How does the spell Time Stop interact with delayed damage AoE spells?












12















I'm preparing to play a certain, popular lich and am going through possible spell combos that he would use on the players.



One in particular I want to use is Time Stop + Cloudkill + Chain Lightning (It's too bad Wall of Force is also concentration - I would love to trap them in with the Cloudkill).



Now, Cloudkill is one of those spells that seems to fall under the fuzzy ruling of delayed AoE spells, like Cloud of Daggers or Moonbeam, which have the confusing ruling of only dealing damage when the creature enters the AoE and starts its turn there.



This makes me wonder how it interacts with Time Stop, which has this stipulation:




This spell ends if one of the actions you use during this period, or any effects that you create during this period, affects a creature other than you or an object being worn or carried by someone other than you.




Emphasis mine. Because Cloudkill and like AoE spells have been ruled to not deal damage, and thus affect creatures until the start of their turn, does this mean that casting Cloudkill right atop them doesn't break the Time Stop? (at least until I cast something like Chain Lightning)










share|improve this question



























    12















    I'm preparing to play a certain, popular lich and am going through possible spell combos that he would use on the players.



    One in particular I want to use is Time Stop + Cloudkill + Chain Lightning (It's too bad Wall of Force is also concentration - I would love to trap them in with the Cloudkill).



    Now, Cloudkill is one of those spells that seems to fall under the fuzzy ruling of delayed AoE spells, like Cloud of Daggers or Moonbeam, which have the confusing ruling of only dealing damage when the creature enters the AoE and starts its turn there.



    This makes me wonder how it interacts with Time Stop, which has this stipulation:




    This spell ends if one of the actions you use during this period, or any effects that you create during this period, affects a creature other than you or an object being worn or carried by someone other than you.




    Emphasis mine. Because Cloudkill and like AoE spells have been ruled to not deal damage, and thus affect creatures until the start of their turn, does this mean that casting Cloudkill right atop them doesn't break the Time Stop? (at least until I cast something like Chain Lightning)










    share|improve this question

























      12












      12








      12








      I'm preparing to play a certain, popular lich and am going through possible spell combos that he would use on the players.



      One in particular I want to use is Time Stop + Cloudkill + Chain Lightning (It's too bad Wall of Force is also concentration - I would love to trap them in with the Cloudkill).



      Now, Cloudkill is one of those spells that seems to fall under the fuzzy ruling of delayed AoE spells, like Cloud of Daggers or Moonbeam, which have the confusing ruling of only dealing damage when the creature enters the AoE and starts its turn there.



      This makes me wonder how it interacts with Time Stop, which has this stipulation:




      This spell ends if one of the actions you use during this period, or any effects that you create during this period, affects a creature other than you or an object being worn or carried by someone other than you.




      Emphasis mine. Because Cloudkill and like AoE spells have been ruled to not deal damage, and thus affect creatures until the start of their turn, does this mean that casting Cloudkill right atop them doesn't break the Time Stop? (at least until I cast something like Chain Lightning)










      share|improve this question














      I'm preparing to play a certain, popular lich and am going through possible spell combos that he would use on the players.



      One in particular I want to use is Time Stop + Cloudkill + Chain Lightning (It's too bad Wall of Force is also concentration - I would love to trap them in with the Cloudkill).



      Now, Cloudkill is one of those spells that seems to fall under the fuzzy ruling of delayed AoE spells, like Cloud of Daggers or Moonbeam, which have the confusing ruling of only dealing damage when the creature enters the AoE and starts its turn there.



      This makes me wonder how it interacts with Time Stop, which has this stipulation:




      This spell ends if one of the actions you use during this period, or any effects that you create during this period, affects a creature other than you or an object being worn or carried by someone other than you.




      Emphasis mine. Because Cloudkill and like AoE spells have been ruled to not deal damage, and thus affect creatures until the start of their turn, does this mean that casting Cloudkill right atop them doesn't break the Time Stop? (at least until I cast something like Chain Lightning)







      dnd-5e spells






      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question











      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question










      asked Jan 8 at 22:17









      NicboboNicbobo

      1,9621037




      1,9621037






















          3 Answers
          3






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          7














          Casting cloudkill doesn't break time stop.



