What creatures does Antimagic Field temporarily wink out of existence?
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The antimagic field spell has the following effect on creatures:
A creature or object summoned or created by magic temporarily winks out of existence in the sphere. Such a creature instantly reappears once the space the creature occupied is no longer within the sphere.
Which creatures, or types of creature, fall within this category?
- Obviously elementals or demons summoned by a spell will qualify.
- What about constructs such as golems?
- What about undead animated by magic, like zombies? Stronger undead?
dnd-5e spells monsters magic antimagic-field
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up vote
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The antimagic field spell has the following effect on creatures:
A creature or object summoned or created by magic temporarily winks out of existence in the sphere. Such a creature instantly reappears once the space the creature occupied is no longer within the sphere.
Which creatures, or types of creature, fall within this category?
- Obviously elementals or demons summoned by a spell will qualify.
- What about constructs such as golems?
- What about undead animated by magic, like zombies? Stronger undead?
dnd-5e spells monsters magic antimagic-field
add a comment |Â
up vote
1
down vote
favorite
up vote
1
down vote
favorite
The antimagic field spell has the following effect on creatures:
A creature or object summoned or created by magic temporarily winks out of existence in the sphere. Such a creature instantly reappears once the space the creature occupied is no longer within the sphere.
Which creatures, or types of creature, fall within this category?
- Obviously elementals or demons summoned by a spell will qualify.
- What about constructs such as golems?
- What about undead animated by magic, like zombies? Stronger undead?
dnd-5e spells monsters magic antimagic-field
The antimagic field spell has the following effect on creatures:
A creature or object summoned or created by magic temporarily winks out of existence in the sphere. Such a creature instantly reappears once the space the creature occupied is no longer within the sphere.
Which creatures, or types of creature, fall within this category?
- Obviously elementals or demons summoned by a spell will qualify.
- What about constructs such as golems?
- What about undead animated by magic, like zombies? Stronger undead?
dnd-5e spells monsters magic antimagic-field
dnd-5e spells monsters magic antimagic-field
edited 1 hour ago
V2Blast
16.6k241106
16.6k241106
asked 2 hours ago
Vigil
5,2992263
5,2992263
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1 Answer
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Any creature created by magic with a non-instantaneous duration disappears
The official D&D Sage advice compendium contains the following clarification:
Whenever you wonder whether a spellâÂÂs effects can be dispelled or suspended, you need to answer one question: is the spellâÂÂs duration instantaneous? If the answer is yes, there is nothing to dispel or suspend.
The clarification continues to explain an example of this at play: the spell conjure woodland beings. Conjure Woodland Beings has a non-instantaneous duration, so the magic that summons the creatures is acting upon them and maintaining their presence for the whole duration of the spell. When they enter an anti-magic field, the magic that is keeping the summoned creatures in place is suspended, so the creatures disappear.
When this situation occurs, ask yourself whether or not the effect that summoned the creature is instantaneous. If it's instantaneous, then the creature will stay, otherwise it will disappear while its space is within the field.
To address your examples
Elementals and fiends will only disappear if the spell that summoned them is not instantaneous. A spell like conjure elemental falls into this category. However, a spell like planar ally can summon an elemental or fiend and has a duration of instantaneous. So a creature summoned by that spell will not disappear.
In general undead and constructs follow the same rule as any other creature. Unless the magic that created it is non-instantaneous, a construct or undead can enter an antimagic field with no ill effect (barring any specific exceptions from some other source: like that creature's stat block).
Hmm. This would suggest that the familiar from find familiar would be unaffected (at least, it wouldn't disappear) in an antimagic field, as rpeinhardt's answer to this other question suggests.
â V2Blast
1 hour ago
@V2Blast I believe that is correct. I updated my answer to use a better reference to support this claim. The sage advice describes how the creatures created by the conjure woodland beings spell will disappear in the field specifically because the spell has a non-instantaneous duration.
â Adam
1 hour ago
Personally, I agree. perhaps you'd like to post an answer to the other question as well.
â ravery
1 hour ago
You might want to mention that if you came across an elemental on an Elemental Plane, or across a fiend in one of the Lower Planes, or they otherwise crossed the planes to actually be wherever you are, then once again antimagic field would not affect them.
â KRyan
18 mins ago
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1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
4
down vote
Any creature created by magic with a non-instantaneous duration disappears
The official D&D Sage advice compendium contains the following clarification:
Whenever you wonder whether a spellâÂÂs effects can be dispelled or suspended, you need to answer one question: is the spellâÂÂs duration instantaneous? If the answer is yes, there is nothing to dispel or suspend.
The clarification continues to explain an example of this at play: the spell conjure woodland beings. Conjure Woodland Beings has a non-instantaneous duration, so the magic that summons the creatures is acting upon them and maintaining their presence for the whole duration of the spell. When they enter an anti-magic field, the magic that is keeping the summoned creatures in place is suspended, so the creatures disappear.
