Can I resurrect a corpse that has been animated?
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24
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One of my teammates has died in battle. As a noble necromancer, I do not want to carry his corpse to the temple on my shoulders, instead I plan to animate his corpse, so he can walk on its own.
Then, in temple, I can destroy the created zombie and pay for his resurrection. Would he get resurrected properly?
dnd-5e undead character-death resurrection
add a comment |
up vote
24
down vote
favorite
One of my teammates has died in battle. As a noble necromancer, I do not want to carry his corpse to the temple on my shoulders, instead I plan to animate his corpse, so he can walk on its own.
Then, in temple, I can destroy the created zombie and pay for his resurrection. Would he get resurrected properly?
dnd-5e undead character-death resurrection
add a comment |
up vote
24
down vote
favorite
up vote
24
down vote
favorite
One of my teammates has died in battle. As a noble necromancer, I do not want to carry his corpse to the temple on my shoulders, instead I plan to animate his corpse, so he can walk on its own.
Then, in temple, I can destroy the created zombie and pay for his resurrection. Would he get resurrected properly?
dnd-5e undead character-death resurrection
One of my teammates has died in battle. As a noble necromancer, I do not want to carry his corpse to the temple on my shoulders, instead I plan to animate his corpse, so he can walk on its own.
Then, in temple, I can destroy the created zombie and pay for his resurrection. Would he get resurrected properly?
dnd-5e undead character-death resurrection
dnd-5e undead character-death resurrection
edited Nov 19 at 12:12
V2Blast
18.1k248114
18.1k248114
asked Nov 19 at 9:04
Gorock
12315
12315
add a comment |
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
up vote
21
down vote
accepted
Yes, you can resurrect him.
The resurrection spell says (emphasis mine):
You touch a dead creature that has been dead for no more than a century, that didn't die of old age, and that isn't undead. If the soul is free and willing the target returns to life with all its Hit Points.
Under normal circumstance I would argue that a destroyed/killed undead would no longer count as undead but Jeremy Crawford has posted a call on the similar revivify spell:
If you cast revivify on a zombie, the creature returns as a zombie. The spell doesn't change creature type.
- Jeremy Crawford
This call would let me extrapolate that it would not be possible. Except that this specific case is actually covered by the MM:
Once turned into a zombie, a creature can't be restored to life except by
powerful magic, such as a resurrection spell.
- MM pg. 315
This would mean the specific case of a resurrection spell (or if you want to be absolutely sure a true resurrection spell) it is able to turn a destroyed zombie back into the person it was before originally killed.
Though you might want to destroy the zombie outside of the temple and carry him the last part as I am guessing that most temples are not happy with zombies walking in.
Beyond RAW
This case relies on a lot of specific rules and exceptions if tis would come up at my home game I would allow resurrection of mindless destroyed undead like skeletons and zombies. I would not allow revivify even if the spell was cast before a minute has past since the original death.
4
What do you make of the JC quote in daze413's answer?
– NathanS
Nov 19 at 11:33
2
+1 for that 'wtf!' moment when a priest sees a zombie walking in
– SeriousBri
Nov 19 at 12:02
3
Also, true resurrection specifically mentions that it works on undead, if you're willing to pay the extra 24,000 gold, you don't even need to kill the zombie. As a side bonus, true resurrection also removes all curses, diseases and poisons, even if they're magical in nature (it also doesn't impose resurrection sickness that regular resurrection does).
– Matt Rick
Nov 19 at 16:12
So if your party member dies, and you need to travel a long distance to the temple, you can animate them so they can walk...
– Toon Krijthe
Nov 20 at 7:04
add a comment |
up vote
23
down vote
No, you can't Resurrect your friend
Strictly by RAW, Animate Dead creates an undead creature, the thing is no longer "your friend's corpse", it is now a zombie with the zombie game statistics:
Animate Dead
Your spell imbues the target with a foul mimicry of life, raising it as an undead creature.
With the above, your teammate has become a zombie, and when destroyed, becomes a dead zombie and not a dead PC.
One of the prerequisites for Resurrection is that the corpse cannot be undead:
Resurrection
You touch a dead creature that has been dead for no more than a century, that didn't die of old age, and that isn't undead.
