Can a time element be part of the description of the recipient in the Animal Messenger spell?











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My Druid wants to warn any unsuspecting travelers from taking a shortcut that leads to a hazard that the party is dealing with. Can he use animal messenger to do it?



The animal messenger spell description states:




You specify a location, which you must have visited, and a recipient who matches a general description




Does this language allow my Druid to specify something like, "Go to the crossroads and tell the first person who comes by, 'Avoid the western route'"?



The examples given in the text all imply that the messenger searches for the recipient and immediately gives the message, and the following text implies that there is no waiting around by the messenger.




When the messenger arrives, it delivers your message [...]




The only limitation specifically mentioned regarding time is the 24-hour spell duration.










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    up vote
    11
    down vote

    favorite












    My Druid wants to warn any unsuspecting travelers from taking a shortcut that leads to a hazard that the party is dealing with. Can he use animal messenger to do it?



    The animal messenger spell description states:




    You specify a location, which you must have visited, and a recipient who matches a general description




    Does this language allow my Druid to specify something like, "Go to the crossroads and tell the first person who comes by, 'Avoid the western route'"?



    The examples given in the text all imply that the messenger searches for the recipient and immediately gives the message, and the following text implies that there is no waiting around by the messenger.




    When the messenger arrives, it delivers your message [...]




    The only limitation specifically mentioned regarding time is the 24-hour spell duration.










    share|improve this question


























      up vote
      11
      down vote

      favorite









      up vote
      11
      down vote

      favorite











      My Druid wants to warn any unsuspecting travelers from taking a shortcut that leads to a hazard that the party is dealing with. Can he use animal messenger to do it?



      The animal messenger spell description states:




      You specify a location, which you must have visited, and a recipient who matches a general description




      Does this language allow my Druid to specify something like, "Go to the crossroads and tell the first person who comes by, 'Avoid the western route'"?



      The examples given in the text all imply that the messenger searches for the recipient and immediately gives the message, and the following text implies that there is no waiting around by the messenger.




      When the messenger arrives, it delivers your message [...]




      The only limitation specifically mentioned regarding time is the 24-hour spell duration.










      share|improve this question















      My Druid wants to warn any unsuspecting travelers from taking a shortcut that leads to a hazard that the party is dealing with. Can he use animal messenger to do it?



      The animal messenger spell description states:




      You specify a location, which you must have visited, and a recipient who matches a general description




      Does this language allow my Druid to specify something like, "Go to the crossroads and tell the first person who comes by, 'Avoid the western route'"?



      The examples given in the text all imply that the messenger searches for the recipient and immediately gives the message, and the following text implies that there is no waiting around by the messenger.




      When the messenger arrives, it delivers your message [...]




      The only limitation specifically mentioned regarding time is the 24-hour spell duration.







      dnd-5e spells time






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      edited Dec 1 at 1:18









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      asked Nov 30 at 17:16









      pokep

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          In your example, yes, but...



          The limits on Animal Messenger are the spell duration (24 hours + 48 per slot above 2nd level) and that it affects a Tiny beast. The beast delivers a message of up to 25 words to a recipient matching a "general description" at a location the spellcaster has visited.



          Provided the beast can arrive at the crossroads within the duration and a person matching the caster's general description of the recipient appears between the beast's arrival and the end of the spell, the message will be delivered as specified.



          "First person who comes by" is a description of the message recipient and therefor allowed. "First person who comes by after 2 o'clock" is not valid as it relies on the beast also marking time rather than simply matching a recipient's description.






          share|improve this answer























          • +1, though I imagine some level of time granularity is fairly easy to achieve. Consider the recipient description "traveling by the crossroads in the early afternoon".
            – ti7
            Nov 30 at 19:45






          • 1




            @ti7 "in the early afternoon" does not describe a person or place.
            – T.J.L.
            Nov 30 at 21:26










          • @T.J.L. Then "the first person to walk through the crossroads in the early afternoon"?
            – Nic Hartley
            Dec 1 at 1:06






          • 2




            @Nic Hartley, T.J.L. has hit the point: the spell lets the caster describe a recipient and location, not any other condition for the delivery of the message. The modifier "in the early afternoon" does not modify the recipient or location, it modifies the time the recipient is to be found and the spell doesn't allow for that.
            – Tuorg
            Dec 1 at 3:05













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          1 Answer
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          up vote
          16
          down vote



          accepted










          In your example, yes, but...



