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Spells
Overview | All spells | Cantrips | Level 1 | Level 2 | Level 3 | Level 4 | Level 5 | Level 6 |
Spells are magical effects that are created by creatures via spellcasting.[note 1] Spells are frequently cast to deal damage and provide healing, or to inflict conditions on the targets.
All classes are capable of casting spells with the help of scrolls and magic items, and classes with the Spellcasting or Pact Magic features – called spellcasters – have spell slots they can expend to cast spells they know, without the need for scrolls.
Overview
Spells |
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Lists of spells by level |
Lists of spells by school |
Lists of spells by class |
Other lists |
Spells are created from the Weave, the magical energies of the multiverse. They are conjured through experience, knowledge, or innate ability, or via the use of scrolls and magical items.
Spell levels
All spells have a level – a measure of how powerful a spell is, as well as how difficult it is to cast it. To cast a spell, the caster must usually expend a spell slot of sufficient level. Spells cast from scrolls do not consume spell slots when cast, nor do most spells granted by magic items.
Level 0 spells are called cantrips, and can always be cast at will, without expending a spell slot.
Spellcasting ability
Every class – including those without the Spellcasting feature – has a designated ability known as their spellcasting ability, which represents their capacity to cast spells.[note 2]
Spells learned from taking levels in a class will use that class' spellcasting ability modifier. Spells learned from scrolls count as Wizard spells (since learning from scrolls is a Wizard feature) and thus use Intelligence.[Needs Verification] Spells from other sources use the spellcasting ability of the class the creature most recently took a first level in.[note 3][note 4]
Spell properties
Each spell belongs to a school which defines its general purpose, and all spells have a range at which they can be cast, and a specified target or area of effect. A spell may have an instantaneous effect when cast (for example a magical attack), or a spell may have an effect which persists for a specified duration (measured in turns).
Most spells can be interrupted by creatures.
before they are cast, and most spells cannot be cast bySchools of magic
Every spell belongs to one of eight schools of magic: abjuration, conjuration, divination, enchantment, evocation, illusion, necromancy, or transmutation. Some class features only benefit spells of a specific school.
Casting time
All spells have a casting time that determines whether it requires the caster to take an action, bonus action, or a reaction. Most spells require the caster to take an action.
Spell saves
Harmful spells which don't require an attack roll, such spells that target an area or a specific point in space – or that affect a target directly – often allow targeted creatures to attempt a save against the spell, potentially ignoring or reducing the spell's effect.
The Difficulty Class (DC) of these saves – called the spell save DC – is generally based on the caster's spellcasting DC:
- Examples of spells that require saves
Certain equipment worn by the caster can also affect their Spell DCs.
Spell attack rolls
Some harmful spells – typically those cast in the form of rays or as projectiles – require the caster to make an attack roll against the target's AC in order to determine if their spell attack is a hit or a miss.
The caster adds their spellcasting ability modifier, as well as their proficiency bonus, to the results of the attack roll:
- Examples of spells that require spell attacks
Concentration
Most spells with a duration require Concentration to maintain them. A caster may only maintain the effect of one concentration spell at a time. If concentration on a spell is broken, the spell's effects are ended immediately.
Ending concentration
Although concentration normally lasts for a spell's full duration, or until another concentration spell is cast, there are multiple ways for concentration to break:
- Manually
- Concentration can be ended by the player at any time via the “X” on the current concentration spell's icon, displayed next to the caster's main portrait.
- Taking damage
- Any time a creature concentrating on a spell takes damage, they make a Constitution save against a DC equal to half the damage taken, or 10, whichever is higher.[note 5] If the save fails, concentration ends.
- Conditions
- Some conditions – such as or – also end concentration, without allowing a save.
- Long rests
- Taking a long rest ends concentration.
- Dismissing companion
- Sending a companion to camp or otherwise removing them from the active party ends their concentration.
Spellcasters
Spellcasters can either be full casters – meaning they can learn up to 6th level spells, half casters – meaning they can learn up to 3rd level spells, or one-third casters – meaning they can learn up to 2nd level spells. Non spellcasters do not gain or add spell slots.
Full casters:
Half casters:
One-third casters:
- Arcane Trickster, rogue subclass
- Eldritch Knight, fighter subclass
Non spellcasters:
- Monk including subclasses
- Barbarian including subclasses
- Rogue (other than Arcane Trickster)
- Fighter (other than Eldritch Knight)
Known spells
Known spells are spells generally learned from taking levels in a class with the Spellcasting or Pact Magic features. Each caster class has access to its own list of spells, though there is significant overlap between classes.