This is further supported by Jeremy Crawford's tweet:
If you cast revivify on a zombie, the creature returns as a zombie. The spell doesn't change creature type.
- Jeremy Crawford
You also cannot use Raise Dead on him as Raise Dead also states:
Raise Dead
The spell can't return an undead creature to life.
However, True Resurrection does not appear to have the same limitations as the previously mentioned spells, so you probably can get someone to cast True Resurrection, if you're able to pay.
3
I believe OP's real issue is whether or not a killed undead still counts as undead, or if he's just dead and can therefore be revived. You seem to assume the former - but can you support this view with citations etc.?
– PixelMaster
Nov 19 at 9:34
9
@PixelMaster I think the Jeremy Crawford tweet is the citation you need - he can't be talking about casting revivify on an animated zombie, as he says "the creature returns as a zombie." Instead he seems to be suggesting that after destroying the zombie, the remains are now the remains of a zombie, not the remains of the dead PC, so resurrection would get you the zombie back.
– liamvharris
Nov 19 at 11:20
5
This is one of the worst 'RAW will screw you over' answers that I have ever seen. Not that it is wrong, but that any GM ruling this way would have me looking for another group.
– SeriousBri
Nov 19 at 12:00
7
Here is the fun part, and where I think it gets muddy, a corpse is an object and objects don't have creature types.
– Slagmoth
Nov 19 at 14:56
4
You know, this reading does make it really obvious why necromancy is evil.
– Yakk
Nov 19 at 20:33
|
show 9 more comments
up vote
15
down vote
Yes, the character can be resurrected.
Source, MM pg. 315 under Zombies, sub-section Dark Servants:
Once turned into a zombie, a creature can't be restored to life except by
powerful magic, such as a resurrection spell.
This is not specific to the spell Resurrection but rather resurrection magic in general. So killing the zombie and bringing the character back to life should be manageable within the rules of most spells so long as they qualify within the bounds of their own restrictions.
However, be careful on timing since the limits on resurrection magic start when the character dies. Animate Dead is not the same as Gentle Repose and does not extend the duration for which you are able to resurrect a dead character/npc. So for instance, Revivify only works if used within a minute of death. Raise Dead within the last 10 days.
5
It's not referring specifically to the resurrection spell; if it were, the name would be in italics. It is referring more generally to resurrection magic in general, without calling out a specific spell.
– V2Blast
Nov 19 at 12:14
1
@V2Blast - You're going to need to source that argument better since it very specifically states: "...such as a resurrection spell." and not, "...such as resurrection magics."
– Lino Frank Ciaralli
Nov 19 at 12:18
7
5e always italicizes actual references to spell names; it's not italicized here, so it's not referring to a specific spell.
– V2Blast
Nov 19 at 12:30
2
I think V2Blast is right on this, also because of the snippet in your last comment; it says "such as a resurrection spell", not "such as the resurrection spell". That said, the quote in your answer does also say "powerful magic", so your overall point still stands, just not on the fact that they said the word "resurrection" to mean literally "the spell".
– NathanS
Nov 19 at 12:43
2
I mean, the other indicator that it's not referring to the specific spell of that name is calling it "a" resurrection spell rather than "the"... But that's more ambiguous. Anyway, I'll leave it at that. At the very least, the answer should probably note that at best it might refer to the specific spell (which assumes that there is an error in the formatting), not that it does refer specifically to that spell.
– V2Blast
Nov 19 at 13:48
|
show 6 more comments
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
21
down vote
accepted
Yes, you can resurrect him.
The resurrection spell says (emphasis mine):
You touch a dead creature that has been dead for no more than a century, that didn't die of old age, and that isn't undead. If the soul is free and willing the target returns to life with all its Hit Points.
Under normal circumstance I would argue that a destroyed/killed undead would no longer count as undead but Jeremy Crawford has posted a call on the similar revivify spell:
If you cast revivify on a zombie, the creature returns as a zombie. The spell doesn't change creature type.
- Jeremy Crawford
This call would let me extrapolate that it would not be possible. Except that this specific case is actually covered by the MM:
Once turned into a zombie, a creature can't be restored to life except by
powerful magic, such as a resurrection spell.
- MM pg. 315
This would mean the specific case of a resurrection spell (or if you want to be absolutely sure a true resurrection spell) it is able to turn a destroyed zombie back into the person it was before originally killed.
