Are sorcerers unable to use the Careful Spell metamagic option on themselves?





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$begingroup$


The sorcerer's Careful Spell metamagic option states the it applies to “other creatures”:




When you cast a spell that forces other creatures to make a saving
throw, you can protect some of those creatures from the spell full
force. To do so, you spend 1 sorcery point and choose a member of
those creatures up to your Charisma modifier (minimum of one
creature). A chosen creature automatically succeeds on its saving
throw against the spell.




Does that mean the caster can’t use it to protect himself from the effects of the spell if you happen to cast an AoE spell like ice storm?










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$endgroup$



















    7












    $begingroup$


    The sorcerer's Careful Spell metamagic option states the it applies to “other creatures”:




    When you cast a spell that forces other creatures to make a saving
    throw, you can protect some of those creatures from the spell full
    force. To do so, you spend 1 sorcery point and choose a member of
    those creatures up to your Charisma modifier (minimum of one
    creature). A chosen creature automatically succeeds on its saving
    throw against the spell.




    Does that mean the caster can’t use it to protect himself from the effects of the spell if you happen to cast an AoE spell like ice storm?










    share|improve this question











    $endgroup$















      7












      7








      7





      $begingroup$


      The sorcerer's Careful Spell metamagic option states the it applies to “other creatures”:




      When you cast a spell that forces other creatures to make a saving
      throw, you can protect some of those creatures from the spell full
      force. To do so, you spend 1 sorcery point and choose a member of
      those creatures up to your Charisma modifier (minimum of one
      creature). A chosen creature automatically succeeds on its saving
      throw against the spell.




      Does that mean the caster can’t use it to protect himself from the effects of the spell if you happen to cast an AoE spell like ice storm?










      share|improve this question











      $endgroup$




      The sorcerer's Careful Spell metamagic option states the it applies to “other creatures”:




      When you cast a spell that forces other creatures to make a saving
      throw, you can protect some of those creatures from the spell full
      force. To do so, you spend 1 sorcery point and choose a member of
      those creatures up to your Charisma modifier (minimum of one
      creature). A chosen creature automatically succeeds on its saving
      throw against the spell.




      Does that mean the caster can’t use it to protect himself from the effects of the spell if you happen to cast an AoE spell like ice storm?







      dnd-5e spells sorcerer metamagic targeting






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      share|improve this question













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      share|improve this question








      edited 56 mins ago









      V2Blast

      27.6k598167




      27.6k598167










      asked 6 hours ago









      Jorge CórdobaJorge Córdoba

      409311




      409311






















          1 Answer
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          5












          $begingroup$

          Yes, you can't protect yourself



          The rule is consistent with using 'other creature' to mean 'you are not included', so with this wording you can't use Careful spell metamagic to protect yourself.



          However,



          I don't see any problem if you ruled the caster can be included. I've DM'ed and played sorcerer with Careful Spell allowed on themselves and there is no problem at all.





          This seems intentional. The wording of Sculpt Spells from Evocation Wizard also suggest the same thing:




          When you cast an evocation spell that affects other creatures that you can see, you can choose a number of them equal to 1 + the spell’s level.




          and the tweet from Jeremy Crawford seems to suggest so




          Careful Spell and Sculpt Spells work as intended.







          share|improve this answer











          $endgroup$













          • $begingroup$
            I could argue that it is definitely intentional because at three different times it references other creatures. "Other creatures", "some of those creatures", "choose a number of those creatures"
            $endgroup$
            – Blake Steel
            5 hours ago










          • $begingroup$
            @BlakeSteel no. The 'those creatures' refer to the group mentioned previously. The previous group has been defined with an error (excluding the caster), thus all references to the defined group is error. Both wording does not clarify better whether it's intentional or not.
            $endgroup$
            – Vylix
            5 hours ago












          Your Answer








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          1 Answer
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          active

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          active

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          5












          $begingroup$

          Yes, you can't protect yourself



          The rule is consistent with using 'other creature' to mean 'you are not included', so with this wording you can't use Careful spell metamagic to protect yourself.



          However,



          I don't see any problem if you ruled the caster can be included. I've DM'ed and played sorcerer with Careful Spell allowed on themselves and there is no problem at all.





          This seems intentional. The wording of Sculpt Spells from Evocation Wizard also suggest the same thing:




          When you cast an evocation spell that affects other creatures that you can see, you can choose a number of them equal to 1 + the spell’s level.




          and the tweet from Jeremy Crawford seems to suggest so




          Careful Spell and Sculpt Spells work as intended.







          share|improve this answer











          $endgroup$













          • $begingroup$
            I could argue that it is definitely intentional because at three different times it references other creatures. "Other creatures", "some of those creatures", "choose a number of those creatures"
            $endgroup$
            – Blake Steel
            5 hours ago










          • $begingroup$
            @BlakeSteel no. The 'those creatures' refer to the group mentioned previously. The previous group has been defined with an error (excluding the caster), thus all references to the defined group is error. Both wording does not clarify better whether it's intentional or not.
            $endgroup$
            – Vylix
            5 hours ago
















          5












          $begingroup$

          Yes, you can't protect yourself



          The rule is consistent with using 'other creature' to mean 'you are not included', so with this wording you can't use Careful spell metamagic to protect yourself.