          Time stop doesn't break when you do something that affects a creature; it breaks when something you do affects a creature. The active verb is "affects". It breaks at the time the creature is affected, not before.



          (Besides which, we don't know that the creature is going to be affected until it happens. What if you cast a spell that requires a save, and they make their save?)



          The logic of the delayed-AoE spells like cloudkill is that the creature gets hit once on each of its turns that it spends any time inside the AoE. Until time stop breaks, the amount of time the creature has been in the cloud is zero, because time is stopped.






          share|improve this answer
























          • I'm not sure I follow this answer. Your second line, what if a creature makes their save implies that I can cast Phantasmal Force, Dominate Person, and Tasha's Hideous Laughter and if they make each save I the spell is not broken. Also, I think that if the creature is forced to make a save immediately, that counts as affecting the creature. I also fail to really understand the difference in your first sentence.

            – Nicbobo
            Jan 9 at 0:30











          • I would agree. If I cast dominate person and you make your save, then the spell doesn't affect you, just like if I attack you and miss, the attack doesn't affect you.

            – Mark Wells
            Jan 9 at 0:33













          • It's a subtle distinction. Let's see if this helps: It doesn't break when "you do (something that affects a creature)"; it breaks when "(something you do) affects a creature".

            – Mark Wells
            Jan 9 at 0:39





















          5














          Time Stop is yet another poorly written 5e spell requiring some DM adjudication. The key question is whether a spell or effect engaged during the time stop "affects" another creature.



          2 Interpretations:




          1. Does a spell or effect that you use "affect" another creature at all? If so, then it ends the Time Stop.

          2. Does a spell or effect that you use "affect" another creature during the Time Stop? If so, then the Time Stop ends.


          My view is that the most reasonable interpretation of this spell is interpretation 2, as the spell obviously contemplates spell effects which may affect another during the Time Stop, or which may not (potentially eliminating interpretation 1). If we use this interpretation, spells like Moonbeam or Cloudkill wouldn't affect others during the Time Stop because the spell doesn't do anything to them until the start of their next turn. Casting spells which affect other creatures at the beginning or end of their turn would not end Time Stop.






          share|improve this answer































            1














            Cloudkill states:




            When a creature enters the spell's area for the first time on a turn or starts its turn there, that creature must make a Constitution saving throw.




            As the affected creatures aren't experiencing a turn, they aren't entering the Cloudkill. This means they take no damage until the Time Stop is over.



            A spell I would recommend is Delayed Blast Fireball, which would be a minimum of 14d6 and guaranteed max of 17d6.






            share|improve this answer










            New contributor




            SoulMuncherr is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
            Check out our Code of Conduct.





















            • The problem with Delayed Blast Fireball is that even 17d6 [avg 59.5] AoE fire damage is not very much by the time you're using 9th level slots. Best case scenario, you're looking at Delayed Blast Fireball + Teleport (or similar) so you can escape, but even if you stack up 2 AoE spells you're better off just casting Meteor Swarm for 40d6 damage [avg 140] (and then you only use 1 level 9 slot instead multiple slot instead of several). Incendiary Cloud + Forcecage + Teleport is much better, doing 10d8 [avg 45] damage each round for 10 rounds [450 average total damage].

              – James
              23 hours ago











            • Incendiary Cloud doesn't work with Time Stop the way Delayed Blast Fireball does: "When the cloud appears, each creature in it must make a Dexterity saving throw" means Time Stop ends.