Though you might want to destroy the zombie outside of the temple and carry him the last part as I am guessing that most temples are not happy with zombies walking in.
Beyond RAW
This case relies on a lot of specific rules and exceptions if tis would come up at my home game I would allow resurrection of mindless destroyed undead like skeletons and zombies. I would not allow revivify even if the spell was cast before a minute has past since the original death.
4
What do you make of the JC quote in daze413's answer?
– NathanS
Nov 19 at 11:33
2
+1 for that 'wtf!' moment when a priest sees a zombie walking in
– SeriousBri
Nov 19 at 12:02
3
Also, true resurrection specifically mentions that it works on undead, if you're willing to pay the extra 24,000 gold, you don't even need to kill the zombie. As a side bonus, true resurrection also removes all curses, diseases and poisons, even if they're magical in nature (it also doesn't impose resurrection sickness that regular resurrection does).
– Matt Rick
Nov 19 at 16:12
So if your party member dies, and you need to travel a long distance to the temple, you can animate them so they can walk...
– Toon Krijthe
Nov 20 at 7:04
add a comment |
up vote
21
down vote
accepted
Yes, you can resurrect him.
The resurrection spell says (emphasis mine):
You touch a dead creature that has been dead for no more than a century, that didn't die of old age, and that isn't undead. If the soul is free and willing the target returns to life with all its Hit Points.
Under normal circumstance I would argue that a destroyed/killed undead would no longer count as undead but Jeremy Crawford has posted a call on the similar revivify spell:
If you cast revivify on a zombie, the creature returns as a zombie. The spell doesn't change creature type.
- Jeremy Crawford
This call would let me extrapolate that it would not be possible. Except that this specific case is actually covered by the MM:
Once turned into a zombie, a creature can't be restored to life except by
powerful magic, such as a resurrection spell.
- MM pg. 315
This would mean the specific case of a resurrection spell (or if you want to be absolutely sure a true resurrection spell) it is able to turn a destroyed zombie back into the person it was before originally killed.
Though you might want to destroy the zombie outside of the temple and carry him the last part as I am guessing that most temples are not happy with zombies walking in.
Beyond RAW
This case relies on a lot of specific rules and exceptions if tis would come up at my home game I would allow resurrection of mindless destroyed undead like skeletons and zombies. I would not allow revivify even if the spell was cast before a minute has past since the original death.
4
What do you make of the JC quote in daze413's answer?
– NathanS
Nov 19 at 11:33
2
+1 for that 'wtf!' moment when a priest sees a zombie walking in
– SeriousBri
Nov 19 at 12:02
3
Also, true resurrection specifically mentions that it works on undead, if you're willing to pay the extra 24,000 gold, you don't even need to kill the zombie. As a side bonus, true resurrection also removes all curses, diseases and poisons, even if they're magical in nature (it also doesn't impose resurrection sickness that regular resurrection does).
– Matt Rick
Nov 19 at 16:12
So if your party member dies, and you need to travel a long distance to the temple, you can animate them so they can walk...
– Toon Krijthe
Nov 20 at 7:04
add a comment |
up vote
21
down vote
accepted
up vote
21
down vote
accepted
Yes, you can resurrect him.
The resurrection spell says (emphasis mine):
You touch a dead creature that has been dead for no more than a century, that didn't die of old age, and that isn't undead. If the soul is free and willing the target returns to life with all its Hit Points.
Under normal circumstance I would argue that a destroyed/killed undead would no longer count as undead but Jeremy Crawford has posted a call on the similar revivify spell:
If you cast revivify on a zombie, the creature returns as a zombie. The spell doesn't change creature type.
- Jeremy Crawford
This call would let me extrapolate that it would not be possible. Except that this specific case is actually covered by the MM:
Once turned into a zombie, a creature can't be restored to life except by
powerful magic, such as a resurrection spell.
- MM pg. 315
This would mean the specific case of a resurrection spell (or if you want to be absolutely sure a true resurrection spell) it is able to turn a destroyed zombie back into the person it was before originally killed.
Though you might want to destroy the zombie outside of the temple and carry him the last part as I am guessing that most temples are not happy with zombies walking in.
