Ultimately, it comes down to how the sentence has been constructed. Was it:
"to teleport to an unoccupied space [you can see within 10 feet of yourself] or [within 5 feet of a creature that is within 30 feet of you and holding one of your Adventurer’s Atlas maps]"
That would be a very poorly constructed sentence. I'm not going to assume WOTC is that bad at their jobs, absent other evidence suggesting that's what they actually meant.
Which is why there exists ambiguity in the writing - it is, in fact, a poorly constructed sentence. The great irony though? All the folks asserting there is “one correct way” to read the sentence sort of prove why this kind of ambiguity comes into fruition.
When someone has an preconceived view of what is right, the human mind is preconditioned to construe ambiguity to support their view. This happens shockingly often when folks write rules - everyone involved in the rulemaking process know how the sentence is supposed to read and tunnel visions in on that reading. As such, they do not see it from the perspective of those outside the system writing the rules, so the ambiguity gets lost.
That is not really to say Wizards is bad at their job - their rate of tunnel vision ambiguity is far lower than plenty of other games I’ve seen (or, frankly real world laws and contracts - these kinds of ambiguities are a large part of why lawyers exist). Wizards staff have also discussed before that sometimes they like a little ambiguity, since it lets individual tables come up with their own interpretations. This, frankly, is a fine place to have a home rule step in and resolve ambiguity - neither interpretation is wrong and neither iteration would end up being particularly game breaking as they’re extremely self-limited.
Just because you're incapable of unwilling to see things from a different point of view
I'm neither of those things. This is just a bad interpretation. Maybe you should give yourself a refresher on your signature
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Active characters:
Edoumiaond Willegume "Eddie" Podslee, Vegetanian scholar (College of Spirits bard) Lan Kidogo, mapach archaeologist and treasure hunter (Knowledge cleric) Peter "the Pied Piper" Hausler, human con artist/remover of vermin (Circle of the Shepherd druid) PIPA - Planar Interception/Protection Aeormaton, warforged bodyguard and ex-wizard hunter (Warrior of the Elements monk/Cartographer artificer) Xhekhetiel, halfling survivor of a Betrayer Gods cult (Runechild sorcerer/fighter)
Which is why there exists ambiguity in the writing - it is, in fact, a poorly constructed sentence.
It isn't, though, regardless of people's efforts to find real ambiguity when it isn't there
Conditions for using the feature and what it does are set ("On your turn, you can spend an amount of movement equal to half your Speed (round down) to teleport to an unoccupied space you can see"), then two use cases are defined ("within 10 feet of yourself", or "within 5 feet of a creature that is within 30 feet of you and holding one of your Adventurer’s Atlas maps"), with one final condition added ("You can’t use this benefit if your Speed is 0")
English grammar isn't algebra (far, far from it lol), but arguing that "you can see" applies to only one of those use cases and not the other is like arguing that ab(x + y) doesn't equal abx + aby. If they wanted b to only apply to x and not y, they really should have said so
I'm speaking here as someone who's both playing a Cartographer artificer in a weekly game and has every incentive to buy into this argument, and someone who earns their living as a writer and editor. The sentence structure isn't the problem here. wagnarokkr's Rule of Cool approach is a far better one than this sort of grammatical pretzel logic if you want to argue for being able to teleport to a spot you cannot see -- an ability, I might add, that isn't available in a spell until dimension door at 4th level, unless I'm forgetting one
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Active characters:
Edoumiaond Willegume "Eddie" Podslee, Vegetanian scholar (College of Spirits bard) Lan Kidogo, mapach archaeologist and treasure hunter (Knowledge cleric) Peter "the Pied Piper" Hausler, human con artist/remover of vermin (Circle of the Shepherd druid) PIPA - Planar Interception/Protection Aeormaton, warforged bodyguard and ex-wizard hunter (Warrior of the Elements monk/Cartographer artificer) Xhekhetiel, halfling survivor of a Betrayer Gods cult (Runechild sorcerer/fighter)
Ambiguity exists when the same rule can be read in two different ways. In law, when we want to show a rule is ambiguous, there is a very simple test we apply--we use letters to break up where the clauses sit without changing the underlying terms. If there are two or more ways to add parentheticals that result in a clear and grammatically correct writing, then the underlying rule is ambiguous. It does not matter if one reading might be "more easy" than the other in its original form - if you can read the same thing different ways, there is an ambiguity. This is why, when I write actual statutes, I always specifically include the listed parenthetical signals--it is a much easier way of removing ambiguity without having to turn over backwards to address all the ways English can be twisted. Wizards does not do this in D&D (they do in Magic's Comprehensive Rules) because it looks a bit formalistic and messy and is not exactly easy for laypeople to read. That is a perfectly valid stylistic choice that sometimes might cause confusion, as in this case, but, more often than not, is going to be fine.