              – CapnZapp
              11 hours ago











            Your Answer





            StackExchange.ifUsing("editor", function () {
            return StackExchange.using("mathjaxEditing", function () {
            StackExchange.MarkdownEditor.creationCallbacks.add(function (editor, postfix) {
            StackExchange.mathjaxEditing.prepareWmdForMathJax(editor, postfix, [["\$", "\$"]]);
            });
            });
            }, "mathjax-editing");

            StackExchange.ready(function() {
            var channelOptions = {
            tags: "".split(" "),
            id: "122"
            };
            initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

            StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function() {
            // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
            if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled) {
            StackExchange.using("snippets", function() {
            createEditor();
            });
            }
            else {
            createEditor();
            }
            });

            function createEditor() {
            StackExchange.prepareEditor({
            heartbeatType: 'answer',
            autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
            convertImagesToLinks: false,
            noModals: true,
            showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
            reputationToPostImages: null,
            bindNavPrevention: true,
            postfix: "",
            imageUploader: {
            brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
            contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
            allowUrls: true
            },
            noCode: true, onDemand: true,
            discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
            ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
            });


            }
            });














            draft saved

            draft discarded


















            StackExchange.ready(
            function () {
            StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2frpg.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f138676%2fhow-does-the-spell-time-stop-interact-with-delayed-damage-aoe-spells%23new-answer', 'question_page');
            }
            );

            Post as a guest















            Required, but never shown

























            3 Answers
            3






            active

            oldest

            votes








            3 Answers
            3






            active

            oldest

            votes









            active

            oldest

            votes






            active

            oldest

            votes









            7














            Casting cloudkill doesn't break time stop.



            Time stop doesn't break when you do something that affects a creature; it breaks when something you do affects a creature. The active verb is "affects". It breaks at the time the creature is affected, not before.



            (Besides which, we don't know that the creature is going to be affected until it happens. What if you cast a spell that requires a save, and they make their save?)



            The logic of the delayed-AoE spells like cloudkill is that the creature gets hit once on each of its turns that it spends any time inside the AoE. Until time stop breaks, the amount of time the creature has been in the cloud is zero, because time is stopped.






            share|improve this answer
























            • I'm not sure I follow this answer. Your second line, what if a creature makes their save implies that I can cast Phantasmal Force, Dominate Person, and Tasha's Hideous Laughter and if they make each save I the spell is not broken. Also, I think that if the creature is forced to make a save immediately, that counts as affecting the creature. I also fail to really understand the difference in your first sentence.

              – Nicbobo
              Jan 9 at 0:30











            • I would agree. If I cast dominate person and you make your save, then the spell doesn't affect you, just like if I attack you and miss, the attack doesn't affect you.

              – Mark Wells
              Jan 9 at 0:33













            • It's a subtle distinction. Let's see if this helps: It doesn't break when "you do (something that affects a creature)"; it breaks when "(something you do) affects a creature".

              – Mark Wells
              Jan 9 at 0:39


















            7














            Casting cloudkill doesn't break time stop.



            Time stop doesn't break when you do something that affects a creature; it breaks when something you do affects a creature. The active verb is "affects". It breaks at the time the creature is affected, not before.



            (Besides which, we don't know that the creature is going to be affected until it happens. What if you cast a spell that requires a save, and they make their save?)



            The logic of the delayed-AoE spells like cloudkill is that the creature gets hit once on each of its turns that it spends any time inside the AoE. Until time stop breaks, the amount of time the creature has been in the cloud is zero, because time is stopped.






            share|improve this answer
























            • I'm not sure I follow this answer. Your second line, what if a creature makes their save implies that I can cast Phantasmal Force, Dominate Person, and Tasha's Hideous Laughter and if they make each save I the spell is not broken. Also, I think that if the creature is forced to make a save immediately, that counts as affecting the creature. I also fail to really understand the difference in your first sentence.

              – Nicbobo
              Jan 9 at 0:30











            • I would agree. If I cast dominate person and you make your save, then the spell doesn't affect you, just like if I attack you and miss, the attack doesn't affect you.

              – Mark Wells
              Jan 9 at 0:33













            • It's a subtle distinction. Let's see if this helps: It doesn't break when "you do (something that affects a creature)"; it breaks when "(something you do) affects a creature".

              – Mark Wells
              Jan 9 at 0:39
















            7












            7








            7







            Casting cloudkill doesn't break time stop.



            Time stop doesn't break when you do something that affects a creature; it breaks when something you do affects a creature. The active verb is "affects". It breaks at the time the creature is affected, not before.