Beyond RAW
This case relies on a lot of specific rules and exceptions if tis would come up at my home game I would allow resurrection of mindless destroyed undead like skeletons and zombies. I would not allow revivify even if the spell was cast before a minute has past since the original death.
Yes, you can resurrect him.
The resurrection spell says (emphasis mine):
You touch a dead creature that has been dead for no more than a century, that didn't die of old age, and that isn't undead. If the soul is free and willing the target returns to life with all its Hit Points.
Under normal circumstance I would argue that a destroyed/killed undead would no longer count as undead but Jeremy Crawford has posted a call on the similar revivify spell:
If you cast revivify on a zombie, the creature returns as a zombie. The spell doesn't change creature type.
- Jeremy Crawford
This call would let me extrapolate that it would not be possible. Except that this specific case is actually covered by the MM:
Once turned into a zombie, a creature can't be restored to life except by
powerful magic, such as a resurrection spell.
- MM pg. 315
This would mean the specific case of a resurrection spell (or if you want to be absolutely sure a true resurrection spell) it is able to turn a destroyed zombie back into the person it was before originally killed.
Though you might want to destroy the zombie outside of the temple and carry him the last part as I am guessing that most temples are not happy with zombies walking in.
Beyond RAW
This case relies on a lot of specific rules and exceptions if tis would come up at my home game I would allow resurrection of mindless destroyed undead like skeletons and zombies. I would not allow revivify even if the spell was cast before a minute has past since the original death.
edited Nov 20 at 9:22
V2Blast
18.1k248114
18.1k248114
answered Nov 19 at 9:17
Dinomaster
2,214520
2,214520
4
What do you make of the JC quote in daze413's answer?
– NathanS
Nov 19 at 11:33
2
+1 for that 'wtf!' moment when a priest sees a zombie walking in
– SeriousBri
Nov 19 at 12:02
3
Also, true resurrection specifically mentions that it works on undead, if you're willing to pay the extra 24,000 gold, you don't even need to kill the zombie. As a side bonus, true resurrection also removes all curses, diseases and poisons, even if they're magical in nature (it also doesn't impose resurrection sickness that regular resurrection does).
– Matt Rick
Nov 19 at 16:12
So if your party member dies, and you need to travel a long distance to the temple, you can animate them so they can walk...
– Toon Krijthe
Nov 20 at 7:04
add a comment |
4
What do you make of the JC quote in daze413's answer?
– NathanS
Nov 19 at 11:33
2
+1 for that 'wtf!' moment when a priest sees a zombie walking in
– SeriousBri
Nov 19 at 12:02
3
Also, true resurrection specifically mentions that it works on undead, if you're willing to pay the extra 24,000 gold, you don't even need to kill the zombie. As a side bonus, true resurrection also removes all curses, diseases and poisons, even if they're magical in nature (it also doesn't impose resurrection sickness that regular resurrection does).
– Matt Rick
Nov 19 at 16:12
So if your party member dies, and you need to travel a long distance to the temple, you can animate them so they can walk...
– Toon Krijthe
Nov 20 at 7:04
4
4
What do you make of the JC quote in daze413's answer?
– NathanS
Nov 19 at 11:33
What do you make of the JC quote in daze413's answer?
– NathanS
Nov 19 at 11:33
2
2
+1 for that 'wtf!' moment when a priest sees a zombie walking in
– SeriousBri
Nov 19 at 12:02
+1 for that 'wtf!' moment when a priest sees a zombie walking in
– SeriousBri
Nov 19 at 12:02
3
3
Also, true resurrection specifically mentions that it works on undead, if you're willing to pay the extra 24,000 gold, you don't even need to kill the zombie. As a side bonus, true resurrection also removes all curses, diseases and poisons, even if they're magical in nature (it also doesn't impose resurrection sickness that regular resurrection does).
– Matt Rick
Nov 19 at 16:12
Also, true resurrection specifically mentions that it works on undead, if you're willing to pay the extra 24,000 gold, you don't even need to kill the zombie. As a side bonus, true resurrection also removes all curses, diseases and poisons, even if they're magical in nature (it also doesn't impose resurrection sickness that regular resurrection does).
– Matt Rick
Nov 19 at 16:12
So if your party member dies, and you need to travel a long distance to the temple, you can animate them so they can walk...
