Invisible

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Revision as of 21:12, 28 February 2014 by MoogleDan (talk | contribs) (Updated for 0.13, cleaned up, moved over details found in the Invisibility spell page)
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Version 0.13: This article may not be up to date for the latest stable release of Crawl.


Invisible is a status effect which renders the victim unseen except through magically enhanced vision or via other senses. It functions differently depending on whether it affects a player or a monster.

Player Version

An invisible player gets the following bonuses and penalties, assuming your victim cannot see or sense invisible:

  • Anyone attacking you in melee incurs a 35% reduction to their to-hit number.
  • Any of your melee victims who have shields have their blocking roll divided by three.
  • You occasionally make tier-3 stabbing attacks, and sleeping or unaware monsters suffer a large penalty to detecting you through your stealth.
  • Enemy ranged attacks have their to-hit number halved, and may target the wrong tile entirely.
  • Monsters are less likely to use certain spells or abilities against you.
  • There is a chance opponents who can't see invisible will break off their attack and resume wandering.
  • You have a 60% chance of gaining a point of magic contamination when handle_time() is called.
  • You can only dissipate magic contamination via "violent discharge" or the wrath of Sif Muna.
  • +5 to all hunger costs.
  • -5 to your melee to-hit number if you yourself cannot see invisible. Official justification: you can't see your weapon.

Sources

You can become invisible by:

Regardless of source, player invisibility lasts for 14 + 1d(spell power) turns (max: 100 turns)

Strategy

The usefulness of being invisible is surprisingly limited. First off, acquiring it can be somewhat tricky. Potions and wands of invisibility are both very finite, and gaining the skill necessary to cast a level 6 spell can be prohibitive for many builds. Even once it is easily castable, overuse generates magic contamination rapidly, putting you at risk of dangerous miscast effects and mutations. Finding items with evocable invisibility is the easiest way to gain unlimited access early on, but this is by no means guaranteed.

Also, the list of monsters capable of seeing or sensing invisible is unfortunately rather large, making the status effect completely useless against them (or worse than useless if you yourself can't see invisible). However, stealthy stabber characters can benefit from being invisible tremendously; it greatly enhances both your ability to go undetected around susceptible enemies and your damage output in melee with them thanks to the stabbing opportunities it provides. The trick lies in learning which enemies can and cannot see right through it.

Alternatively, consider learning the Dazzling Spray spell. This level 3 spell damages opponents and renders them blind, duplicating many of the advantages of invisibility with none of the drawbacks, and affecting many opponents that possess see invisible.

Monster Version

Invisible monsters are very dangerous to a player who cannot see invisible. If you cannot see invisible, then in melee with invisible monsters:

  • Your shield rolls are divided by three.
  • You suffer a -10 penalty to your EV against their melee attacks
  • You suffer a -6 penalty to your melee to-hit number against invisible monsters.

On top of that, invisible monsters cannot be seen either within your line of sight or on the map, and if you actually manage to guess which tile they're in and attack them, you receive significantly less information than normal (the monster is referred to as "it" rather than by its actual name).

Sources

Permanently invisible

These monsters are permanently, inherently invisible:

Casters of invisibility

Some spellcasting monsters can make themselves invisible:

This effect has a finite duration, but the monster can always recast it after it has run out.

Potion or wand users

Monsters who know how to use magic items may use potions or wands of invisibility to make themselves invisible. This effect has a finite duration, but the monster can always reattempt it after it has run out.

Detecting invisible monsters

See invisible

If you have the see invisible intrinsic, invisible monsters gain no benefits against you. You can acquire this in the following ways:

Backlighting

Under some circumstances, a target may become backlit. This renders its invisibility ineffective, and actually makes it easier to hit than normal. Backlighting occurs whenever:

Invisible monsters revealed as a disturbance

Certain less stealthy monsters, like orc wizards and sky beasts, will occasionally leave disturbances while invisible, represented by a white humanoid outline if playing in tiles or by the { glyph if playing in console. Additionally, all substantial invisible monsters, when passing through a cloud, are temporarily rendered visible in the same way. Should you examine the disturbance (with the x key), you will be able to determine the creature's identity. Thus anything the player can do to create clouds when an invisible creature is near will aid him in fixing that creature's location:

Also, any non-flying invisible monster in shallow water is always visible as a disturbance.

Submerged monsters

Certain monsters have the ability to render themselves effectively invisible by submerging. However, this is a defensive maneuver only: they are always revealed if they become adjacent to, or if they attempt to attack, the player. None of the conventional methods described above for detecting actually invisible monsters work on submerged monsters:

History

Prior to 0.13, invisible monsters were immune to the effects of Olgreb's Toxic Radiance.