            (Besides which, we don't know that the creature is going to be affected until it happens. What if you cast a spell that requires a save, and they make their save?)



            The logic of the delayed-AoE spells like cloudkill is that the creature gets hit once on each of its turns that it spends any time inside the AoE. Until time stop breaks, the amount of time the creature has been in the cloud is zero, because time is stopped.






            share|improve this answer













            Casting cloudkill doesn't break time stop.



            Time stop doesn't break when you do something that affects a creature; it breaks when something you do affects a creature. The active verb is "affects". It breaks at the time the creature is affected, not before.



            (Besides which, we don't know that the creature is going to be affected until it happens. What if you cast a spell that requires a save, and they make their save?)



            The logic of the delayed-AoE spells like cloudkill is that the creature gets hit once on each of its turns that it spends any time inside the AoE. Until time stop breaks, the amount of time the creature has been in the cloud is zero, because time is stopped.







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered Jan 8 at 23:22









            Mark WellsMark Wells

            5,2971438




            5,2971438













            • I'm not sure I follow this answer. Your second line, what if a creature makes their save implies that I can cast Phantasmal Force, Dominate Person, and Tasha's Hideous Laughter and if they make each save I the spell is not broken. Also, I think that if the creature is forced to make a save immediately, that counts as affecting the creature. I also fail to really understand the difference in your first sentence.

              – Nicbobo
              Jan 9 at 0:30











            • I would agree. If I cast dominate person and you make your save, then the spell doesn't affect you, just like if I attack you and miss, the attack doesn't affect you.

              – Mark Wells
              Jan 9 at 0:33













            • It's a subtle distinction. Let's see if this helps: It doesn't break when "you do (something that affects a creature)"; it breaks when "(something you do) affects a creature".

              – Mark Wells
              Jan 9 at 0:39





















            • I'm not sure I follow this answer. Your second line, what if a creature makes their save implies that I can cast Phantasmal Force, Dominate Person, and Tasha's Hideous Laughter and if they make each save I the spell is not broken. Also, I think that if the creature is forced to make a save immediately, that counts as affecting the creature. I also fail to really understand the difference in your first sentence.

              – Nicbobo
              Jan 9 at 0:30











            • I would agree. If I cast dominate person and you make your save, then the spell doesn't affect you, just like if I attack you and miss, the attack doesn't affect you.

              – Mark Wells
              Jan 9 at 0:33













            • It's a subtle distinction. Let's see if this helps: It doesn't break when "you do (something that affects a creature)"; it breaks when "(something you do) affects a creature".

              – Mark Wells
              Jan 9 at 0:39



















            I'm not sure I follow this answer. Your second line, what if a creature makes their save implies that I can cast Phantasmal Force, Dominate Person, and Tasha's Hideous Laughter and if they make each save I the spell is not broken. Also, I think that if the creature is forced to make a save immediately, that counts as affecting the creature. I also fail to really understand the difference in your first sentence.

            – Nicbobo
            Jan 9 at 0:30





            I'm not sure I follow this answer. Your second line, what if a creature makes their save implies that I can cast Phantasmal Force, Dominate Person, and Tasha's Hideous Laughter and if they make each save I the spell is not broken. Also, I think that if the creature is forced to make a save immediately, that counts as affecting the creature. I also fail to really understand the difference in your first sentence.

            – Nicbobo
            Jan 9 at 0:30













            I would agree. If I cast dominate person and you make your save, then the spell doesn't affect you, just like if I attack you and miss, the attack doesn't affect you.

            – Mark Wells
            Jan 9 at 0:33







            I would agree. If I cast dominate person and you make your save, then the spell doesn't affect you, just like if I attack you and miss, the attack doesn't affect you.

            – Mark Wells
            Jan 9 at 0:33















            It's a subtle distinction. Let's see if this helps: It doesn't break when "you do (something that affects a creature)"; it breaks when "(something you do) affects a creature".

            – Mark Wells
            Jan 9 at 0:39







            It's a subtle distinction. Let's see if this helps: It doesn't break when "you do (something that affects a creature)"; it breaks when "(something you do) affects a creature".