– Toon Krijthe
Nov 20 at 7:04
So if your party member dies, and you need to travel a long distance to the temple, you can animate them so they can walk...
– Toon Krijthe
Nov 20 at 7:04
add a comment |
up vote
23
down vote
No, you can't Resurrect your friend
Strictly by RAW, Animate Dead creates an undead creature, the thing is no longer "your friend's corpse", it is now a zombie with the zombie game statistics:
Animate Dead
Your spell imbues the target with a foul mimicry of life, raising it as an undead creature.
With the above, your teammate has become a zombie, and when destroyed, becomes a dead zombie and not a dead PC.
One of the prerequisites for Resurrection is that the corpse cannot be undead:
Resurrection
You touch a dead creature that has been dead for no more than a century, that didn't die of old age, and that isn't undead.
This is further supported by Jeremy Crawford's tweet:
If you cast revivify on a zombie, the creature returns as a zombie. The spell doesn't change creature type.
- Jeremy Crawford
You also cannot use Raise Dead on him as Raise Dead also states:
Raise Dead
The spell can't return an undead creature to life.
However, True Resurrection does not appear to have the same limitations as the previously mentioned spells, so you probably can get someone to cast True Resurrection, if you're able to pay.
3
I believe OP's real issue is whether or not a killed undead still counts as undead, or if he's just dead and can therefore be revived. You seem to assume the former - but can you support this view with citations etc.?
– PixelMaster
Nov 19 at 9:34
9
@PixelMaster I think the Jeremy Crawford tweet is the citation you need - he can't be talking about casting revivify on an animated zombie, as he says "the creature returns as a zombie." Instead he seems to be suggesting that after destroying the zombie, the remains are now the remains of a zombie, not the remains of the dead PC, so resurrection would get you the zombie back.
– liamvharris
Nov 19 at 11:20
5
This is one of the worst 'RAW will screw you over' answers that I have ever seen. Not that it is wrong, but that any GM ruling this way would have me looking for another group.
– SeriousBri
Nov 19 at 12:00
7
Here is the fun part, and where I think it gets muddy, a corpse is an object and objects don't have creature types.
– Slagmoth
Nov 19 at 14:56
4
You know, this reading does make it really obvious why necromancy is evil.
– Yakk
Nov 19 at 20:33
|
show 9 more comments
up vote
23
down vote
No, you can't Resurrect your friend
Strictly by RAW, Animate Dead creates an undead creature, the thing is no longer "your friend's corpse", it is now a zombie with the zombie game statistics:
Animate Dead
Your spell imbues the target with a foul mimicry of life, raising it as an undead creature.
With the above, your teammate has become a zombie, and when destroyed, becomes a dead zombie and not a dead PC.
One of the prerequisites for Resurrection is that the corpse cannot be undead:
Resurrection
You touch a dead creature that has been dead for no more than a century, that didn't die of old age, and that isn't undead.
This is further supported by Jeremy Crawford's tweet:
If you cast revivify on a zombie, the creature returns as a zombie. The spell doesn't change creature type.
- Jeremy Crawford
You also cannot use Raise Dead on him as Raise Dead also states:
Raise Dead
The spell can't return an undead creature to life.
However, True Resurrection does not appear to have the same limitations as the previously mentioned spells, so you probably can get someone to cast True Resurrection, if you're able to pay.
3
I believe OP's real issue is whether or not a killed undead still counts as undead, or if he's just dead and can therefore be revived. You seem to assume the former - but can you support this view with citations etc.?
– PixelMaster
Nov 19 at 9:34
9
@PixelMaster I think the Jeremy Crawford tweet is the citation you need - he can't be talking about casting revivify on an animated zombie, as he says "the creature returns as a zombie." Instead he seems to be suggesting that after destroying the zombie, the remains are now the remains of a zombie, not the remains of the dead PC, so resurrection would get you the zombie back.
– liamvharris
Nov 19 at 11:20
5
This is one of the worst 'RAW will screw you over' answers that I have ever seen. Not that it is wrong, but that any GM ruling this way would have me looking for another group.
– SeriousBri
Nov 19 at 12:00
7
Here is the fun part, and where I think it gets muddy, a corpse is an object and objects don't have creature types.