When this situation occurs, ask yourself whether or not the effect that summoned the creature is instantaneous. If it's instantaneous, then the creature will stay, otherwise it will disappear while its space is within the field.
To address your examples
Elementals and fiends will only disappear if the spell that summoned them is not instantaneous. A spell like conjure elemental falls into this category. However, a spell like planar ally can summon an elemental or fiend and has a duration of instantaneous. So a creature summoned by that spell will not disappear.
In general undead and constructs follow the same rule as any other creature. Unless the magic that created it is non-instantaneous, a construct or undead can enter an antimagic field with no ill effect (barring any specific exceptions from some other source: like that creature's stat block).
Hmm. This would suggest that the familiar from find familiar would be unaffected (at least, it wouldn't disappear) in an antimagic field, as rpeinhardt's answer to this other question suggests.
â V2Blast
1 hour ago
@V2Blast I believe that is correct. I updated my answer to use a better reference to support this claim. The sage advice describes how the creatures created by the conjure woodland beings spell will disappear in the field specifically because the spell has a non-instantaneous duration.
â Adam
1 hour ago
Personally, I agree. perhaps you'd like to post an answer to the other question as well.
â ravery
1 hour ago
You might want to mention that if you came across an elemental on an Elemental Plane, or across a fiend in one of the Lower Planes, or they otherwise crossed the planes to actually be wherever you are, then once again antimagic field would not affect them.
â KRyan
18 mins ago
add a comment |Â
up vote
4
down vote
Any creature created by magic with a non-instantaneous duration disappears
The official D&D Sage advice compendium contains the following clarification:
Whenever you wonder whether a spellâÂÂs effects can be dispelled or suspended, you need to answer one question: is the spellâÂÂs duration instantaneous? If the answer is yes, there is nothing to dispel or suspend.
The clarification continues to explain an example of this at play: the spell conjure woodland beings. Conjure Woodland Beings has a non-instantaneous duration, so the magic that summons the creatures is acting upon them and maintaining their presence for the whole duration of the spell. When they enter an anti-magic field, the magic that is keeping the summoned creatures in place is suspended, so the creatures disappear.
When this situation occurs, ask yourself whether or not the effect that summoned the creature is instantaneous. If it's instantaneous, then the creature will stay, otherwise it will disappear while its space is within the field.
To address your examples
Elementals and fiends will only disappear if the spell that summoned them is not instantaneous. A spell like conjure elemental falls into this category. However, a spell like planar ally can summon an elemental or fiend and has a duration of instantaneous. So a creature summoned by that spell will not disappear.
In general undead and constructs follow the same rule as any other creature. Unless the magic that created it is non-instantaneous, a construct or undead can enter an antimagic field with no ill effect (barring any specific exceptions from some other source: like that creature's stat block).
Hmm. This would suggest that the familiar from find familiar would be unaffected (at least, it wouldn't disappear) in an antimagic field, as rpeinhardt's answer to this other question suggests.
â V2Blast
1 hour ago
@V2Blast I believe that is correct. I updated my answer to use a better reference to support this claim. The sage advice describes how the creatures created by the conjure woodland beings spell will disappear in the field specifically because the spell has a non-instantaneous duration.
â Adam
1 hour ago
Personally, I agree. perhaps you'd like to post an answer to the other question as well.
â ravery
1 hour ago
You might want to mention that if you came across an elemental on an Elemental Plane, or across a fiend in one of the Lower Planes, or they otherwise crossed the planes to actually be wherever you are, then once again antimagic field would not affect them.
â KRyan
18 mins ago
add a comment |Â
up vote
4
down vote
up vote
4
down vote
Any creature created by magic with a non-instantaneous duration disappears
The official D&D Sage advice compendium contains the following clarification:
Whenever you wonder whether a spellâÂÂs effects can be dispelled or suspended, you need to answer one question: is the spellâÂÂs duration instantaneous? If the answer is yes, there is nothing to dispel or suspend.
The clarification continues to explain an example of this at play: the spell conjure woodland beings. Conjure Woodland Beings has a non-instantaneous duration, so the magic that summons the creatures is acting upon them and maintaining their presence for the whole duration of the spell. When they enter an anti-magic field, the magic that is keeping the summoned creatures in place is suspended, so the creatures disappear.
When this situation occurs, ask yourself whether or not the effect that summoned the creature is instantaneous. If it's instantaneous, then the creature will stay, otherwise it will disappear while its space is within the field.
To address your examples
Elementals and fiends will only disappear if the spell that summoned them is not instantaneous. A spell like conjure elemental falls into this category. However, a spell like planar ally can summon an elemental or fiend and has a duration of instantaneous. So a creature summoned by that spell will not disappear.
