Wall Of Fire
(Evocation)
(Fire)



 
 
L^: d5, mu4, wj4
-
R#: d: 8", mu: 6", wj: 6"
-
D^: S
C^: v.s.m
 (mu: v.s.m)
(wj: v.s.m)
-
CT: d: 7, mu: 4, wj: 4 
-
S^: None (item)
A^: S
MP: 18
-
Wall of water: MP.27
UW : No

Duration: The opaque wall of fire lasts for as long as the druid concentrates on maintaining it,
or 1 round per level of xperience of the druid in the event he or she does not wish to concentrate upon it.

AREA:
The spell creates a sheet of flame up to 2" square per level of the spell caster,
    The former is stationary,

OR

as a ring with a radius of up to 1/2" per level of experience from the druid (mu: ring radius) to its flames, and a height of 2".
    while the latter moves as the druid moves.

Effect: The wall of fire spell brings forth a blazing curtain of magical fire of shimmering color --
yellow-green || amber in case of druidical magic.
The wall of fireinflicts 4 to 16 HP of damage,
plus 1 HP of damage per level of the spell caster, upon any creature passing through it.
Creatures within 1" of the wall take 2-8 HP of damage,
those within 2" take 1-4 HP of damage.
Creatures especially subject to fire may take additional damage, and undead always take twice normal damage.
Only the side of the wall away from the spell caster will inflict damage.

Effect.magic-user: This spell differs from the fifth level druid spell,
wall of fire (q.v.) only as indicated above and as stated below:
the flame color is either violet or reddish blue,
base damage is 2-12 hit points (plus 1 hit point per level),

DMG.druid: It is not possible for the spell caster to move at all and maintain concentration on the wall of fire.

ADQ: The description of the 5th level 
druid spell wall of fire, when discussing 
the differences between sheet and ring 
forms, notes that "the former is stationary 
while the latter moves as the 
druid moves". What does this mean? 
ADA: In this case the phrase "the 
former" refers to the sheet as being the 
former form. The ring comes latter. Stationary 
means "having a fixed position"; 
fixed means repaired, while position 
means everything (or so I'm told). It 
seems that the former form is repaired 
and everything, and therefore the latter is 
up against the wall... or something to that 
effect. 
    The ring must also be fairly flexible, 
since its movements match those of the 
druid. If the druid has a broken leg, the 
ring will limip right along with him. 
    (Polyhedron #23)

Area.magic-user: the radius of the ring-shaped wall of fire is 1" + 1/4" per level of experience of the magic user casting it,

MC.magic-user: Phosphorus.
 

Wu Jen: This spell conjures a blazing curtain of amber flames inflicting 2d6 points of damage to those within, +1 point of damage for every level of the caster.
The side nearest the wu jen radiates no heat, but the far side inflicts 1d6 points of damage to those within 1 ", 1-3 points to those within 2".
Undead and creatures susceptible to fire take double damage.
The wall is immobile, and lasts as long as the wu jen concentrates upon it, or the wu jen's level in rounds if no concentration is given.
The spell may be cast as a sheet-like wall of up to 2" square per level of the caster, or a ring of 1 " + 1 /4" per level of the wu jen casting the spell.

Wu Jen.MC: A piece of volcanic glass.

Q: Can a wall of fire be formed into a
circle around a target so that the hot
side faces in toward the target?

A: Yes, it can.
(153.7)



 


garhkal wrote:
Gary. What wall spells are supposed to be affected by magic resistance?
Ie, if i cast a wall of iron over a drow, would the drow get squished, or would his MR kick in>
What about rock to mud under their feet???
 


Ciao!

As a matter of fact I did not allow a wall spell to be cast save if there was some surface the bottom edge it could rest upon.

If you allow them to be cast into the blue, then MR will not affect one in falling, as it is not a spell.
MR does not affect blosw from magic wea[ons, eh?
The same goes for rock turned to mud.

Cheers,
Gary
 
 





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