– Slagmoth
Nov 19 at 14:56
4
You know, this reading does make it really obvious why necromancy is evil.
– Yakk
Nov 19 at 20:33
|
show 9 more comments
up vote
23
down vote
up vote
23
down vote
No, you can't Resurrect your friend
Strictly by RAW, Animate Dead creates an undead creature, the thing is no longer "your friend's corpse", it is now a zombie with the zombie game statistics:
Animate Dead
Your spell imbues the target with a foul mimicry of life, raising it as an undead creature.
With the above, your teammate has become a zombie, and when destroyed, becomes a dead zombie and not a dead PC.
One of the prerequisites for Resurrection is that the corpse cannot be undead:
Resurrection
You touch a dead creature that has been dead for no more than a century, that didn't die of old age, and that isn't undead.
This is further supported by Jeremy Crawford's tweet:
If you cast revivify on a zombie, the creature returns as a zombie. The spell doesn't change creature type.
- Jeremy Crawford
You also cannot use Raise Dead on him as Raise Dead also states:
Raise Dead
The spell can't return an undead creature to life.
However, True Resurrection does not appear to have the same limitations as the previously mentioned spells, so you probably can get someone to cast True Resurrection, if you're able to pay.
No, you can't Resurrect your friend
Strictly by RAW, Animate Dead creates an undead creature, the thing is no longer "your friend's corpse", it is now a zombie with the zombie game statistics:
Animate Dead
Your spell imbues the target with a foul mimicry of life, raising it as an undead creature.
With the above, your teammate has become a zombie, and when destroyed, becomes a dead zombie and not a dead PC.
One of the prerequisites for Resurrection is that the corpse cannot be undead:
Resurrection
You touch a dead creature that has been dead for no more than a century, that didn't die of old age, and that isn't undead.
This is further supported by Jeremy Crawford's tweet:
If you cast revivify on a zombie, the creature returns as a zombie. The spell doesn't change creature type.
- Jeremy Crawford
You also cannot use Raise Dead on him as Raise Dead also states:
Raise Dead
The spell can't return an undead creature to life.
However, True Resurrection does not appear to have the same limitations as the previously mentioned spells, so you probably can get someone to cast True Resurrection, if you're able to pay.
edited Nov 19 at 12:40
answered Nov 19 at 9:14
daze413
21.4k780166
21.4k780166
3
I believe OP's real issue is whether or not a killed undead still counts as undead, or if he's just dead and can therefore be revived. You seem to assume the former - but can you support this view with citations etc.?
– PixelMaster
Nov 19 at 9:34
9
@PixelMaster I think the Jeremy Crawford tweet is the citation you need - he can't be talking about casting revivify on an animated zombie, as he says "the creature returns as a zombie." Instead he seems to be suggesting that after destroying the zombie, the remains are now the remains of a zombie, not the remains of the dead PC, so resurrection would get you the zombie back.
– liamvharris
Nov 19 at 11:20
5
This is one of the worst 'RAW will screw you over' answers that I have ever seen. Not that it is wrong, but that any GM ruling this way would have me looking for another group.
– SeriousBri
Nov 19 at 12:00
7
Here is the fun part, and where I think it gets muddy, a corpse is an object and objects don't have creature types.
– Slagmoth
Nov 19 at 14:56
4
You know, this reading does make it really obvious why necromancy is evil.
– Yakk
Nov 19 at 20:33
|
show 9 more comments
3
I believe OP's real issue is whether or not a killed undead still counts as undead, or if he's just dead and can therefore be revived. You seem to assume the former - but can you support this view with citations etc.?
– PixelMaster
Nov 19 at 9:34
9
@PixelMaster I think the Jeremy Crawford tweet is the citation you need - he can't be talking about casting revivify on an animated zombie, as he says "the creature returns as a zombie." Instead he seems to be suggesting that after destroying the zombie, the remains are now the remains of a zombie, not the remains of the dead PC, so resurrection would get you the zombie back.
– liamvharris
Nov 19 at 11:20
5
This is one of the worst 'RAW will screw you over' answers that I have ever seen. Not that it is wrong, but that any GM ruling this way would have me looking for another group.
– SeriousBri
Nov 19 at 12:00
7
Here is the fun part, and where I think it gets muddy, a corpse is an object and objects don't have creature types.