The following classes must learn spells through leveling up:
All of these classes, with the exception of wizard, also have access to the Replacement Spell feature, which allows them to swap a known spell each time a new level is taken in them. While wizards do not have access to this feature, they can instead learn new spells from scrolls, without needing to give up an already known spell.
The following classes automatically learn all their available spells when a level is taken in them:
Prepared spells
Some casters – known as prepared spellcasters to set them apart from spontaneous spellcasters – need to prepare a smaller selection of their known spells in order to cast them. Spells can be prepared at any time except during combat.
Prepared spellcasters include:
The number of prepared spells each class can have at a time is equal to spellcasting ability modifier + class level (minimum of 1).
Additionally, spells granted by racial features or by certain class features (such as by cleric Domains) are considered inherent and are always prepared.
Some spells with ongoing effects that do not require concentration, like
or , must remain in the caster's prepared spells list after being cast, or their effects will end.Spell slots
All spellcasters have spell slots, which they expend to cast their known spells. Cantrips do not expend spell slots and can be cast at will. Depleted spell slots are generally replenished by taking a Long Rest (Short Rest for Warlocks), though there are methods of creating additional slots, or replenishing expended ones.
A spell of a given level requires a spell slot of the same level or higher to be expended to cast it. Many spells will be upcast when cast with a higher spell slot, making them more powerful. Even if it gains no other benefit, a spell always counts as a spell of the level of the slot used to cast it.
Spellcasting
ESL | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 2 | - | - | - | - | - |
2 | 3 | - | - | - | - | - |
3 | 4 | 2 | - | - | - | - |
4 | 4 | 3 | - | - | - | - |
5 | 4 | 3 | 2 | - | - | - |
6 | 4 | 3 | 3 | - | - | - |
7 | 4 | 3 | 3 | 1 | - | - |
8 | 4 | 3 | 3 | 2 | - | - |
9 | 4 | 3 | 3 | 3 | 1 | - |
10 | 4 | 3 | 3 | 3 | 2 | - |
11 | 4 | 3 | 3 | 3 | 2 | 1 |
12 | 4 | 3 | 3 | 3 | 2 | 1 |
A caster's available Spellcasting spell slots are determined by the caster's effective spellcaster level (ESL). A full caster's ESL is exactly their class level, whereas the ESL of half-casters is equal to half (rounded down) and one-third casters is equal to one third their level (rounded to nearest).
When multiple classes with the Spellcasting feature are chosen for a character, the creature's total ESL is instead the summed ESL of every individual spellcasting class they have taken a level in, each rounded down.
Pact Magic
Warlocks do not cast spells through the Spellcasting feature, but through their unique Pact Magic feature. Spell slots granted by Pact Magic are always of the highest level the Warlock can cast, and are replenished on a short rest. Spells cast using Pact Magic are always upcast at the highest possible level.
To distinguish them from Spellcasting spell slots, Pact Magic spell slots have a unique colour:
Spell slots gained from Pact Magic are calculated differently than those gained from Spellcasting. As such, levels taken in warlock are ignored when calculating ESL.
Other uses of spell slots
Some Wizard subclass features (such as Arcane Ward and Grim Harvest) and the Paladin's Divine Smite ability have varying effects depending on level of the spell or spell slot used to power them.
Ritual spells
When a ritual spell is cast outside of combat/turn-based mode, it does not consume spell slots and is effectively free to cast. Ritual spells consume spell slots as normal in combat/turn-based mode.
Scrolls
Spells can be cast from scrolls that are bought, found or looted. Spells cast from scrolls cannot be upcast (cast with a higher level spell slot for additional benefits e.g. to affect more targets). Spells cast from scrolls cannot benefit from metamagic. Scrolls cannot be created (scribed from a wizard's spellbook). Wizards can learn spells from scrolls (scribe the spell from a scroll into their spellbook). See Wizard/Spell scribing.
See also
Footnotes
- ↑ The term spellcasting refers both to the act of casting spells, as well as the Spellcasting class feature. The latter is always capitalised, whereas the former is generally not.
- ↑ Some spells designate a specific spellcasting ability regardless of the class casting them. This is most commonly a result of spells obtained via racial features.
- ↑ A level 5 wizard that takes 1 level in sorcerer will use Charisma as their spellcasting ability for non-wizard spells, even if they later take more levels in wizard. However, if they take a level in cleric, they will use Wisdom as their spellcasting ability modifier instead, as this is their most recently acquired class.
- ↑ Fighters and rogues will only provide their spellcasting ability if they are level 3 and have the appropriate subclass (Eldritch Knight and Arcane Trickster respectively).
- ↑ Constitution saves are sometimes erroneously referred to as a Constitution checks.
- ↑ Warlocks have the Pact Magic feature, which functions similarly to Spellcasting.
External links
Spell on the Forgotten Realms Wiki