Author Topic: How would you make a ward that could do this?  (Read 3832 times)

Offline zenten

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Re: How would you make a ward that could do this?
« Reply #15 on: September 09, 2011, 02:05:56 AM »
Nothing about the Counterspell rules say that they will bypass the Block effect of a Ward.  In fact, it even says that it works like an attack.  Unless the ward was keyed to ignore the counterspeller's magic of course.

Offline Sanctaphrax

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Re: How would you make a ward that could do this?
« Reply #16 on: September 09, 2011, 02:12:56 AM »
It says that the spell targeted disappears if you beat its power. Seems simple enough to me.

Offline zenten

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Re: How would you make a ward that could do this?
« Reply #17 on: September 09, 2011, 02:57:21 AM »
Sure, and the ward section says that anything targetting it or what's beyond the ward has a Block on it.

Offline UmbraLux

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Re: How would you make a ward that could do this?
« Reply #18 on: September 09, 2011, 02:58:27 AM »
He is kind of a puppetmaster and they have not really wencountered him beofre this climax.  Necromantic and conjuration focuses probably.
A 25+ ward from a mind, necromantic, and conjuration focused wizard?  How about something like this...

5 shift mind affecting veil - "This isn't the house you're looking for..."
8 shifts into the ward barrier itself
choose one:
 - 12 shifts into summoning a swarm of minor imps (10 into the imps + 2 for the trigger)
 - 12 shifts into an enervating block against movement (8 shift block + 2 for zone + 2 for trigger)

Get's you a 25 shift ward which will a) make the house seem innocuous, b) create an 8 shift barrier and an 8 shift suppression of supernatural abilities, and c) either summon minor imps or make movement through at least one area extremely difficult. 

That said, if the guy has resources and plenty of time, he should be capable of even more shifts in his ward.  Twenty five isn't much for a long term residence - though it's probably appropriate for a short term residence. 

Almost forgot, you do need to add shifts for duration to the above ward.  So 12 more shifts if you want it to last for a mortal lifetime.

« Last Edit: September 09, 2011, 03:02:56 AM by UmbraLux »
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Offline Todjaeger

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Re: How would you make a ward that could do this?
« Reply #19 on: September 09, 2011, 04:47:02 AM »
It says that the spell targeted disappears if you beat its power. Seems simple enough to me.

Below I have quoted the very first paragraph beneath the Counterspell heading from YS253, please note the portion I bolded.

Quote
Counterspell
If a wizard is in the presence of a magical effect, he can attempt to nullify it with the power of his will alone. Even though counterspells are an evocation effect, they can be used to disrupt thaumaturgy. While such an attempt may only be temporary, it can buy the wizard precious time.

The way I interpret that, is that a counterspell potentially nullifies the effects of a spell as it happens (Evocation) or can potentially nullify a spell/effect with a duration (Thaumaturgy) temporarily.

I would also like to point out that the wizard attempting an 18 shift counterspell as described above will also have to take a Severe and a Moderate consequence at a minimum, not two Minor consequences and a Moderate, assuming of course they are successful in summoning 18 shifts of power.  A bad roll of the dice would immediately cause the counterspell to fail, and the wizard would still end up taking mental stress...

My reasoning is this.  A Counterspell is an Evocation effect, it is essentially described as an attack spell with a target of the spell being counterspelled/nullified.  In order for the Counterspell to nullify an 18-shift Ward, that means an 18-shift Evocation effect is required.  The RAW on YS255 state:

Quote
You can channel a number of shifts in power equal to your Conviction with a minimum of impact—just one point of mental stress.

This is then followed up on YS256 with:

Quote
Every shift of power you summon past your Conviction costs one additional point of mental stress during casting;

If the wizard has a Conviction of Superb (+5), then an 18-shift Evocation would cause the Wizard to take 14 boxes of Mental stress.  Any specialty in Spirit (Power) makes it easier for the wizard to summon the power, but the wizard still suffers from summoning that much power, since it is still past his Conviction skill level.

In short, the wizard would take some significant harm to nullify the Ward, wouldn't completely negate the Ward, and would at best have a Minor consequence, a Minor Mental consequence, and an Extreme consequence remaining, as well as Physical stress having been taking and possibly Mental stress as well.  All before even managing to enter the BBEG's lair, where those consequences the character took can/should/would be used against them...

