Originally Posted by Warlocke
Sorry to harp on this but it is so weird that you specifically say that rules do not limit how many magic stones you can have. The Magic Stones rules description is only 7 sentences long, and two of those sentences explicitly limit how many stones you can have.


“You touch one to three pebbles and imbue them with magic.
. . .
If you cast this spell again, the spell ends early on any pebbles still affected by it.”

Based on your post, if you do play table top, I can only imagine that your group is a cluster fuck of rules misapprehensions.

I was unaware of the second rule in how it is originally. When we played it, all peebles that where enchanted by the spell would remain enchanted even if you cast it, similar to how you could with goodberry, where they last for up to 24 hours. 3 stone limitation seems strange in the original. We played with a 99 limit as it is an item stack.



Originally Posted by Blackheifer
What are you talking about?
1. Gust doesn't exist in the game at this time.
2. Mold Earth is not in game
3. Control flames is not in game
4. Magic stone is not in game
5. If you want to create 4 Githyanki/Mages/Sorc with mage hand and waste your action on casting that then have fun. Mage hand is not that useful in bg3. It's shove is really weak. 250 feet? what?

You mention Pathfinder, you may be in the wrong place.

It is not in the game yet, but I am assuming it will be on full release, this is EA. I am provide advise in advance to help avoid issues down the line. Regarding mage hand, you can shove people repeatedly, move one hand, shove, move one hand shove, move one hand shove, shove is a bonus action, and shove is guaranteed out of stealth, it has auto stealth when used by some classes, at lvl 17 it summons 4 hands, at lvl 11 it does 3. https://www.gmbinder.com/share/-LYZbrD6UhjrYlC3FY_x

When I say up to 250ft, i am include vertical distance, as you could space out the hands, and drop the enemy from a ledge with hand A, shove them with hand B, albeit such an example is theocratical.