by Llenlleawg » Wed Feb 03, 2010 7:09 pm
First of all, hello! I'm new here.
Second of all, to clarify (a bit) about Magic Missile. In the original D&D Supplement I: Greyhawk (which introduced the spell Magic Missile), its effect was described as follows:
Magic Missile: This is a conjured missile equivalent to a magic arrow, and it does full damage (2-7 points) to any creature it strikes. For every five levels the magic-user has attained he may add an additional two missiles when employing this spell, so a 6th level magic-user may cast three magic missiles at his target, an 11th level magic-user casts five, and so-on. Range 15"
As you can see, it was not altogether clear from this text that the spell *doesn't* require a roll "to hit" (much less a saving throw!). Of course, in the original set as well as in its supplements, many spell descriptions (many descriptions, period) are precisely vague in just the same way. (By way of parallel, the Sleep spell in Men & Magic does not explicitly state that no save is allowed, even though it states that "the spell always affects the number determined by the dice".) Perhaps this was less than lucid writing. Perhaps the goal was deliberate ambiguity to allow for the referee to decide on his own. Indeed, in the 1977 Holmes Basic edition of D&D, the spell Magic Missile explicitly states, "Roll the missile fire like a long bow arrow."
Whatever the case, the spell eventually came to be interpreted as disallowing a save and always striking its target. By the dawn of the AD&D Player's Handbook, the spell produced no longer 1d6+1 damage missiles, with two additional missiles every five levels, but 1d4+1 damage missiles, with one additional missile every two additional levels, and with the explicit clarification that the missiles always strike, no save.
So, S&W has chosen the middle path of allowing both eventual interpretations (the higher damage but "to hit" reading of Holmes and the lower damage but automatic hit interpretation of the AD&D PH), to be decided by the individual referee.
My two cents, anyway.