• ocassionallyaduck@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Bad DM.

    Nat 20 doesn’t just let you do whatever. Cure wounds could easily be interpreted as returning the body to its natural state as the soul percieves it. If wanted his legs back more than anything so much that his soul held onto it like phantom pain, then I would say maybe a Greater Restoration could if he wanted that.

    But if he’d grown accoustomed to his new life and his new legs and no longer sought to “restore” anything, having made peace with his injury, then no, greater restoration would just restore him to his own healthy self image. And a spell like cure wounds would do absolute dick.

    I’d love to let this play out, narrate the lack of effect of this spell, and kick this asshole from the table.

      • ocassionallyaduck@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        Interesting question. I suppose it would in the version I laid out. And why not. Hahahah.

        Honestly could make for an extremely compelling character arc to explore, but may hit close to home for some players

    • vithigar@lemmy.ca
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      3 months ago

      My read of simple HP restoring magical healing, at least in D&D, is simply that it is equivalent to accelerated natural healing with no potential for complications. So if whatever ailment you’re trying to heal wouldn’t also be healed by any arbitrary amount of rest and recuperation then Cure Wounds won’t cut it either.

    • nagaram@startrek.website
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      3 months ago

      There’s a book I read that takes place in Faerun where a cleric is getting tortured by ogre clerics by having his limbs broken and then they use heal spells to heal his limbs at odd angles. After he’s freed, they break his limbs again, heal them in braces, but he had a permanent limp

      DnD healing can only do so much before its just some high power reality changing magic.

      • ocassionallyaduck@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        Exactly. If that adventurer wanted to “cure” what he saw as a flaw, he could quest for a much more specialized magical healer or more powerful spell to enable it. I mention greater restoration, but true polymorph to his original form, or some kind of time manipulation, etc. There are options, at a high enough toer of magic, to undo injury, but that power has to have been attained.

        This is why amputations aren’t cured by a cure wounds. You can’t just grow a pile of pork by hacking into a live pig and repeatedly healing it.

    • Dasus@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      narrate the lack of effect of this spell, and kick this asshole from the table.

      You had me in the first half. First 95%

    • techMayhem@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      I am unsure from what this is from, but I once read a story in which a form of healing magic exists. One requirement for it to work was that the person being healed needs to be OK with it. If someone tried to cure your paralyzed legs and you don’t want them to be “fixed” as you don’t view as an issue or being paralyzed is just part of how you are, then the magic can’t work on you.