Can a Pearl of Power be used to cast Identify?











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My group recently located a Pearl of Power on their adventures.



The campaign setting is not always a place where spell components are easy to come by. As a consequence, the players have asked me if they can use the Pearl of Power as a spell component in order to cast Identify.



Identify requires 'a pearl worth at least 100 gp' (which will not be consumed). The Pearl of Power does not have a stated value but it might reasonably be concluded to be worth consderably more than 100 gp due to it's other properties.



Can it be used in this way?










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  • You ask should you allow it, but I'm finding it hard to follow why you wouldn't. Is there a reason you are keeping components scarce? And would allowing the Pearl violate that? Further, are you just some for advice here (should you do it) or are you asking about the rules?
    – Rubiksmoose
    Nov 26 at 14:06










  • @Rubiksmoose Definitely about rules. Advice would be offtopic. It could possibly be argued that a Pearl of Power is not the same thing as a pearl in game terms. Or, that as it has no stated value, even if it it considered a pearl, it's not eligible for use here.
    – Tiggerous
    Nov 26 at 14:18















up vote
8
down vote

favorite












My group recently located a Pearl of Power on their adventures.



The campaign setting is not always a place where spell components are easy to come by. As a consequence, the players have asked me if they can use the Pearl of Power as a spell component in order to cast Identify.



Identify requires 'a pearl worth at least 100 gp' (which will not be consumed). The Pearl of Power does not have a stated value but it might reasonably be concluded to be worth consderably more than 100 gp due to it's other properties.



Can it be used in this way?










share|improve this question
























  • You ask should you allow it, but I'm finding it hard to follow why you wouldn't. Is there a reason you are keeping components scarce? And would allowing the Pearl violate that? Further, are you just some for advice here (should you do it) or are you asking about the rules?
    – Rubiksmoose
    Nov 26 at 14:06










  • @Rubiksmoose Definitely about rules. Advice would be offtopic. It could possibly be argued that a Pearl of Power is not the same thing as a pearl in game terms. Or, that as it has no stated value, even if it it considered a pearl, it's not eligible for use here.
    – Tiggerous
    Nov 26 at 14:18













up vote
8
down vote

favorite









up vote
8
down vote

favorite











My group recently located a Pearl of Power on their adventures.



The campaign setting is not always a place where spell components are easy to come by. As a consequence, the players have asked me if they can use the Pearl of Power as a spell component in order to cast Identify.



Identify requires 'a pearl worth at least 100 gp' (which will not be consumed). The Pearl of Power does not have a stated value but it might reasonably be concluded to be worth consderably more than 100 gp due to it's other properties.



Can it be used in this way?










share|improve this question















My group recently located a Pearl of Power on their adventures.



The campaign setting is not always a place where spell components are easy to come by. As a consequence, the players have asked me if they can use the Pearl of Power as a spell component in order to cast Identify.



Identify requires 'a pearl worth at least 100 gp' (which will not be consumed). The Pearl of Power does not have a stated value but it might reasonably be concluded to be worth consderably more than 100 gp due to it's other properties.



Can it be used in this way?







dnd-5e spells spell-components






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Nov 26 at 14:13









Rubiksmoose

44.6k6224340




44.6k6224340










asked Nov 26 at 13:59









Tiggerous

7,43943268




7,43943268












  • You ask should you allow it, but I'm finding it hard to follow why you wouldn't. Is there a reason you are keeping components scarce? And would allowing the Pearl violate that? Further, are you just some for advice here (should you do it) or are you asking about the rules?
    – Rubiksmoose
    Nov 26 at 14:06










  • @Rubiksmoose Definitely about rules. Advice would be offtopic. It could possibly be argued that a Pearl of Power is not the same thing as a pearl in game terms. Or, that as it has no stated value, even if it it considered a pearl, it's not eligible for use here.
    – Tiggerous
    Nov 26 at 14:18


















  • You ask should you allow it, but I'm finding it hard to follow why you wouldn't. Is there a reason you are keeping components scarce? And would allowing the Pearl violate that? Further, are you just some for advice here (should you do it) or are you asking about the rules?
    – Rubiksmoose
    Nov 26 at 14:06










  • @Rubiksmoose Definitely about rules. Advice would be offtopic. It could possibly be argued that a Pearl of Power is not the same thing as a pearl in game terms. Or, that as it has no stated value, even if it it considered a pearl, it's not eligible for use here.
    – Tiggerous
    Nov 26 at 14:18
















You ask should you allow it, but I'm finding it hard to follow why you wouldn't. Is there a reason you are keeping components scarce? And would allowing the Pearl violate that? Further, are you just some for advice here (should you do it) or are you asking about the rules?
– Rubiksmoose
Nov 26 at 14:06




You ask should you allow it, but I'm finding it hard to follow why you wouldn't. Is there a reason you are keeping components scarce? And would allowing the Pearl violate that? Further, are you just some for advice here (should you do it) or are you asking about the rules?
– Rubiksmoose
Nov 26 at 14:06












@Rubiksmoose Definitely about rules. Advice would be offtopic. It could possibly be argued that a Pearl of Power is not the same thing as a pearl in game terms. Or, that as it has no stated value, even if it it considered a pearl, it's not eligible for use here.
– Tiggerous
Nov 26 at 14:18




@Rubiksmoose Definitely about rules. Advice would be offtopic. It could possibly be argued that a Pearl of Power is not the same thing as a pearl in game terms. Or, that as it has no stated value, even if it it considered a pearl, it's not eligible for use here.
– Tiggerous
Nov 26 at 14:18










1 Answer
1






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up vote
18
down vote



accepted










Yes, it can, for both RAW and RAF reasons.



