Pathfinder Roleplaying Game Core Rulebook
  • School evocation []
  • Spell Lists
    • occultist 5
    • sorcerer/wizard 5
  • Casting Time 1 standard action
  • Components V, S, M (powdered quartz)
  • Range close (25 ft. + 5 ft./2 levels)
  • Effect(s) wall whose area is up to one 10-ft. square/level
  • Duration 1 round /level (D)
  • Saving Throw none

A wall of force creates an invisible wall of pure force. The wall cannot move and is not easily destroyed. A wall of force is immune to dispel magic, although a mage’s disjunction can still dispel it.

A wall of force can be damaged by spells as normal, except for disintegrate, which automatically destroys it. It can be damaged by weapons and supernatural abilities, but a wall of force has hardness 30 and a number of hit points equal to 20 per caster level. Contact with a sphere of annihilation or rod of cancellation instantly destroys a wall of force.

Breath weapons and spells cannot pass through a wall of force in either direction, although dimension door, teleport, and similar effects can bypass the barrier. It blocks ethereal creatures as well as material ones (though ethereal creatures can usually circumvent the wall by going around it, through material floors and ceilings). Gaze attacks can operate through a wall of force.

The caster can form the wall into a flat, vertical plane whose area is up to one 10-foot square per level. The wall must be continuous and unbroken when formed. If its surface is broken by any object or creature, the spell fails.

Wall of force can be made permanent with a permanency spell.


The text on this page is Open Game Content, and is licensed for public use under the terms of the Open Game License v1.0a.

Sources:

  • Pathfinder Roleplaying Game Core Rulebook

SECTION 15

  • Pathfinder Roleplaying Game Core Rulebook, Copyright 2011, Paizo Publishing, LLC; Author: Jason Bulmahn, based on material by Jonathan Tweet, Monte Cook, and Skip Williams.
  • The Book of Experimental Might, Copyright 2008, Monte J. Cook. All rights reserved.
  • Tome of Horrors, Copyright 2002, Necromancer Games, Inc.; Authors: Scott Greene, with Clark Peterson, Erica Balsley, Kevin Baase, Casey Christofferson, Lance Hawvermale, Travis Hawvermale, Patrick Lawinger, and Bill Webb; Based on original content from TSR.
  • Open Game License v 1.0a, Copyright 2000, Wizards of the Coast, Inc.
  • System Reference Document, Copyright 2000, Wizards of the Coast, Inc.; Authors Jonathan Tweet, Monte Cook, Skip Williams, based on material by E. Gary Gygax and Dave Arneson.
  • Pathminder, Copyright 2016, Drumanagh Wilpole.