          The limits on Animal Messenger are the spell duration (24 hours + 48 per slot above 2nd level) and that it affects a Tiny beast. The beast delivers a message of up to 25 words to a recipient matching a "general description" at a location the spellcaster has visited.



          Provided the beast can arrive at the crossroads within the duration and a person matching the caster's general description of the recipient appears between the beast's arrival and the end of the spell, the message will be delivered as specified.



          "First person who comes by" is a description of the message recipient and therefor allowed. "First person who comes by after 2 o'clock" is not valid as it relies on the beast also marking time rather than simply matching a recipient's description.






          share|improve this answer























          • +1, though I imagine some level of time granularity is fairly easy to achieve. Consider the recipient description "traveling by the crossroads in the early afternoon".
            – ti7
            Nov 30 at 19:45






          • 1




            @ti7 "in the early afternoon" does not describe a person or place.
            – T.J.L.
            Nov 30 at 21:26










          • @T.J.L. Then "the first person to walk through the crossroads in the early afternoon"?
            – Nic Hartley
            Dec 1 at 1:06






          • 2




            @Nic Hartley, T.J.L. has hit the point: the spell lets the caster describe a recipient and location, not any other condition for the delivery of the message. The modifier "in the early afternoon" does not modify the recipient or location, it modifies the time the recipient is to be found and the spell doesn't allow for that.
            – Tuorg
            Dec 1 at 3:05

















          up vote
          16
          down vote



          accepted










          In your example, yes, but...



          The limits on Animal Messenger are the spell duration (24 hours + 48 per slot above 2nd level) and that it affects a Tiny beast. The beast delivers a message of up to 25 words to a recipient matching a "general description" at a location the spellcaster has visited.



          Provided the beast can arrive at the crossroads within the duration and a person matching the caster's general description of the recipient appears between the beast's arrival and the end of the spell, the message will be delivered as specified.



          "First person who comes by" is a description of the message recipient and therefor allowed. "First person who comes by after 2 o'clock" is not valid as it relies on the beast also marking time rather than simply matching a recipient's description.






          share|improve this answer























          • +1, though I imagine some level of time granularity is fairly easy to achieve. Consider the recipient description "traveling by the crossroads in the early afternoon".
            – ti7
            Nov 30 at 19:45






          • 1




            @ti7 "in the early afternoon" does not describe a person or place.
            – T.J.L.
            Nov 30 at 21:26










          • @T.J.L. Then "the first person to walk through the crossroads in the early afternoon"?
            – Nic Hartley
            Dec 1 at 1:06






          • 2




            @Nic Hartley, T.J.L. has hit the point: the spell lets the caster describe a recipient and location, not any other condition for the delivery of the message. The modifier "in the early afternoon" does not modify the recipient or location, it modifies the time the recipient is to be found and the spell doesn't allow for that.
            – Tuorg
            Dec 1 at 3:05















          up vote
          16
          down vote



          accepted







          up vote
          16
          down vote



          accepted






          In your example, yes, but...



          The limits on Animal Messenger are the spell duration (24 hours + 48 per slot above 2nd level) and that it affects a Tiny beast. The beast delivers a message of up to 25 words to a recipient matching a "general description" at a location the spellcaster has visited.



          Provided the beast can arrive at the crossroads within the duration and a person matching the caster's general description of the recipient appears between the beast's arrival and the end of the spell, the message will be delivered as specified.



          "First person who comes by" is a description of the message recipient and therefor allowed. "First person who comes by after 2 o'clock" is not valid as it relies on the beast also marking time rather than simply matching a recipient's description.






          share|improve this answer














          In your example, yes, but...