            – Mark Wells
            Jan 9 at 0:39















            5














            Time Stop is yet another poorly written 5e spell requiring some DM adjudication. The key question is whether a spell or effect engaged during the time stop "affects" another creature.



            2 Interpretations:




            1. Does a spell or effect that you use "affect" another creature at all? If so, then it ends the Time Stop.

            2. Does a spell or effect that you use "affect" another creature during the Time Stop? If so, then the Time Stop ends.


            My view is that the most reasonable interpretation of this spell is interpretation 2, as the spell obviously contemplates spell effects which may affect another during the Time Stop, or which may not (potentially eliminating interpretation 1). If we use this interpretation, spells like Moonbeam or Cloudkill wouldn't affect others during the Time Stop because the spell doesn't do anything to them until the start of their next turn. Casting spells which affect other creatures at the beginning or end of their turn would not end Time Stop.






            share|improve this answer




























              5














              Time Stop is yet another poorly written 5e spell requiring some DM adjudication. The key question is whether a spell or effect engaged during the time stop "affects" another creature.



              2 Interpretations:




              1. Does a spell or effect that you use "affect" another creature at all? If so, then it ends the Time Stop.

              2. Does a spell or effect that you use "affect" another creature during the Time Stop? If so, then the Time Stop ends.


              My view is that the most reasonable interpretation of this spell is interpretation 2, as the spell obviously contemplates spell effects which may affect another during the Time Stop, or which may not (potentially eliminating interpretation 1). If we use this interpretation, spells like Moonbeam or Cloudkill wouldn't affect others during the Time Stop because the spell doesn't do anything to them until the start of their next turn. Casting spells which affect other creatures at the beginning or end of their turn would not end Time Stop.






              share|improve this answer


























                5












                5








                5







                Time Stop is yet another poorly written 5e spell requiring some DM adjudication. The key question is whether a spell or effect engaged during the time stop "affects" another creature.



                2 Interpretations:




                1. Does a spell or effect that you use "affect" another creature at all? If so, then it ends the Time Stop.

                2. Does a spell or effect that you use "affect" another creature during the Time Stop? If so, then the Time Stop ends.


                My view is that the most reasonable interpretation of this spell is interpretation 2, as the spell obviously contemplates spell effects which may affect another during the Time Stop, or which may not (potentially eliminating interpretation 1). If we use this interpretation, spells like Moonbeam or Cloudkill wouldn't affect others during the Time Stop because the spell doesn't do anything to them until the start of their next turn. Casting spells which affect other creatures at the beginning or end of their turn would not end Time Stop.






                share|improve this answer













                Time Stop is yet another poorly written 5e spell requiring some DM adjudication. The key question is whether a spell or effect engaged during the time stop "affects" another creature.



                2 Interpretations:




                1. Does a spell or effect that you use "affect" another creature at all? If so, then it ends the Time Stop.

                2. Does a spell or effect that you use "affect" another creature during the Time Stop? If so, then the Time Stop ends.


                My view is that the most reasonable interpretation of this spell is interpretation 2, as the spell obviously contemplates spell effects which may affect another during the Time Stop, or which may not (potentially eliminating interpretation 1). If we use this interpretation, spells like Moonbeam or Cloudkill wouldn't affect others during the Time Stop because the spell doesn't do anything to them until the start of their next turn. Casting spells which affect other creatures at the beginning or end of their turn would not end Time Stop.







                share|improve this answer












                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer










                answered Jan 8 at 22:38









                JamesJames

                1795




                1795























                    1














                    Cloudkill states:




                    When a creature enters the spell's area for the first time on a turn or starts its turn there, that creature must make a Constitution saving throw.




                    As the affected creatures aren't experiencing a turn, they aren't entering the Cloudkill. This means they take no damage until the Time Stop is over.



                    A spell I would recommend is Delayed Blast Fireball, which would be a minimum of 14d6 and guaranteed max of 17d6.






                    share|improve this answer










                    New contributor




                    SoulMuncherr is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                    Check out our Code of Conduct.





















