Here's the situation. There are an Investigator and another model in 4.1" from him. The Investigator places Scheme Marker, triggering his "It's Evidence" stuff.
Since 30mm + 3" is more then 4.1", so the another model can be pushed by "It's Evidence", even being not actually in aura's range.
As it stated in RB, all models inside the Aura’s area, including what is generating the Aura, are affected by the Aura as long as they stay inside the area and remain in Line of Sight of the generating object. The “affected model” in these instances is whatever model experiences some change in game state.
In my example we have the model outside the Aura's range, but experiencing some changes in game state.
So the question is - will be the model in example treated as "affected" by an aura? More widely: are the "stay inside the area and remain in Line of Sight of the generating object" and "experiences some change in game state" separate causes for a model to be count as "affected", or they should be used in conjunction?
Question
Domin
Here's the situation. There are an Investigator and another model in 4.1" from him. The Investigator places Scheme Marker, triggering his "It's Evidence" stuff.
Since 30mm + 3" is more then 4.1", so the another model can be pushed by "It's Evidence", even being not actually in aura's range.
As it stated in RB, all models inside the Aura’s area, including what is generating the Aura, are affected by the Aura as long as they stay inside the area and remain in Line of Sight of the generating object. The “affected model” in these instances is whatever model experiences some change in game state.
In my example we have the model outside the Aura's range, but experiencing some changes in game state.
So the question is - will be the model in example treated as "affected" by an aura? More widely: are the "stay inside the area and remain in Line of Sight of the generating object" and "experiences some change in game state" separate causes for a model to be count as "affected", or they should be used in conjunction?
Link to comment
Share on other sites
11 answers to this question
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.