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I followed @Hey I Can Chan advice and put a prismatic burst (MIC 40) on my rapier. Now when I look into the spell description it says that the area of effect is a cone with a 60ft range, and that any creature within area will be targeted by a ray...

Which makes me think that I should pay attention at my placement, because it would be annoying to hit an ally. So I wondered how friendly fire is handled in D&D because so far I never saw it being applied whether in a campaign or a video game, and in case my understanding would be correct, and aside placing myself in a situation where no ally can possibly be in the cone, how are those situations handled?

Beside, my current character can easily change its placement by tumbling or using dimension leap, but I have a friend who is also planning to use the effect. I was wondering if there were items for either avoiding to hit allies or for allies to avoid being hit by a friend, and how to use flanking tactics without having a friend in the potential cone area..

Thanks for your advices.

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6 Answers 6

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You unwittingly have two different questions without realizing it.

Question 1: How do I avoid injuring my allies with the Prismatic Burst on my melee weapon?

Answer 1: Easily. The Prismatic Burst weapon enhancement only affects the target of your confirmed critical hit. "Whenever you score a successful critical hit with this weapon, . . . , subjecting the target to a prismatic spray effect." You do not get a free casting of the spell on an area, but just an effect on a single target.

Question 2: How do I avoid injuring my allies with area-effect spells?

Answer 2: By spell selection and tactics. This can be a big and dramatic part of D&D 3.5 tactical combat. One climactic moment in a game I played involved me defeating our opponent with a fireball that killed one of the party, but saved the rest of us from almost certain doom. Those using area effect spells also generally choose their zones very carefully to maximize damage to the enemy and to avoid injuring allies. While the tactics are not historical in any way, this does lead to in-game tactics of spreading apart and using cover. Regardless, you generally cannot fireball into a melee without endangering your allies: it's one of the trade-offs.

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  • \$\begingroup\$ Excellent answer! I was surprised at this issue in prismatic burst but I neglected to actually check it. \$\endgroup\$
    – KRyan
    Apr 15, 2014 at 14:52
  • \$\begingroup\$ Yeah, this should be closer to the top. Prismatic Spraying everything would be an issue... but turns out it doesn't do that. Crisis averted. \$\endgroup\$
    – Ernir
    Apr 15, 2014 at 14:56
  • \$\begingroup\$ Thanks, I missed that part of the description. And you also replied to my third (untold) question "how to not look ridiculous with a rapier sending multicolor laser rays like in a giant discotheque?" \$\endgroup\$
    – Epeedefeu
    Apr 15, 2014 at 15:26
  • \$\begingroup\$ I believe that the description mentions the light surging down the blade into the target... \$\endgroup\$
    – Dane
    Apr 15, 2014 at 16:00
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By default, attacks against Ally's/PCs work just the same as attacks against enemies/monsters

Unless you have a feat, feature, or other item that somehow affects attacks against your PC allies and they are in the cone described they they will also be subject to the attack.

Prismatic Burst is not your friend, the fact that it only occurs when you crit means you have no control over when it goes off. You'll have to balance playing safe (ie avoiding flanking, trying to make it so that if a burst did go off you'd hit the least amount of friendlies) and the cost of that (you're not getting or giving flanking) vs. if you just played normally and risked all of that friendly fire.

That said if you do decide to keep it and try to use it here is the only advice I can give to relatively optimize using it.

Tactics

Front Toward Enemy

  1. Be the first to act. You've basically got a magical claymore built into your sword. By being the player who acts first you'll not have to worry about your allies and if you act first or early in the imitative, you'll probably fight enemies that are more closely clustered allowing you to get more targets out of the ability.
  2. Don't flank with allies. Simply put once everyone gets tangled together you can't hope to avoid hitting friendlies if you are flanking with them. If however you are at a right angle with an ally you could still safely attack an enemy and not hit an ally.
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This pertains more to the second question, "How do I avoid injuring my allies with area-effect spells?"

There are some really good points presented here by Dane, Joshua, and CatLord, but they all overlook one very specific thing that gets left out of most tabletop games, especially those on a grid mat: the third dimension.