In general undead and constructs follow the same rule as any other creature. Unless the magic that created it is non-instantaneous, a construct or undead can enter an antimagic field with no ill effect (barring any specific exceptions from some other source: like that creature's stat block).
Any creature created by magic with a non-instantaneous duration disappears
The official D&D Sage advice compendium contains the following clarification:
Whenever you wonder whether a spellâÂÂs effects can be dispelled or suspended, you need to answer one question: is the spellâÂÂs duration instantaneous? If the answer is yes, there is nothing to dispel or suspend.
The clarification continues to explain an example of this at play: the spell conjure woodland beings. Conjure Woodland Beings has a non-instantaneous duration, so the magic that summons the creatures is acting upon them and maintaining their presence for the whole duration of the spell. When they enter an anti-magic field, the magic that is keeping the summoned creatures in place is suspended, so the creatures disappear.
When this situation occurs, ask yourself whether or not the effect that summoned the creature is instantaneous. If it's instantaneous, then the creature will stay, otherwise it will disappear while its space is within the field.
To address your examples
Elementals and fiends will only disappear if the spell that summoned them is not instantaneous. A spell like conjure elemental falls into this category. However, a spell like planar ally can summon an elemental or fiend and has a duration of instantaneous. So a creature summoned by that spell will not disappear.
In general undead and constructs follow the same rule as any other creature. Unless the magic that created it is non-instantaneous, a construct or undead can enter an antimagic field with no ill effect (barring any specific exceptions from some other source: like that creature's stat block).
edited 1 hour ago
answered 1 hour ago
Adam
18.5k474125
18.5k474125
Hmm. This would suggest that the familiar from find familiar would be unaffected (at least, it wouldn't disappear) in an antimagic field, as rpeinhardt's answer to this other question suggests.
â V2Blast
1 hour ago
@V2Blast I believe that is correct. I updated my answer to use a better reference to support this claim. The sage advice describes how the creatures created by the conjure woodland beings spell will disappear in the field specifically because the spell has a non-instantaneous duration.
â Adam
1 hour ago
Personally, I agree. perhaps you'd like to post an answer to the other question as well.
â ravery
1 hour ago
You might want to mention that if you came across an elemental on an Elemental Plane, or across a fiend in one of the Lower Planes, or they otherwise crossed the planes to actually be wherever you are, then once again antimagic field would not affect them.
â KRyan
18 mins ago
add a comment |Â
Hmm. This would suggest that the familiar from find familiar would be unaffected (at least, it wouldn't disappear) in an antimagic field, as rpeinhardt's answer to this other question suggests.
â V2Blast
1 hour ago
@V2Blast I believe that is correct. I updated my answer to use a better reference to support this claim. The sage advice describes how the creatures created by the conjure woodland beings spell will disappear in the field specifically because the spell has a non-instantaneous duration.
â Adam
1 hour ago
Personally, I agree. perhaps you'd like to post an answer to the other question as well.
â ravery
1 hour ago
You might want to mention that if you came across an elemental on an Elemental Plane, or across a fiend in one of the Lower Planes, or they otherwise crossed the planes to actually be wherever you are, then once again antimagic field would not affect them.
â KRyan
18 mins ago
Hmm. This would suggest that the familiar from find familiar would be unaffected (at least, it wouldn't disappear) in an antimagic field, as rpeinhardt's answer to this other question suggests.
â V2Blast
1 hour ago
Hmm. This would suggest that the familiar from find familiar would be unaffected (at least, it wouldn't disappear) in an antimagic field, as rpeinhardt's answer to this other question suggests.
â V2Blast
1 hour ago
@V2Blast I believe that is correct. I updated my answer to use a better reference to support this claim. The sage advice describes how the creatures created by the conjure woodland beings spell will disappear in the field specifically because the spell has a non-instantaneous duration.
â Adam
1 hour ago
@V2Blast I believe that is correct. I updated my answer to use a better reference to support this claim. The sage advice describes how the creatures created by the conjure woodland beings spell will disappear in the field specifically because the spell has a non-instantaneous duration.
â Adam
1 hour ago
Personally, I agree. perhaps you'd like to post an answer to the other question as well.
â ravery
1 hour ago
Personally, I agree. perhaps you'd like to post an answer to the other question as well.
â ravery
1 hour ago
You might want to mention that if you came across an elemental on an Elemental Plane, or across a fiend in one of the Lower Planes, or they otherwise crossed the planes to actually be wherever you are, then once again antimagic field would not affect them.
â KRyan
18 mins ago
You might want to mention that if you came across an elemental on an Elemental Plane, or across a fiend in one of the Lower Planes, or they otherwise crossed the planes to actually be wherever you are, then once again antimagic field would not affect them.
â KRyan
18 mins ago
add a comment |Â
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