          The limits on Animal Messenger are the spell duration (24 hours + 48 per slot above 2nd level) and that it affects a Tiny beast. The beast delivers a message of up to 25 words to a recipient matching a "general description" at a location the spellcaster has visited.



          Provided the beast can arrive at the crossroads within the duration and a person matching the caster's general description of the recipient appears between the beast's arrival and the end of the spell, the message will be delivered as specified.



          "First person who comes by" is a description of the message recipient and therefor allowed. "First person who comes by after 2 o'clock" is not valid as it relies on the beast also marking time rather than simply matching a recipient's description.







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Nov 30 at 17:53

























          answered Nov 30 at 17:41









          Tuorg

          1,3331519




          1,3331519












          • +1, though I imagine some level of time granularity is fairly easy to achieve. Consider the recipient description "traveling by the crossroads in the early afternoon".
            – ti7
            Nov 30 at 19:45






          • 1




            @ti7 "in the early afternoon" does not describe a person or place.
            – T.J.L.
            Nov 30 at 21:26










          • @T.J.L. Then "the first person to walk through the crossroads in the early afternoon"?
            – Nic Hartley
            Dec 1 at 1:06






          • 2




            @Nic Hartley, T.J.L. has hit the point: the spell lets the caster describe a recipient and location, not any other condition for the delivery of the message. The modifier "in the early afternoon" does not modify the recipient or location, it modifies the time the recipient is to be found and the spell doesn't allow for that.
            – Tuorg
            Dec 1 at 3:05




















          • +1, though I imagine some level of time granularity is fairly easy to achieve. Consider the recipient description "traveling by the crossroads in the early afternoon".
            – ti7
            Nov 30 at 19:45






          • 1




            @ti7 "in the early afternoon" does not describe a person or place.
            – T.J.L.
            Nov 30 at 21:26










          • @T.J.L. Then "the first person to walk through the crossroads in the early afternoon"?
            – Nic Hartley
            Dec 1 at 1:06






          • 2




            @Nic Hartley, T.J.L. has hit the point: the spell lets the caster describe a recipient and location, not any other condition for the delivery of the message. The modifier "in the early afternoon" does not modify the recipient or location, it modifies the time the recipient is to be found and the spell doesn't allow for that.
            – Tuorg
            Dec 1 at 3:05


















          +1, though I imagine some level of time granularity is fairly easy to achieve. Consider the recipient description "traveling by the crossroads in the early afternoon".
          – ti7
          Nov 30 at 19:45




          +1, though I imagine some level of time granularity is fairly easy to achieve. Consider the recipient description "traveling by the crossroads in the early afternoon".
          – ti7
          Nov 30 at 19:45




          1




          1




          @ti7 "in the early afternoon" does not describe a person or place.
          – T.J.L.
          Nov 30 at 21:26




          @ti7 "in the early afternoon" does not describe a person or place.
          – T.J.L.
          Nov 30 at 21:26












          @T.J.L. Then "the first person to walk through the crossroads in the early afternoon"?
          – Nic Hartley
          Dec 1 at 1:06




          @T.J.L. Then "the first person to walk through the crossroads in the early afternoon"?
          – Nic Hartley
          Dec 1 at 1:06




          2




          2




          @Nic Hartley, T.J.L. has hit the point: the spell lets the caster describe a recipient and location, not any other condition for the delivery of the message. The modifier "in the early afternoon" does not modify the recipient or location, it modifies the time the recipient is to be found and the spell doesn't allow for that.
          – Tuorg
          Dec 1 at 3:05






          @Nic Hartley, T.J.L. has hit the point: the spell lets the caster describe a recipient and location, not any other condition for the delivery of the message. The modifier "in the early afternoon" does not modify the recipient or location, it modifies the time the recipient is to be found and the spell doesn't allow for that.
          – Tuorg
          Dec 1 at 3:05




















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