-Cheers

Edit: Additional comments.  From the Counterspelling rules on YS253, there is no mention of using particular elements for the Counterspell.  In fact, from the example given, Harry didn't get any Power or Control bonuses to attempt to counterspell, nor was any mention made of what element Harry was using.  This would mean that a wizard's ability to counterspell is completely reliant on the wizard's Conviction, Discipline and Lore skills, as well as the number of stress boxes and consequences the wizard has available and is willing to use.  I mention Lore as well because even if the wizard was to use the Sight to see the Ward, they would still need to make a Lore check to correctly determine how much power was required to counterspell the Ward.
« Last Edit: September 09, 2011, 07:01:28 AM by Todjaeger »
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Offline Belial666

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Re: How would you make a ward that could do this?
« Reply #20 on: September 09, 2011, 07:07:02 AM »
1) The basic conflict actions of evocation are; attack, block, maneuver, counterspell. Do note that counterspell is different than an attack.
2) A Ward reflects total shifts, not an attack roll. So a 18-shift evocation will not be reflected by an 18-shift Ward, even if its attack roll is lower than 18.

3) A wizard without specializations/foci with superb skills has 5 power/5 control +1 free specialization from Evocation. A fully specialized submerged wizard with foci might well reach 9 power, 10 control in his specialization. My aiming for 7 power 8 control is rather average.

Offline Sanctaphrax

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Re: How would you make a ward that could do this?
« Reply #21 on: September 09, 2011, 07:15:18 PM »
It seems that the counterspell rules are even more ambiguous than I had assumed.

"May only be temporary" is a very slippery phrase.

And that's just the start of the confusion.

I would love to argue my side further, but I don't think I can prove anything.

Although I will say that I think you can counterspell with whatever element seems appropriate.

PS: 8 control and 7 power is not average at all. Many wizard characters have non-wizard character elements that move their refresh and skill points away from evocation. Or they specialize in thaumaturgy.

Now, a non-thaumaturge wizard without some nonmagical gimmick built by you or I will likely have Conviction 5 Discipline 5 and appropriate specializations/foci. But most people don't approach this sort of thing the way you and I do. Most people don't optimize at all. I think the average is more like 5 shifts of evocation.

Take a look at canonical spellcasting NPCs. The first thing that should strike you is the sheer amount of wasted refresh. And the average spellcasting PC has a fair bit in common with those NPCs.

I think.

Offline Becq

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Re: How would you make a ward that could do this?
« Reply #22 on: September 09, 2011, 08:20:43 PM »
Apparently I hit something that submitted my post well before I finished writing (and, as it turns out, completely revising) it.  See my post below.
« Last Edit: September 09, 2011, 09:28:17 PM by Becq »

Offline Sanctaphrax

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Re: How would you make a ward that could do this?
« Reply #23 on: September 09, 2011, 09:04:26 PM »
Eh, no.

There is a third possibility.

Counterspells work just as well against wards as they do against other forms of Thaumaturgy.

Now, which choice is correct is uncertain.

But that third choice is there.

Offline Belial666

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Re: How would you make a ward that could do this?
« Reply #24 on: September 09, 2011, 09:18:42 PM »
Meh. I put down an offensive block vs magic on the ward itself. Blocks don't require attack rolls so either way you take it, the result is the same; the Ward is prevented from acting by the block. Now the party just walks through unopposed.

Ditto from putting a veil on the Ward (or yourself), so that the Ward does not detect your presence as hostile and doesn't activate as you pass.

Third option is using poison gas; Sarin is a good option. Since wards aren't airtight (ppl inside still breathe), whoever is inside is toasted.

Fourth option is to use earth magic to tunnel under the house, circumventing the Ward.

Fifth option is to make a big circle around the house with the caster inside. Activate the circle then the group's caster uses up the magic in the very limited place. Not only the Ward falls but anyone inside cannot complete any weird rituals either.

Sixth option is to steal a fire truck and a hundred pounds of salt, then hose down the ward with salt water.

Seventh option is to get a piece of Mordite from the Outside then throw it at the ward.

Offline zenten

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Re: How would you make a ward that could do this?
« Reply #25 on: September 09, 2011, 09:21:25 PM »
But the Ward's block would block the offensive block.

Offline Belial666

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Re: How would you make a ward that could do this?
« Reply #26 on: September 09, 2011, 09:25:43 PM »
Blocks are all-or-nothing and ties go to the attacker. Under most circumstances, an offensive block trying to surpress a defensive block of the same number of shifts is going to "win".