It is worth at least 100 GP based on being an uncommon magic item which is valued at 101-500 GP (DMG, p. 129 & p. 139). It is a pearl. The spell component is not consumed in the casting.




(a pearl worth at least 100 gp) (identify, spell description, SRD)




RAW (rules as written): nothing prohibits its use.
RAF1 (rules as fun): why not allow it? That's a good use of assets by the players.

Bravo to your players!





1
RAF. Regardless of what’s on the page or what the designers intended, D&D is meant to be fun, and the DM is the ringmaster at each game table. The best DMs shape the game on the fly to bring the most delight to their players. Such DMs aim for RAF, “rules as fun.” ... I recommend a healthy mix of RAW, RAI, and RAF!






share|improve this answer



















  • 2




    The DMG specifically says "The D&D rules help you and the other players have a good time, but the rules aren't in charge" Something like that has been in D&D all the way back to the first edition - in 1976, Gygax himself wrote "as with any set of rules [...] these are for your playing enjoyment. If you find sections which do not bring you enjoyment, alter, expand or delete them as you see fit". So, you could argue that Rules As Fun are Rules As Intended, and indeed, Rules As Written!
    – anaximander
    Nov 26 at 14:59








  • 5




    @Anaximander While I agree, I probably should not digress into that style point in this answer; I added in the RAF point/link in support of players being rewarded for getting the most out of what they have. (And because I don't think RAF gets as much love as I wish it would ...)
    – KorvinStarmast
    Nov 26 at 15:01











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1 Answer
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active

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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

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active

oldest

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active

oldest

votes








up vote
18
down vote



accepted










Yes, it can, for both RAW and RAF reasons.



It is worth at least 100 GP based on being an uncommon magic item which is valued at 101-500 GP (DMG, p. 129 & p. 139). It is a pearl. The spell component is not consumed in the casting.




(a pearl worth at least 100 gp) (identify, spell description, SRD)




RAW (rules as written): nothing prohibits its use.
RAF1 (rules as fun): why not allow it? That's a good use of assets by the players.

Bravo to your players!





1
RAF. Regardless of what’s on the page or what the designers intended, D&D is meant to be fun, and the DM is the ringmaster at each game table. The best DMs shape the game on the fly to bring the most delight to their players. Such DMs aim for RAF, “rules as fun.” ... I recommend a healthy mix of RAW, RAI, and RAF!






share|improve this answer



















  • 2




    The DMG specifically says "The D&D rules help you and the other players have a good time, but the rules aren't in charge" Something like that has been in D&D all the way back to the first edition - in 1976, Gygax himself wrote "as with any set of rules [...] these are for your playing enjoyment. If you find sections which do not bring you enjoyment, alter, expand or delete them as you see fit". So, you could argue that Rules As Fun are Rules As Intended, and indeed, Rules As Written!
    – anaximander
    Nov 26 at 14:59








  • 5




    @Anaximander While I agree, I probably should not digress into that style point in this answer; I added in the RAF point/link in support of players being rewarded for getting the most out of what they have. (And because I don't think RAF gets as much love as I wish it would ...)
    – KorvinStarmast
    Nov 26 at 15:01















up vote
18
down vote



accepted










Yes, it can, for both RAW and RAF reasons.



It is worth at least 100 GP based on being an uncommon magic item which is valued at 101-500 GP (DMG, p. 129 & p. 139). It is a pearl. The spell component is not consumed in the casting.




(a pearl worth at least 100 gp) (identify, spell description, SRD)




RAW (rules as written): nothing prohibits its use.
RAF1 (rules as fun): why not allow it? That's a good use of assets by the players.

Bravo to your players!





1
RAF. Regardless of what’s on the page or what the designers intended, D&D is meant to be fun, and the DM is the ringmaster at each game table. The best DMs shape the game on the fly to bring the most delight to their players. Such DMs aim for RAF, “rules as fun.” ... I recommend a healthy mix of RAW, RAI, and RAF!






share|improve this answer



















  • 2




    The DMG specifically says "The D&D rules help you and the other players have a good time, but the rules aren't in charge" Something like that has been in D&D all the way back to the first edition - in 1976, Gygax himself wrote "as with any set of rules [...] these are for your playing enjoyment. If you find sections which do not bring you enjoyment, alter, expand or delete them as you see fit". So, you could argue that Rules As Fun are Rules As Intended, and indeed, Rules As Written!
    – anaximander
    Nov 26 at 14:59








  • 5




    @Anaximander While I agree, I probably should not digress into that style point in this answer; I added in the RAF point/link in support of players being rewarded for getting the most out of what they have. (And because I don't think RAF gets as much love as I wish it would ...)
    – KorvinStarmast
    Nov 26 at 15:01













up vote
18
down vote



accepted







up vote
18
down vote



accepted






Yes, it can, for both RAW and RAF reasons.