                    • The problem with Delayed Blast Fireball is that even 17d6 [avg 59.5] AoE fire damage is not very much by the time you're using 9th level slots. Best case scenario, you're looking at Delayed Blast Fireball + Teleport (or similar) so you can escape, but even if you stack up 2 AoE spells you're better off just casting Meteor Swarm for 40d6 damage [avg 140] (and then you only use 1 level 9 slot instead multiple slot instead of several). Incendiary Cloud + Forcecage + Teleport is much better, doing 10d8 [avg 45] damage each round for 10 rounds [450 average total damage].

                      – James
                      23 hours ago











                    • Incendiary Cloud doesn't work with Time Stop the way Delayed Blast Fireball does: "When the cloud appears, each creature in it must make a Dexterity saving throw" means Time Stop ends.

                      – CapnZapp
                      11 hours ago
















                    1














                    Cloudkill states:




                    When a creature enters the spell's area for the first time on a turn or starts its turn there, that creature must make a Constitution saving throw.




                    As the affected creatures aren't experiencing a turn, they aren't entering the Cloudkill. This means they take no damage until the Time Stop is over.



                    A spell I would recommend is Delayed Blast Fireball, which would be a minimum of 14d6 and guaranteed max of 17d6.






                    share|improve this answer










                    New contributor




                    SoulMuncherr is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                    Check out our Code of Conduct.





















                    • The problem with Delayed Blast Fireball is that even 17d6 [avg 59.5] AoE fire damage is not very much by the time you're using 9th level slots. Best case scenario, you're looking at Delayed Blast Fireball + Teleport (or similar) so you can escape, but even if you stack up 2 AoE spells you're better off just casting Meteor Swarm for 40d6 damage [avg 140] (and then you only use 1 level 9 slot instead multiple slot instead of several). Incendiary Cloud + Forcecage + Teleport is much better, doing 10d8 [avg 45] damage each round for 10 rounds [450 average total damage].

                      – James
                      23 hours ago











                    • Incendiary Cloud doesn't work with Time Stop the way Delayed Blast Fireball does: "When the cloud appears, each creature in it must make a Dexterity saving throw" means Time Stop ends.

                      – CapnZapp
                      11 hours ago














                    1












                    1








                    1







                    Cloudkill states:




                    When a creature enters the spell's area for the first time on a turn or starts its turn there, that creature must make a Constitution saving throw.




                    As the affected creatures aren't experiencing a turn, they aren't entering the Cloudkill. This means they take no damage until the Time Stop is over.



                    A spell I would recommend is Delayed Blast Fireball, which would be a minimum of 14d6 and guaranteed max of 17d6.






                    share|improve this answer










                    New contributor




                    SoulMuncherr is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                    Check out our Code of Conduct.










                    Cloudkill states:




                    When a creature enters the spell's area for the first time on a turn or starts its turn there, that creature must make a Constitution saving throw.




                    As the affected creatures aren't experiencing a turn, they aren't entering the Cloudkill. This means they take no damage until the Time Stop is over.



                    A spell I would recommend is Delayed Blast Fireball, which would be a minimum of 14d6 and guaranteed max of 17d6.







                    share|improve this answer










                    New contributor




                    SoulMuncherr is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                    Check out our Code of Conduct.









                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer








                    edited yesterday









                    V2Blast

                    19.9k357123




                    19.9k357123






                    New contributor




                    SoulMuncherr is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                    Check out our Code of Conduct.









                    answered 2 days ago









                    SoulMuncherrSoulMuncherr

                    994




                    994




                    New contributor




                    SoulMuncherr is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                    Check out our Code of Conduct.





                    New contributor





                    SoulMuncherr is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                    Check out our Code of Conduct.






                    SoulMuncherr is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                    Check out our Code of Conduct.