          However,



          I don't see any problem if you ruled the caster can be included. I've DM'ed and played sorcerer with Careful Spell allowed on themselves and there is no problem at all.





          This seems intentional. The wording of Sculpt Spells from Evocation Wizard also suggest the same thing:




          When you cast an evocation spell that affects other creatures that you can see, you can choose a number of them equal to 1 + the spell’s level.




          and the tweet from Jeremy Crawford seems to suggest so




          Careful Spell and Sculpt Spells work as intended.







          share|improve this answer











          $endgroup$













          • $begingroup$
            I could argue that it is definitely intentional because at three different times it references other creatures. "Other creatures", "some of those creatures", "choose a number of those creatures"
            $endgroup$
            – Blake Steel
            5 hours ago










          • $begingroup$
            @BlakeSteel no. The 'those creatures' refer to the group mentioned previously. The previous group has been defined with an error (excluding the caster), thus all references to the defined group is error. Both wording does not clarify better whether it's intentional or not.
            $endgroup$
            – Vylix
            5 hours ago














          5












          5








          5





          $begingroup$

          Yes, you can't protect yourself



          The rule is consistent with using 'other creature' to mean 'you are not included', so with this wording you can't use Careful spell metamagic to protect yourself.



          However,



          I don't see any problem if you ruled the caster can be included. I've DM'ed and played sorcerer with Careful Spell allowed on themselves and there is no problem at all.





          This seems intentional. The wording of Sculpt Spells from Evocation Wizard also suggest the same thing:




          When you cast an evocation spell that affects other creatures that you can see, you can choose a number of them equal to 1 + the spell’s level.




          and the tweet from Jeremy Crawford seems to suggest so




          Careful Spell and Sculpt Spells work as intended.







          share|improve this answer











          $endgroup$



          Yes, you can't protect yourself



          The rule is consistent with using 'other creature' to mean 'you are not included', so with this wording you can't use Careful spell metamagic to protect yourself.



          However,



          I don't see any problem if you ruled the caster can be included. I've DM'ed and played sorcerer with Careful Spell allowed on themselves and there is no problem at all.





          This seems intentional. The wording of Sculpt Spells from Evocation Wizard also suggest the same thing:




          When you cast an evocation spell that affects other creatures that you can see, you can choose a number of them equal to 1 + the spell’s level.




          and the tweet from Jeremy Crawford seems to suggest so




          Careful Spell and Sculpt Spells work as intended.








          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited 5 hours ago

























          answered 5 hours ago









          VylixVylix

          14.4k260163




          14.4k260163












          • $begingroup$
            I could argue that it is definitely intentional because at three different times it references other creatures. "Other creatures", "some of those creatures", "choose a number of those creatures"
            $endgroup$
            – Blake Steel
            5 hours ago










          • $begingroup$
            @BlakeSteel no. The 'those creatures' refer to the group mentioned previously. The previous group has been defined with an error (excluding the caster), thus all references to the defined group is error. Both wording does not clarify better whether it's intentional or not.
            $endgroup$
            – Vylix
            5 hours ago


















          • $begingroup$
            I could argue that it is definitely intentional because at three different times it references other creatures. "Other creatures", "some of those creatures", "choose a number of those creatures"
            $endgroup$
            – Blake Steel
            5 hours ago










          • $begingroup$
            @BlakeSteel no. The 'those creatures' refer to the group mentioned previously. The previous group has been defined with an error (excluding the caster), thus all references to the defined group is error. Both wording does not clarify better whether it's intentional or not.
            $endgroup$
            – Vylix
            5 hours ago
















          $begingroup$
          I could argue that it is definitely intentional because at three different times it references other creatures. "Other creatures", "some of those creatures", "choose a number of those creatures"
          $endgroup$
          – Blake Steel
          5 hours ago




          $begingroup$
          I could argue that it is definitely intentional because at three different times it references other creatures. "Other creatures", "some of those creatures", "choose a number of those creatures"
          $endgroup$
          – Blake Steel
          5 hours ago












          $begingroup$
          @BlakeSteel no. The 'those creatures' refer to the group mentioned previously. The previous group has been defined with an error (excluding the caster), thus all references to the defined group is error. Both wording does not clarify better whether it's intentional or not.
          $endgroup$
          – Vylix
          5 hours ago




          $begingroup$
          @BlakeSteel no. The 'those creatures' refer to the group mentioned previously. The previous group has been defined with an error (excluding the caster), thus all references to the defined group is error. Both wording does not clarify better whether it's intentional or not.
          $endgroup$
          – Vylix
          5 hours ago


















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