You grant the semblance of life and intelligence to a corpse of your choice within range, allowing it to answer the questions you pose. The corpse must still have a mouth and can't be undead. The spell fails if the corpse was the target of this spell within the last 10 days.
Until the spell ends, you can ask the corpse up to five questions. The corpse knows only what it knew in life, including the languages it knew. Answers are usually brief, cryptic, or repetitive, and the corpse is under no compulsion to offer a truthful answer if you are hostile to it or it recognizes you as an enemy. This spell doesn't return the creature's soul to its body, only its animating spirit. Thus, the corpse can't learn new information, doesn't comprehend anything that has happened since it died, and can't speculate about future events.
* - (burning incense)
According to the Manual of the Planes, their memories fade over the centuries, not right away. Eventually they either merge with the plane or become angelic beings. That's why there's a limit to how long after death resurrection spells work.
This spell should be available for wizards.
https://www.dndbeyond.com/sources/tcoe/wizard#AdditionalWizardSpells
That's pretty sad. Weaksauce, really.
I love when players are clever. I'd say it's not on the players to clear it with their DM, it's on the DM to become better DMs.
The DM challenges the players with monsters and secrets and plots.
The challenge FOR the DM is when the players think of somethng they missed. That's the FUN part.
I swear a lot of these whiny DMs are like the slow kid on the playground whining that the other kids should let him catch them in tag. "No Fair! You're all faster than me!!"
Is there a way to protect a corpse from ever being the target of this spell? I think in earlier editions, once it was targeted by this spell, it was never able to be targeted again. Now it apparently is 10 days.
Gentle Repose won't work because Speak with Dead doesn't make the corpse undead (which would be prevented by Gentle Repose). If it did make the corpse undead, even temporarily, it would say so.
How is this not a ritual
I like some of the watsonian interpretations of this spell's explanation.
Here's my take on it: When a beast gets Awakened, it gains a soul like a humanoid has but there is nothing corporeal about it that changes. When an Awakened beast dies, its soul and animating spirit separate from the body. Likewise, a living humanoid has a body with a soul and animating spirit. Without an inhabiting soul, a living humanoid may as well be a very advanced primate, totally morally agnostic and operating solely by survival instinct.
So when Speak With Dead connects to a humanoid corpse, the corpse ought to respond like an Awakened primate would, smart enough to speak one or more languages and not overtly hostile or deceptive unless it has a reason to be, but otherwise probably responds as a sociopath would.
I have the same question. When we played in our home-brew game, I let the whole party hear the questions and answers. One of the players asked if they could all hear the answers and our most experienced player with a couple of decades of D&D had no idea. I like your thought regarding the vocal component and it seemed most natural at the time to allow the whole party to hear.
'Available For: BARD CLERIC KNOWLEDGE DOMAIN THE UNDYING THE UNDEAD'...
and yet a sorcerer used it in HAT.
Can the corpse avoid speaking common and instead only use its most used language or other language it knew in life? Even if the caster is commanding it to communicate?
Yeah, there's nothing about the spell that says the dead person is required to actually be helpful to you. It has to answer your questions, but it doesn't say the answers have to be in a language you understand.
what the hell is an animating spirit
He did not cast the Spell.
He used the coin
A magic Item
He did not cast the Spell.
He used the coin
A magic Item
Does anyone know what sourcebook this is in? I'd like to buy it, since I'm playing a bard, but im not seeing it in my list