                    • The problem with Delayed Blast Fireball is that even 17d6 [avg 59.5] AoE fire damage is not very much by the time you're using 9th level slots. Best case scenario, you're looking at Delayed Blast Fireball + Teleport (or similar) so you can escape, but even if you stack up 2 AoE spells you're better off just casting Meteor Swarm for 40d6 damage [avg 140] (and then you only use 1 level 9 slot instead multiple slot instead of several). Incendiary Cloud + Forcecage + Teleport is much better, doing 10d8 [avg 45] damage each round for 10 rounds [450 average total damage].

                      – James
                      23 hours ago











                    • Incendiary Cloud doesn't work with Time Stop the way Delayed Blast Fireball does: "When the cloud appears, each creature in it must make a Dexterity saving throw" means Time Stop ends.

                      – CapnZapp
                      11 hours ago



















                    • The problem with Delayed Blast Fireball is that even 17d6 [avg 59.5] AoE fire damage is not very much by the time you're using 9th level slots. Best case scenario, you're looking at Delayed Blast Fireball + Teleport (or similar) so you can escape, but even if you stack up 2 AoE spells you're better off just casting Meteor Swarm for 40d6 damage [avg 140] (and then you only use 1 level 9 slot instead multiple slot instead of several). Incendiary Cloud + Forcecage + Teleport is much better, doing 10d8 [avg 45] damage each round for 10 rounds [450 average total damage].

                      – James
                      23 hours ago











                    • Incendiary Cloud doesn't work with Time Stop the way Delayed Blast Fireball does: "When the cloud appears, each creature in it must make a Dexterity saving throw" means Time Stop ends.

                      – CapnZapp
                      11 hours ago

















                    The problem with Delayed Blast Fireball is that even 17d6 [avg 59.5] AoE fire damage is not very much by the time you're using 9th level slots. Best case scenario, you're looking at Delayed Blast Fireball + Teleport (or similar) so you can escape, but even if you stack up 2 AoE spells you're better off just casting Meteor Swarm for 40d6 damage [avg 140] (and then you only use 1 level 9 slot instead multiple slot instead of several). Incendiary Cloud + Forcecage + Teleport is much better, doing 10d8 [avg 45] damage each round for 10 rounds [450 average total damage].

                    – James
                    23 hours ago





                    The problem with Delayed Blast Fireball is that even 17d6 [avg 59.5] AoE fire damage is not very much by the time you're using 9th level slots. Best case scenario, you're looking at Delayed Blast Fireball + Teleport (or similar) so you can escape, but even if you stack up 2 AoE spells you're better off just casting Meteor Swarm for 40d6 damage [avg 140] (and then you only use 1 level 9 slot instead multiple slot instead of several). Incendiary Cloud + Forcecage + Teleport is much better, doing 10d8 [avg 45] damage each round for 10 rounds [450 average total damage].

                    – James
                    23 hours ago













                    Incendiary Cloud doesn't work with Time Stop the way Delayed Blast Fireball does: "When the cloud appears, each creature in it must make a Dexterity saving throw" means Time Stop ends.

                    – CapnZapp
                    11 hours ago





                    Incendiary Cloud doesn't work with Time Stop the way Delayed Blast Fireball does: "When the cloud appears, each creature in it must make a Dexterity saving throw" means Time Stop ends.

                    – CapnZapp
                    11 hours ago


















                    draft saved

                    draft discarded




















































                    Thanks for contributing an answer to Role-playing Games Stack Exchange!


                    • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

                    But avoid



                    • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

                    • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.


                    Use MathJax to format equations. MathJax reference.


                    To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




                    draft saved


                    draft discarded














                    StackExchange.ready(
                    function () {
                    StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2frpg.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f138676%2fhow-does-the-spell-time-stop-interact-with-delayed-damage-aoe-spells%23new-answer', 'question_page');
                    }
                    );

                    Post as a guest















                    Required, but never shown





















































                    Required, but never shown














                    Required, but never shown












                    Required, but never shown







                    Required, but never shown

































                    Required, but never shown














                    Required, but never shown












                    Required, but never shown







                    Required, but never shown







                    Popular posts from this blog

                    If I really need a card on my start hand, how many mulligans make sense? [duplicate]

                    Alcedinidae

                    Can an atomic nucleus contain both particles and antiparticles? [duplicate]