It is worth at least 100 GP based on being an uncommon magic item which is valued at 101-500 GP (DMG, p. 129 & p. 139). It is a pearl. The spell component is not consumed in the casting.




(a pearl worth at least 100 gp) (identify, spell description, SRD)




RAW (rules as written): nothing prohibits its use.
RAF1 (rules as fun): why not allow it? That's a good use of assets by the players.

Bravo to your players!





1
RAF. Regardless of what’s on the page or what the designers intended, D&D is meant to be fun, and the DM is the ringmaster at each game table. The best DMs shape the game on the fly to bring the most delight to their players. Such DMs aim for RAF, “rules as fun.” ... I recommend a healthy mix of RAW, RAI, and RAF!






share|improve this answer














Yes, it can, for both RAW and RAF reasons.



It is worth at least 100 GP based on being an uncommon magic item which is valued at 101-500 GP (DMG, p. 129 & p. 139). It is a pearl. The spell component is not consumed in the casting.




(a pearl worth at least 100 gp) (identify, spell description, SRD)




RAW (rules as written): nothing prohibits its use.
RAF1 (rules as fun): why not allow it? That's a good use of assets by the players.

Bravo to your players!





1
RAF. Regardless of what’s on the page or what the designers intended, D&D is meant to be fun, and the DM is the ringmaster at each game table. The best DMs shape the game on the fly to bring the most delight to their players. Such DMs aim for RAF, “rules as fun.” ... I recommend a healthy mix of RAW, RAI, and RAF!







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Nov 26 at 17:02









Rubiksmoose

44.6k6224340




44.6k6224340










answered Nov 26 at 14:06









KorvinStarmast

71.9k17226393




71.9k17226393








  • 2




    The DMG specifically says "The D&D rules help you and the other players have a good time, but the rules aren't in charge" Something like that has been in D&D all the way back to the first edition - in 1976, Gygax himself wrote "as with any set of rules [...] these are for your playing enjoyment. If you find sections which do not bring you enjoyment, alter, expand or delete them as you see fit". So, you could argue that Rules As Fun are Rules As Intended, and indeed, Rules As Written!
    – anaximander
    Nov 26 at 14:59








  • 5




    @Anaximander While I agree, I probably should not digress into that style point in this answer; I added in the RAF point/link in support of players being rewarded for getting the most out of what they have. (And because I don't think RAF gets as much love as I wish it would ...)
    – KorvinStarmast
    Nov 26 at 15:01














  • 2




    The DMG specifically says "The D&D rules help you and the other players have a good time, but the rules aren't in charge" Something like that has been in D&D all the way back to the first edition - in 1976, Gygax himself wrote "as with any set of rules [...] these are for your playing enjoyment. If you find sections which do not bring you enjoyment, alter, expand or delete them as you see fit". So, you could argue that Rules As Fun are Rules As Intended, and indeed, Rules As Written!
    – anaximander
    Nov 26 at 14:59








  • 5




    @Anaximander While I agree, I probably should not digress into that style point in this answer; I added in the RAF point/link in support of players being rewarded for getting the most out of what they have. (And because I don't think RAF gets as much love as I wish it would ...)
    – KorvinStarmast
    Nov 26 at 15:01








2




2




The DMG specifically says "The D&D rules help you and the other players have a good time, but the rules aren't in charge" Something like that has been in D&D all the way back to the first edition - in 1976, Gygax himself wrote "as with any set of rules [...] these are for your playing enjoyment. If you find sections which do not bring you enjoyment, alter, expand or delete them as you see fit". So, you could argue that Rules As Fun are Rules As Intended, and indeed, Rules As Written!
– anaximander
Nov 26 at 14:59






The DMG specifically says "The D&D rules help you and the other players have a good time, but the rules aren't in charge" Something like that has been in D&D all the way back to the first edition - in 1976, Gygax himself wrote "as with any set of rules [...] these are for your playing enjoyment. If you find sections which do not bring you enjoyment, alter, expand or delete them as you see fit". So, you could argue that Rules As Fun are Rules As Intended, and indeed, Rules As Written!
– anaximander
Nov 26 at 14:59






5




5




@Anaximander While I agree, I probably should not digress into that style point in this answer; I added in the RAF point/link in support of players being rewarded for getting the most out of what they have. (And because I don't think RAF gets as much love as I wish it would ...)
– KorvinStarmast
Nov 26 at 15:01




@Anaximander While I agree, I probably should not digress into that style point in this answer; I added in the RAF point/link in support of players being rewarded for getting the most out of what they have. (And because I don't think RAF gets as much love as I wish it would ...)
– KorvinStarmast
Nov 26 at 15:01


















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