The globe of invulnerability spell creates "A barrier with a 10-foot radius [that] surrounds you".
Does that barrier move with the caster, or stays in the same place for the duration regardless of whether the caster moves afterwards?
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Sign up to join this communityThe globe is not mobile.
From description of globe of invulnerability:
An immobile, faintly shimmering barrier springs into existence in a 10-foot radius around you and remains for the duration.
Definition of immobile:
Not moving; motionless.
1.1 Incapable of moving or being moved.
The globe stays immobile sure, but you have to specify in respect to what, since it's cast on self, and specifically mentions that it shimmers into existence "around you". This implies that the point of reference is clearly the caster.
Now RAI, I think it's in reference to the earth, but RAW I don't think that's a solid argument to make since doing so requires the earth to be somehow special, which is just a vain human preconception and special pleading.
Other spells specify that they remain centered on you for the duration, however, which enforces the RAI reading.
I would argue that Gcl's answer is unsatisfying, since movement is relative.
In his example, the sphere still moves in relation to the sun, to you, to the galaxy, to literally everything in the universe except arbitrarily, the earth.
Hm it says that the barrier is immobile. But not IMMOVABLE (like the rod). So in theory as it is a GLOBE you could run around pushing the barrier with you. Like a rodent in a ball.
The barrier doesn't move of its own accord (immobile ie static, like a table or a desk) but it could be moved (movable ie not fixed in place, but could be pushed/carried) assuming you cast it in such a way that the globe is not half buried within the ground?
I dont actually think that's how the spell works but the theory is still there.