On Fri, 11 Aug 2023 21:00:15 -0700 (PDT), mike <
[email protected]>
wrote:
It's Invisibility, not Invisibility plus Minor Illusion.
You can see through invisible objects. That's what it means
to be invisible. Any other interpretation adds capabilities
to the spell that don't exist in the rules, and can't be
adjudicated consistently.
How fun to revive a twenty-two year old debate!
https://groups.google.com/g/rec.games.frp.dnd/c/7QYF7v2NUlc if you
want to catch up ;-)
Anyway, it all depends on the edition you're playing. If we go by RAW
and look at the spell descriptions in the various Player Handbooks:
- OD&D (White Box) says "a person or thing"
- D&D Basic (Holmes, Moldvay, BECMI, Cyclopedia) had an effect on "one
creature or object" ("any person or object" in Holmes)
- AD&D 1st & 2nd Edition specify the area of effect is "1 creature".
- D&D 3rd Edition also targets the spell at a 'creature'
- 3.5 Edition specifies "1 creature or object"
- 4th Edition says "You or one creature".
- 5th Edition also specifies "creature" (the number is variable).
So if you are playing OD&D, D&D Basic, or 3.5th Edition, your spell
can affect the door. Otherwise, the spell is ineffective because it
only affects creatures.
Well, unless the door is alive, I suppose. And, strangely, when cast
on a creature it DOES affect anything they are wearing or carrying.
Still, most editions are fairly specific that the spell only works on
living things, and not inanimate objects.
But if you happen to be playing the appropriate edition and the spell
does work, you should be able to see through the door. Arguably there
are spells in the other editions that can make objects invisible, but
these are not the same thing as the 2nd level spell the players in
question were using.
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