Hi there!! , the description of the Cube's area of effect specifies that the point of origin is any point on one of its faces. However, in the Spells chapter, the image of the gnome pointing out the points of origin of the areas is used again, where it is clear that the cube's point of origin is the center of one of its faces. This must be a mistake. No?
I don't see any contradiction there. The rule says that the point of origin is any point on one of its faces; the diagram indicates a point on one of the cube's faces. The diagram is not saying that the center of the face is the only possible point of origin. It's an example.
Hi there!! , the description of the Cube's area of effect specifies that the point of origin is any point on one of its faces. However, in the Spells chapter, the image of the gnome pointing out the points of origin of the areas is used again, where it is clear that the cube's point of origin is the center of one of its faces. This must be a mistake. No?
Hi there!! , the description of the Cube's area of effect specifies that the point of origin is any point on one of its faces. However, in the Spells chapter, the image of the gnome pointing out the points of origin of the areas is used again, where it is clear that the cube's point of origin is the center of one of its faces. This must be a mistake. No?
Thanks
I don't see any contradiction there. The rule says that the point of origin is any point on one of its faces; the diagram indicates a point on one of the cube's faces. The diagram is not saying that the center of the face is the only possible point of origin. It's an example.
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The center of a face is a point on the face
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point on the face does not mean an intersection on a grid, but it can