SpikeFightwicky
2007-10-18, 01:06 PM
A conjuration (Creation) spell typically conjures some mundane 'something', and magically keeps it in being (hence, it can penetrate SR and even spell immunity with ease). So how magical, exactly, is the actual spell effect?
For example, Acid Arrow (from what I gather, the spell conjures acid from 'somewhere', and hurls it at something, then keeps it around a few levels) ignores SR because it's basically non-magical acid being magically held together in what I guess is an arrow form.
Would I be daft to interpret this as meaning that the spell effect is actually non-magical? Like, would an acid arrow simply pass through an incorporeal creature? If so, then would a wall of stone ward against incorporeal creatures? It's a mundane stone wall, but was 'magically' brought in being. What about acid fog? The spell pretty much takes some of acidic fog and drops it where you aim it. What about an orb of acid? Would the same properties that make it effective against SR make it less effective against incorporeal?
For example, Acid Arrow (from what I gather, the spell conjures acid from 'somewhere', and hurls it at something, then keeps it around a few levels) ignores SR because it's basically non-magical acid being magically held together in what I guess is an arrow form.
Would I be daft to interpret this as meaning that the spell effect is actually non-magical? Like, would an acid arrow simply pass through an incorporeal creature? If so, then would a wall of stone ward against incorporeal creatures? It's a mundane stone wall, but was 'magically' brought in being. What about acid fog? The spell pretty much takes some of acidic fog and drops it where you aim it. What about an orb of acid? Would the same properties that make it effective against SR make it less effective against incorporeal?