Applying this test here clearly shows the ambiguity. Both the below sentences are grammatically correct and unambiguous - but only are such because of the placement of the signals within. Thus, the underlying sentence contains, on its face, an ambiguity. There really should be no question of that - it is plain to see for anyone with a basic understanding of how to write and interpret rules. But, the fact folks are continuing to argue against it sort of proves my point above - the human mind is preconditioned to accept its reading and will interpret sentence structure in such a way as to fixate on those preconditions. Not sure I have anything else to say on this subject beyond that, so probably will not be posting again on this thread unless someone raises something novel.
Portal Jump. On your turn, you can spend an amount of movement equal to half your Speed (round down) to teleport to an unoccupied space you can see (a) within 10 feet of yourself or (b) within 5 feet of a creature that is within 30 feet of you and holding one of your Adventurer’s Atlas maps. You can’t use this benefit if your Speed is 0.
Portal Jump. On your turn, you can spend an amount of movement equal to half your Speed (round down) to teleport to an unoccupied space (a) you can see within 10 feet of yourself or (b) within 5 feet of a creature that is within 30 feet of you and holding one of your Adventurer’s Atlas maps. You can’t use this benefit if your Speed is 0.
Ambiguity exists when the same rule can be read in two different ways. In law, when we want to show a rule is ambiguous, there is a very simple test we apply--we use letters to break up where the clauses sit without changing the underlying terms.
This is not a legal document though, and there's no reason to treat it as such
As an editor, I look for confusion and ambiguity all the time. I also have to ask myself whether a particular reading is something that could reasonably be arrived at, or if it's just nitpicking/finding issues for the sake of finding issues. This is firmly in the latter category. A handful of people getting lost in the weeds on grammar does not indicate a sentence's meaning is ambiguous
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Active characters:
Edoumiaond Willegume "Eddie" Podslee, Vegetanian scholar (College of Spirits bard) Lan Kidogo, mapach archaeologist and treasure hunter (Knowledge cleric) Peter "the Pied Piper" Hausler, human con artist/remover of vermin (Circle of the Shepherd druid) PIPA - Planar Interception/Protection Aeormaton, warforged bodyguard and ex-wizard hunter (Warrior of the Elements monk/Cartographer artificer) Xhekhetiel, halfling survivor of a Betrayer Gods cult (Runechild sorcerer/fighter)
Ambiguity exists when the same rule can be read in two different ways. In law, when we want to show a rule is ambiguous, there is a very simple test we apply--we use letters to break up where the clauses sit without changing the underlying terms.
This is not a legal document though, and there's no reason to treat it as such
As an editor, I look for confusion and ambiguity all the time. I also have to ask myself whether a particular reading is something that could reasonably be arrived at, or if it's just nitpicking/finding issues for the sake of finding issues. This is firmly in the latter category. A handful of people getting lost in the weeds on grammar does not indicate a sentence's meaning is ambiguous
Since I did say I would respond to novel arguments, I’ll bite.
Your argument is essentially dismissing my analysis on the grounds that “Your analysis, which is based upon how to read rules systems, is not applicable in reading this rule system. We should instead apply my analysis, which is about reading non-rule systems, to this rule system.” I think it is pretty clear why that is a silly argument, and why the rules system analysis - which demands a level of specificity beyond that of plain writing - is more applicable.
Ambiguity exists when the same rule can be read in two different ways. In law, when we want to show a rule is ambiguous, there is a very simple test we apply--we use letters to break up where the clauses sit without changing the underlying terms. If there are two or more ways to add parentheticals that result in a clear and grammatically correct writing, then the underlying rule is ambiguous. It does not matter if one reading might be "more easy" than the other in its original form - if you can read the same thing different ways, there is an ambiguity. This is why, when I write actual statutes, I always specifically include the listed parenthetical signals--it is a much easier way of removing ambiguity without having to turn over backwards to address all the ways English can be twisted. Wizards does not do this in D&D (they do in Magic's Comprehensive Rules) because it looks a bit formalistic and messy and is not exactly easy for laypeople to read. That is a perfectly valid stylistic choice that sometimes might cause confusion, as in this case, but, more often than not, is going to be fine.
