Thanka
– David Coffron
Dec 6 at 18:25
@Rubiksmoose added. Thanka
– David Coffron
Dec 6 at 18:25
I am actually a player in a campaign vs campaign game, and was trying to find a way to defend my evil wizard tower
– Geekdude3
Dec 6 at 18:27
I am actually a player in a campaign vs campaign game, and was trying to find a way to defend my evil wizard tower
– Geekdude3
Dec 6 at 18:27
@Geekdude3 added that information to the question. Will revise
– David Coffron
Dec 6 at 18:29
@Geekdude3 added that information to the question. Will revise
– David Coffron
Dec 6 at 18:29
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
This is not a valid use of Glyph of Warding
Glyph of Warding requires:
Spell Glyph: You can store a prepared spell of 3rd level or lower by casting it as part of creating the glyph. The spell must target a single creature or an area. The spell being stored has no immediate effect.
Per Jeremy Crawford on a related topic (twinning spells as a sorcerer), if a requirement of a spell or ability requires a single target, a spell must be able to target only a single target. Because Teleport can target more than one creature (and does not specify an area), it is not a valid spell to use in conjunction with Glyph of Warding.
One way your answer might be more helpful would be if you could find a way to solve what appears to be OP's actual problem: " I was considering using it as an unavoidable trap to teleport players out of a building." Up to you of course, this answers the question fine as is.
– Rubiksmoose
Dec 6 at 18:54
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
This is not a valid use of Glyph of Warding
Glyph of Warding requires:
Spell Glyph: You can store a prepared spell of 3rd level or lower by casting it as part of creating the glyph. The spell must target a single creature or an area. The spell being stored has no immediate effect.
Per Jeremy Crawford on a related topic (twinning spells as a sorcerer), if a requirement of a spell or ability requires a single target, a spell must be able to target only a single target. Because Teleport can target more than one creature (and does not specify an area), it is not a valid spell to use in conjunction with Glyph of Warding.
One way your answer might be more helpful would be if you could find a way to solve what appears to be OP's actual problem: " I was considering using it as an unavoidable trap to teleport players out of a building." Up to you of course, this answers the question fine as is.
– Rubiksmoose
Dec 6 at 18:54
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
up vote
2
down vote
This is not a valid use of Glyph of Warding
Glyph of Warding requires:
Spell Glyph: You can store a prepared spell of 3rd level or lower by casting it as part of creating the glyph. The spell must target a single creature or an area. The spell being stored has no immediate effect.
Per Jeremy Crawford on a related topic (twinning spells as a sorcerer), if a requirement of a spell or ability requires a single target, a spell must be able to target only a single target. Because Teleport can target more than one creature (and does not specify an area), it is not a valid spell to use in conjunction with Glyph of Warding.
This is not a valid use of Glyph of Warding
Glyph of Warding requires:
Spell Glyph: You can store a prepared spell of 3rd level or lower by casting it as part of creating the glyph. The spell must target a single creature or an area. The spell being stored has no immediate effect.
Per Jeremy Crawford on a related topic (twinning spells as a sorcerer), if a requirement of a spell or ability requires a single target, a spell must be able to target only a single target. Because Teleport can target more than one creature (and does not specify an area), it is not a valid spell to use in conjunction with Glyph of Warding.
edited Dec 6 at 18:54
Rubiksmoose
46.7k6233357
46.7k6233357
answered Dec 6 at 18:22
Rykara
1,796318
1,796318
One way your answer might be more helpful would be if you could find a way to solve what appears to be OP's actual problem: " I was considering using it as an unavoidable trap to teleport players out of a building." Up to you of course, this answers the question fine as is.
– Rubiksmoose
Dec 6 at 18:54
add a comment |
One way your answer might be more helpful would be if you could find a way to solve what appears to be OP's actual problem: " I was considering using it as an unavoidable trap to teleport players out of a building." Up to you of course, this answers the question fine as is.
– Rubiksmoose
Dec 6 at 18:54
One way your answer might be more helpful would be if you could find a way to solve what appears to be OP's actual problem: " I was considering using it as an unavoidable trap to teleport players out of a building." Up to you of course, this answers the question fine as is.
– Rubiksmoose
Dec 6 at 18:54
One way your answer might be more helpful would be if you could find a way to solve what appears to be OP's actual problem: " I was considering using it as an unavoidable trap to teleport players out of a building." Up to you of course, this answers the question fine as is.
– Rubiksmoose
Dec 6 at 18:54
add a comment |
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Related: rpg.stackexchange.com/questions/101157/…
– Rykara
Dec 6 at 18:14
Geekdude3, if you meant player versus player, then I am unclear what "campaign vs campaign" was referring to. I edited in player versus player, I think you'll want to edit out "campaign vs campaign" since I think they mean the same thing. Right?
– KorvinStarmast
Dec 6 at 19:25
By “campaign vs campaign” do you mean a DM is running multiple groups and your group is competing with another? I don’t think it’s important to the question, but that wording is going to confuse possible answer-providers, so it’s good to make sure all your readers understand the question.
– SevenSidedDie♦
Dec 6 at 19:50
Our party is the antagonist in the other parties story
– Geekdude3
Dec 6 at 20:39