Offline Becq

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Re: How would you make a ward that could do this?
« Reply #27 on: September 09, 2011, 09:26:58 PM »
The basic disagreement here comes down to what I believe is either a miswording or an attempt to interpret too literally.

I think (or hope) we all agree that wards have some form of effect on any form of energy that tries to pass through; the text specifically mentions that it works against both physical and magical, and examples include everything from the kinetic energy of a person walking to spells.  (It seems clear to me that the intention is for wards to comprehensively apply to all means of intrusion or attack past the boundaries protected by the ward.)

I think we can also all agree that to the extent that it is successful, a ward is intended to reflect whatever hits it back against whoever did the hitting.  Sufficiently strong effects can get through in some form.

The disagreement is caused by the specific word "attack" used when describing how the ward attenuates stuff that penetrates it.  But note that in the paragraph just before, the designers used the word "attacker" to refer to anyone who causes an "effect" to "hit" the ward.  This makes it clear (to me, at least) that the designers meant "attacker" to be interpreted generally to apply to anyone who tries to do something across a ward, regardless of intention.  If someone tried to cast a heal spell through the ward, the ward would respond to the spell as an "attack", and would reflect it back on the "attacker".

Because of this, it seems clear that the following paragraph is also intended to be interpreted generally.  Any effect that is strong enough (as measured in shifts) to bypass the ward has the ward's strength subtracted from its shifts, with the remaining shift applied either to the ward construct or another target in the ward.  And similarly, to "attack" the ward (in the general sense of trying to affect it by any means) requires you to penetrate the ward first.  This would include counterspells.

Offline Todjaeger

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Re: How would you make a ward that could do this?
« Reply #28 on: September 09, 2011, 09:35:51 PM »
It seems that the counterspell rules are even more ambiguous than I had assumed.

"May only be temporary" is a very slippery phrase.

And that's just the start of the confusion.

I would love to argue my side further, but I don't think I can prove anything.

Although I will say that I think you can counterspell with whatever element seems appropriate.

Agreed, the counterspell rules are somewhat ambiguous, and likely absent word from Fred and/or others at Evil Hat, some of the way counterspelling 'works' would have to be house-ruled to ensure consistency.

Having said that, neither the rules nor example given made any mention of using a specific element when counterspelling.  To me, it seems to make sense that it is more about the amount of raw power (Conviction) the wizard attempting the counterspell can handle, than being particularly good at handling Spirit-based magic for instance.  My reasoning behind this (please feel free to poke holes in my logic) is how relevant or rather irrelevant is a wizard's facility with Spirit-based Evocations, when attempting to nullify an active Biomancy effect?  I don't see how it would, but then part of that has to do with how I 'see' the magic.

As the RAW covers, the Conviction skill represents the amount of raw power a practioner can call.  Next come specializations, which mechanically boost the Conviction  and Discipline skill levels, when the practioner is working within the specialty.  After this comes the focus items, which can mechanically boost the Conviction and/or Discipline skill levels, again when working within the appropriate specialty and depending on what is being done, the correct type of magic (offensive, defensive, etc).  What the RAW doesn't cover, is whether the use of specialties and/or focus items actually summons more power, or is a way to represent the character just being more efficient with the power they can draw.  My interpretation of the novels (Small Favor, Changes and Ghost Story in particular) has me treating specializations and focus items as being more efficient uses of called power, not as things which actually call more power.

-Cheers
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Offline Becq

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Re: How would you make a ward that could do this?
« Reply #29 on: September 09, 2011, 09:41:43 PM »
But the Ward's block would block the offensive block.
This.

The ward, as written, violates the way blocks work.  As it is written, it is basically a construct (with 'hit points' based on the strength of the ward) that continuously projects around itself and everything inside the warded area a block.  Whereas a normal block disipates once breach, a ward does not disipate until the contruct is destroyed, but is weakened as the construct is damaged.  The ward energy eminates from the construct, which is inside the warded area, so the attacking the energy itself does nothing (it's just immediately renewed, just as the ward is immediately renewed each time an attack penetrates it).

Frankly, if wards were as weak as some folk are indicating, then why bother with a ward at all?  The "pretty high" strength ward mentioned (a legendary strength of 8(!)) could be knocked over by any 2-bit evoker with a couple of aspects to tag.