Applying this test here clearly shows the ambiguity. Both the below sentences are grammatically correct and unambiguous - but only are such because of the placement of the signals within. Thus, the underlying sentence contains, on its face, an ambiguity. There really should be no question of that - it is plain to see for anyone with a basic understanding of how to write and interpret rules. But, the fact folks are continuing to argue against it sort of proves my point above - the human mind is preconditioned to accept its reading and will interpret sentence structure in such a way as to fixate on those preconditions. Not sure I have anything else to say on this subject beyond that, so probably will not be posting again on this thread unless someone raises something novel.
Portal Jump. On your turn, you can spend an amount of movement equal to half your Speed (round down) to teleport to an unoccupied space you can see (a) within 10 feet of yourself or (b) within 5 feet of a creature that is within 30 feet of you and holding one of your Adventurer’s Atlas maps. You can’t use this benefit if your Speed is 0.
Portal Jump. On your turn, you can spend an amount of movement equal to half your Speed (round down) to teleport to an unoccupied space (a) you can see within 10 feet of yourself or (b) within 5 feet of a creature that is within 30 feet of you and holding one of your Adventurer’s Atlas maps. You can’t use this benefit if your Speed is 0.
I really appreciate the way you laid out the ambiguity here. I tend towards the second interpretation but I think you've really clearly laid out the situation. :-)
I would argue to the second because your maps allow you to replace the map with sight in general for magic regarding your mapholders. You know where they are all the time, as long as they're on the same plane. It makes sense that for a jump that isn't to a mapholder, though, that you'd need to see the space.
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Which is why there exists ambiguity in the writing - it is, in fact, a poorly constructed sentence. The great irony though? All the folks asserting there is “one correct way” to read the sentence sort of prove why this kind of ambiguity comes into fruition.
When someone has an preconceived view of what is right, the human mind is preconditioned to construe ambiguity to support their view. This happens shockingly often when folks write rules - everyone involved in the rulemaking process know how the sentence is supposed to read and tunnel visions in on that reading. As such, they do not see it from the perspective of those outside the system writing the rules, so the ambiguity gets lost.
That is not really to say Wizards is bad at their job - their rate of tunnel vision ambiguity is far lower than plenty of other games I’ve seen (or, frankly real world laws and contracts - these kinds of ambiguities are a large part of why lawyers exist). Wizards staff have also discussed before that sometimes they like a little ambiguity, since it lets individual tables come up with their own interpretations. This, frankly, is a fine place to have a home rule step in and resolve ambiguity - neither interpretation is wrong and neither iteration would end up being particularly game breaking as they’re extremely self-limited.
I'm neither of those things. This is just a bad interpretation. Maybe you should give yourself a refresher on your signature
Active characters:
Edoumiaond Willegume "Eddie" Podslee, Vegetanian scholar (College of Spirits bard)
Lan Kidogo, mapach archaeologist and treasure hunter (Knowledge cleric)
Peter "the Pied Piper" Hausler, human con artist/remover of vermin (Circle of the Shepherd druid)
PIPA - Planar Interception/Protection Aeormaton, warforged bodyguard and ex-wizard hunter (Warrior of the Elements monk/Cartographer artificer)
Xhekhetiel, halfling survivor of a Betrayer Gods cult (Runechild sorcerer/fighter)
It isn't, though, regardless of people's efforts to find real ambiguity when it isn't there
Conditions for using the feature and what it does are set ("On your turn, you can spend an amount of movement equal to half your Speed (round down) to teleport to an unoccupied space you can see"), then two use cases are defined ("within 10 feet of yourself", or "within 5 feet of a creature that is within 30 feet of you and holding one of your Adventurer’s Atlas maps"), with one final condition added ("You can’t use this benefit if your Speed is 0")
English grammar isn't algebra (far, far from it lol), but arguing that "you can see" applies to only one of those use cases and not the other is like arguing that ab(x + y) doesn't equal abx + aby. If they wanted b to only apply to x and not y, they really should have said so
I'm speaking here as someone who's both playing a Cartographer artificer in a weekly game and has every incentive to buy into this argument, and someone who earns their living as a writer and editor. The sentence structure isn't the problem here. wagnarokkr's Rule of Cool approach is a far better one than this sort of grammatical pretzel logic if you want to argue for being able to teleport to a spot you cannot see -- an ability, I might add, that isn't available in a spell until dimension door at 4th level, unless I'm forgetting one
Active characters:
Edoumiaond Willegume "Eddie" Podslee, Vegetanian scholar (College of Spirits bard)
Lan Kidogo, mapach archaeologist and treasure hunter (Knowledge cleric)
Peter "the Pied Piper" Hausler, human con artist/remover of vermin (Circle of the Shepherd druid)
PIPA - Planar Interception/Protection Aeormaton, warforged bodyguard and ex-wizard hunter (Warrior of the Elements monk/Cartographer artificer)
Xhekhetiel, halfling survivor of a Betrayer Gods cult (Runechild sorcerer/fighter)
You can teleport through a Wall of Force or through a glass wall, or through a wall that has any hole/window/door in it.
