How does Mercy remove conditions?Question on Stacked conditionsCreature death and save conditionsHow does one...

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How does Mercy remove conditions?


Question on Stacked conditionsCreature death and save conditionsHow does one keep track of all of the different statuses, conditions, and mathematically-entwined stats of FFRPG?Removing Conditions without resolutionHow exactly do healing spells interact with the conditions they remove?Does magical healing prevent or remove scars?How can a (wizard) lich remove his paralysis from a victim?Combining Improved Dirge of Doom and Blistering Invective – how long does the “frightened” condition last?Can Lay on Hands be used to both heal hit points and remove diseases/poisons with the same action?How does the Gaseous Form spell interact with the grappled and restrained conditions?






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Is the creature affected by a Paladin's Mercy, immune from contracting the conditions another time during the duration of the hour long ability? (because those conditions wouldn't actually get eliminated but simply removed for an hour, according to Mercy's description)



Does that mean that stacking effects like fear do stack even on a creature affected by Mercy (because those conditions are still there, they simply don't show any symptoms) and can therefore produce worse conditions?










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    $begingroup$


    Is the creature affected by a Paladin's Mercy, immune from contracting the conditions another time during the duration of the hour long ability? (because those conditions wouldn't actually get eliminated but simply removed for an hour, according to Mercy's description)



    Does that mean that stacking effects like fear do stack even on a creature affected by Mercy (because those conditions are still there, they simply don't show any symptoms) and can therefore produce worse conditions?










    share|improve this question











    $endgroup$

















      2












      2








      2





      $begingroup$


      Is the creature affected by a Paladin's Mercy, immune from contracting the conditions another time during the duration of the hour long ability? (because those conditions wouldn't actually get eliminated but simply removed for an hour, according to Mercy's description)



      Does that mean that stacking effects like fear do stack even on a creature affected by Mercy (because those conditions are still there, they simply don't show any symptoms) and can therefore produce worse conditions?










      share|improve this question











      $endgroup$




      Is the creature affected by a Paladin's Mercy, immune from contracting the conditions another time during the duration of the hour long ability? (because those conditions wouldn't actually get eliminated but simply removed for an hour, according to Mercy's description)



      Does that mean that stacking effects like fear do stack even on a creature affected by Mercy (because those conditions are still there, they simply don't show any symptoms) and can therefore produce worse conditions?







      pathfinder-1e paladin conditions healing






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      edited 11 hours ago







      Zashura

















      asked 11 hours ago









      ZashuraZashura

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          $begingroup$

          Mercy does not confer any kind of immunity. It removes conditions already present, but the target may well gain them again. For example, if a paladin with the Fatigued mercy uses lay on hands on their barbarian ally who has stopped raging, that barbarian will no longer be fatigued—and if an enemy witch uses touch of fatigue on the barbarian the very next round, that barbarian will be fatigued again.



          The description of mercy does mention something about “1 hour,” but this is only for special cases where the mercy removes a condition but not an underlying effect causing that condition. For example, if a paladin has the Enfeebled mercy, but not the Poisoned mercy, and uses lay on hands on an ally poisoned with king’s sleep, that ally is no longer drained of 1 Constitution, but they are still poisoned. An hour later, the king’s sleep kicks back in, and then they are drained 1 Constitution again. But anything else (including a fresh dose of king’s sleep) during that hour can still drain their Constitution.






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            $begingroup$

            Mercy does not confer any kind of immunity. It removes conditions already present, but the target may well gain them again. For example, if a paladin with the Fatigued mercy uses lay on hands on their barbarian ally who has stopped raging, that barbarian will no longer be fatigued—and if an enemy witch uses touch of fatigue on the barbarian the very next round, that barbarian will be fatigued again.



            The description of mercy does mention something about “1 hour,” but this is only for special cases where the mercy removes a condition but not an underlying effect causing that condition. For example, if a paladin has the Enfeebled mercy, but not the Poisoned mercy, and uses lay on hands on an ally poisoned with king’s sleep, that ally is no longer drained of 1 Constitution, but they are still poisoned. An hour later, the king’s sleep kicks back in, and then they are drained 1 Constitution again. But anything else (including a fresh dose of king’s sleep) during that hour can still drain their Constitution.






            share|improve this answer









            $endgroup$




















              6













              $begingroup$

              Mercy does not confer any kind of immunity. It removes conditions already present, but the target may well gain them again. For example, if a paladin with the Fatigued mercy uses lay on hands on their barbarian ally who has stopped raging, that barbarian will no longer be fatigued—and if an enemy witch uses touch of fatigue on the barbarian the very next round, that barbarian will be fatigued again.



              The description of mercy does mention something about “1 hour,” but this is only for special cases where the mercy removes a condition but not an underlying effect causing that condition. For example, if a paladin has the Enfeebled mercy, but not the Poisoned mercy, and uses lay on hands on an ally poisoned with king’s sleep, that ally is no longer drained of 1 Constitution, but they are still poisoned. An hour later, the king’s sleep kicks back in, and then they are drained 1 Constitution again. But anything else (including a fresh dose of king’s sleep) during that hour can still drain their Constitution.






              share|improve this answer









              $endgroup$


















                6














                6










                6







                $begingroup$

                Mercy does not confer any kind of immunity. It removes conditions already present, but the target may well gain them again. For example, if a paladin with the Fatigued mercy uses lay on hands on their barbarian ally who has stopped raging, that barbarian will no longer be fatigued—and if an enemy witch uses touch of fatigue on the barbarian the very next round, that barbarian will be fatigued again.



                The description of mercy does mention something about “1 hour,” but this is only for special cases where the mercy removes a condition but not an underlying effect causing that condition. For example, if a paladin has the Enfeebled mercy, but not the Poisoned mercy, and uses lay on hands on an ally poisoned with king’s sleep, that ally is no longer drained of 1 Constitution, but they are still poisoned. An hour later, the king’s sleep kicks back in, and then they are drained 1 Constitution again. But anything else (including a fresh dose of king’s sleep) during that hour can still drain their Constitution.






                share|improve this answer









                $endgroup$



                Mercy does not confer any kind of immunity. It removes conditions already present, but the target may well gain them again. For example, if a paladin with the Fatigued mercy uses lay on hands on their barbarian ally who has stopped raging, that barbarian will no longer be fatigued—and if an enemy witch uses touch of fatigue on the barbarian the very next round, that barbarian will be fatigued again.



                The description of mercy does mention something about “1 hour,” but this is only for special cases where the mercy removes a condition but not an underlying effect causing that condition. For example, if a paladin has the Enfeebled mercy, but not the Poisoned mercy, and uses lay on hands on an ally poisoned with king’s sleep, that ally is no longer drained of 1 Constitution, but they are still poisoned. An hour later, the king’s sleep kicks back in, and then they are drained 1 Constitution again. But anything else (including a fresh dose of king’s sleep) during that hour can still drain their Constitution.







                share|improve this answer












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                answered 11 hours ago









                KRyanKRyan

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