Use of the z-coordinate doesn't help a whole lot with ranged touch, line effects, or most cone blasts, but it can play a very integral part in preventing friendly-fire with burst area-of-effect spells.

For example, assume your party is fighting a frost giant, and there are two friendly fighters in melee with the fearsome foe. You can set off a fireball 15 feet above the giant and prevent it from hitting any of your comrades, regardless of which side they are on (assuming they are on the ground and not over 10 feet tall).

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As @Dane pointed out, you don't get to actually cast a prismatic spray when you hit with a prismatic weapon. You just have your terget suffer the same effects as he has been hit with one.

This leaves open your second question, which I'm going to address in its general case.

Avoiding hitting your allies with friendly fire from AoE spells is an art.

  • An art where the archmage PrC, with the option to choose some squares and just let the spell avoid your friends that are stepping there, certainly excels.
  • Without the high level prestige class, the metamagic feat Sculpt Spell lets you change a huge area into different forms that are easier to deploy on the battlefield in enemy squares only.
  • I do agree with @FinniMcFinger's idea of using the 3D-ness of your spheres and cones to hit less grounded enemies, but be aware that actual 3D shapes are hard to visualize and could slow down your game, especially because you need to calculate distances by square-to-square increments and nobody told us how to approximate movement along a 3D diagonal. I find it reasonable to have cones hit just a line. I have no idea if it's a 1-square or a 2-square wide line, though.
  • You can also have your fellow party members know your tactics and don't get in the middle of the perfect spot every damn time, unless they have high saves, evasion/mettle, have a reliable way of rerolling 1s or not automatically fail their save on a 1 ...and your spell allows for a save.
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How to limit magical friendly fire risks during a fight

Tactics:

  1. Train your fellow players, to give your spells consideration and open space. Before a combat starts, tell them the kinds of spells you've prepared and the types of enemies to leave you space for. Area of affect, etc.

  2. Choose spells that say 'enemies only' or have direct targeting.

Feats:

  1. Spell Sculpt: shape the area of spell

  2. Selective Spell: Screen an ally from the affect of a spell

Magic items:

Metamagic Rods, (greater, lesser, least):
Same as Feats above. Keep a couple of these on your belt.

Spellguard Rings. Page 127 of Complete Mage.
Pair of rings; One on caster and other wearer is immune to spells cast by the first ring. Might be able to make multiple pairs in-tune with the prime ring. Thus making your party immune to your spells. Great for combat spells, sucks for needing a quick protection spell. ;) Downside: takes a ring slot for each wearer.

Prismatic Burst

I see it was noted already, but some other answers seem not to know that weapon burst affects, only apply to the target of the hit. Prismatic burst, on a crit, affects the damaged person only. Not the allies flanking the target.

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To add to Joshua Aslan Smith's answer, Prismatic Spray is a spell that targets everyone un the area but tactics is key. Certain spells will explicitly say something like "all allies" or "all enemies", but more often you'll see things like "humanoid" (Mass Hold Person), or even "Mass Cure [Whatever] Wounds" has different effects based on creature type or alignment (Holy Word/Blasphemy). So if you happen to keep spells that can't affect your party members (or maybe just their pets/summons/familiars - see below) then you don't need to be as concerned.

While I agree with Joshua about attacking before your allies move in, you don't necessarily have to go first. Strategy would suggest that you and anyone else attempting ranged combat could go in any order as long as nobody decides to run into the hornet's nest right away before the volley is complete. Something like Precise Shot could work for an archer, but it's still fairly limited in scope. If you want to take risks, let your allies with Improved Evasion dart in but that's rarely worth the risk unless there's a greater plan in effect, such as resistance/protection spells against fire on your allies before hurling that fireball.

Also in theory, advantageous terrain could add to being your best friend. Should you be able to choose your terrain wisely enough you can let certain melee characters move in, get into total concealment from your LoS but still have reach on an enemy. It assures them the save without the above risks.

tl;dr: It's all in the planning. Give allies cover, buff them, use spells that can't target them, or keep them out of the way.

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