I have often used similar abilities (Misty Step) to get in and out of a Wall of Force or a ForceCage (Cha. check required)
Ambiguity exists when the same rule can be read in two different ways. In law, when we want to show a rule is ambiguous, there is a very simple test we apply--we use letters to break up where the clauses sit without changing the underlying terms. If there are two or more ways to add parentheticals that result in a clear and grammatically correct writing, then the underlying rule is ambiguous. It does not matter if one reading might be "more easy" than the other in its original form - if you can read the same thing different ways, there is an ambiguity. This is why, when I write actual statutes, I always specifically include the listed parenthetical signals--it is a much easier way of removing ambiguity without having to turn over backwards to address all the ways English can be twisted. Wizards does not do this in D&D (they do in Magic's Comprehensive Rules) because it looks a bit formalistic and messy and is not exactly easy for laypeople to read. That is a perfectly valid stylistic choice that sometimes might cause confusion, as in this case, but, more often than not, is going to be fine.
Applying this test here clearly shows the ambiguity. Both the below sentences are grammatically correct and unambiguous - but only are such because of the placement of the signals within. Thus, the underlying sentence contains, on its face, an ambiguity. There really should be no question of that - it is plain to see for anyone with a basic understanding of how to write and interpret rules. But, the fact folks are continuing to argue against it sort of proves my point above - the human mind is preconditioned to accept its reading and will interpret sentence structure in such a way as to fixate on those preconditions. Not sure I have anything else to say on this subject beyond that, so probably will not be posting again on this thread unless someone raises something novel.
This is not a legal document though, and there's no reason to treat it as such
As an editor, I look for confusion and ambiguity all the time. I also have to ask myself whether a particular reading is something that could reasonably be arrived at, or if it's just nitpicking/finding issues for the sake of finding issues. This is firmly in the latter category. A handful of people getting lost in the weeds on grammar does not indicate a sentence's meaning is ambiguous
Active characters:
Edoumiaond Willegume "Eddie" Podslee, Vegetanian scholar (College of Spirits bard)
Lan Kidogo, mapach archaeologist and treasure hunter (Knowledge cleric)
Peter "the Pied Piper" Hausler, human con artist/remover of vermin (Circle of the Shepherd druid)
PIPA - Planar Interception/Protection Aeormaton, warforged bodyguard and ex-wizard hunter (Warrior of the Elements monk/Cartographer artificer)
Xhekhetiel, halfling survivor of a Betrayer Gods cult (Runechild sorcerer/fighter)
Since I did say I would respond to novel arguments, I’ll bite.
Your argument is essentially dismissing my analysis on the grounds that “Your analysis, which is based upon how to read rules systems, is not applicable in reading this rule system. We should instead apply my analysis, which is about reading non-rule systems, to this rule system.” I think it is pretty clear why that is a silly argument, and why the rules system analysis - which demands a level of specificity beyond that of plain writing - is more applicable.
I really appreciate the way you laid out the ambiguity here. I tend towards the second interpretation but I think you've really clearly laid out the situation. :-)
I would argue to the second because your maps allow you to replace the map with sight in general for magic regarding your mapholders. You know where they are all the time, as long as they're on the same plane. It makes sense that for a jump that isn't to a mapholder, though, that you'd need to see the space.