So I am playing a warlock with magic initiate (warlock) and according to sage advice (link below) the first level spell I get counts as a known spell since it is for a class I have levels in and I have spell slots to use it.
It does not show up on my spell list even though I meet the requirements and selected it when I picked up the feat. Though I realize this is going to be a niche low priority. Thank you for any updates or assistance here when/if you can get to it.
Rollback Post to RevisionRollBack
The lack of inflection in text means that a reader of any post adds their own inflection as they "verbalize" it in their head. I write long and repetitive in an effort to be clear and avoid my intent from being skewed or inverted. I am also bad at examples. It is common for people to skim my posts pull out the idea they think I mean or want to argue against or focus on my bad example instead of the point I am actually trying to make. I apologies for the confusion my failure to be clear and concise creates.
To post a comment, please login or register a new account.
So I am playing a warlock with magic initiate (warlock) and according to sage advice (link below) the first level spell I get counts as a known spell since it is for a class I have levels in and I have spell slots to use it.
http://media.wizards.com/2015/downloads/dnd/SA_Compendium_1.02.pdf
It does not show up on my spell list even though I meet the requirements and selected it when I picked up the feat. Though I realize this is going to be a niche low priority. Thank you for any updates or assistance here when/if you can get to it.
The lack of inflection in text means that a reader of any post adds their own inflection as they "verbalize" it in their head. I write long and repetitive in an effort to be clear and avoid my intent from being skewed or inverted. I am also bad at examples. It is common for people to skim my posts pull out the idea they think I mean or want to argue against or focus on my bad example instead of the point I am actually trying to make. I apologies for the confusion my failure to be clear and concise creates.