Last session a question came up made me feel like I was inside the movie Inception...a Gnomish Trickster was casting an illusion of a light spell being cast on a pebble being tossed into the air, using Phantasmal Force, as part of an ambush. He cast it away from the party, next to a spot where he had been throwing his voice with Ventriloquism. The question was: does the illusionary pebble with an illusionary light spell cast on it, illuminate the party's foes?
The entire table went silent as everyone tried to wrap their heads around this. After a minute or so I cleared my throat and pointed out that I couldn't believe this had never come up before in more than thirty years of play!
Now, I've always found that illusions can be a real bear to deal with in actual play, as players are generally a pretty imaginative lot. I'd like to think I've gotten much better at adjudicating them (read: not letting them break the game), but you still get into these oddball situations every once in a while.
While I'm not looking for any sort of definitive answer on this, I am very interested in other Judges' (or even Players') thoughts on this. Some of the considerations, as I saw them at the time:
- Does allowing one spell to too closely duplicate the effects of another go too far (e.g. can I cast an illusionary Light spell on a target's eyes to blind them)?
<ul> <li>I don't think this one is such a problem in most cases, including this specific one, as both <em>Phantasmal </em>and <em>Chimerical Force</em> are higher level spells than <em>Light</em>. If a caster wants to burn a slot on that, fine. Plus, the illusion spells already note that they can appear to duplicate other spells.</li> </ul> </li> <li>Does an illusionary object (e.g. a torch) or spell (e.g. <em>Light</em>) project light as a light-source? Does that light extend beyond the area of the illusion spell (e.g. 20' x 20' x 20'), or stop at the boundary? <ul> <li>A fascinating question to me with all sorts of weird implications, depending on the answer. (If it <em>doesn't </em>illuminate the area, presumably the illusion could include an illusionary view of the area being illuminated...how far down the rabbit hole would you like to go?)</li> </ul> </li> <li>If someone disbelieves an illusion, would light "radiated" by the illusion still illuminate the area? <ul> <li>The answer to this obviously depends on the tack one takes when deciding the nature of an illusion; does it/can it radiate light, or is it merely an image/thing that can reflect light?</li> </ul> </li>
At any rate, given a little thought, there are a number of others issues that crop up depending on how one adjudicates the situation. Thoughts?