– Slagmoth
Nov 19 at 14:56
4
You know, this reading does make it really obvious why necromancy is evil.
– Yakk
Nov 19 at 20:33
3
3
I believe OP's real issue is whether or not a killed undead still counts as undead, or if he's just dead and can therefore be revived. You seem to assume the former - but can you support this view with citations etc.?
– PixelMaster
Nov 19 at 9:34
I believe OP's real issue is whether or not a killed undead still counts as undead, or if he's just dead and can therefore be revived. You seem to assume the former - but can you support this view with citations etc.?
– PixelMaster
Nov 19 at 9:34
9
9
@PixelMaster I think the Jeremy Crawford tweet is the citation you need - he can't be talking about casting revivify on an animated zombie, as he says "the creature returns as a zombie." Instead he seems to be suggesting that after destroying the zombie, the remains are now the remains of a zombie, not the remains of the dead PC, so resurrection would get you the zombie back.
– liamvharris
Nov 19 at 11:20
@PixelMaster I think the Jeremy Crawford tweet is the citation you need - he can't be talking about casting revivify on an animated zombie, as he says "the creature returns as a zombie." Instead he seems to be suggesting that after destroying the zombie, the remains are now the remains of a zombie, not the remains of the dead PC, so resurrection would get you the zombie back.
– liamvharris
Nov 19 at 11:20
5
5
This is one of the worst 'RAW will screw you over' answers that I have ever seen. Not that it is wrong, but that any GM ruling this way would have me looking for another group.
– SeriousBri
Nov 19 at 12:00
This is one of the worst 'RAW will screw you over' answers that I have ever seen. Not that it is wrong, but that any GM ruling this way would have me looking for another group.
– SeriousBri
Nov 19 at 12:00
7
7
Here is the fun part, and where I think it gets muddy, a corpse is an object and objects don't have creature types.
– Slagmoth
Nov 19 at 14:56
Here is the fun part, and where I think it gets muddy, a corpse is an object and objects don't have creature types.
– Slagmoth
Nov 19 at 14:56
4
4
You know, this reading does make it really obvious why necromancy is evil.
– Yakk
Nov 19 at 20:33
You know, this reading does make it really obvious why necromancy is evil.
– Yakk
Nov 19 at 20:33
|
show 9 more comments
up vote
15
down vote
Yes, the character can be resurrected.
Source, MM pg. 315 under Zombies, sub-section Dark Servants:
Once turned into a zombie, a creature can't be restored to life except by
powerful magic, such as a resurrection spell.
This is not specific to the spell Resurrection but rather resurrection magic in general. So killing the zombie and bringing the character back to life should be manageable within the rules of most spells so long as they qualify within the bounds of their own restrictions.
However, be careful on timing since the limits on resurrection magic start when the character dies. Animate Dead is not the same as Gentle Repose and does not extend the duration for which you are able to resurrect a dead character/npc. So for instance, Revivify only works if used within a minute of death. Raise Dead within the last 10 days.
5
It's not referring specifically to the resurrection spell; if it were, the name would be in italics. It is referring more generally to resurrection magic in general, without calling out a specific spell.
– V2Blast
Nov 19 at 12:14
1
@V2Blast - You're going to need to source that argument better since it very specifically states: "...such as a resurrection spell." and not, "...such as resurrection magics."
– Lino Frank Ciaralli
Nov 19 at 12:18
7
5e always italicizes actual references to spell names; it's not italicized here, so it's not referring to a specific spell.
– V2Blast
Nov 19 at 12:30
2
I think V2Blast is right on this, also because of the snippet in your last comment; it says "such as a resurrection spell", not "such as the resurrection spell". That said, the quote in your answer does also say "powerful magic", so your overall point still stands, just not on the fact that they said the word "resurrection" to mean literally "the spell".
– NathanS
Nov 19 at 12:43
2
I mean, the other indicator that it's not referring to the specific spell of that name is calling it "a" resurrection spell rather than "the"... But that's more ambiguous. Anyway, I'll leave it at that. At the very least, the answer should probably note that at best it might refer to the specific spell (which assumes that there is an error in the formatting), not that it does refer specifically to that spell.
– V2Blast
Nov 19 at 13:48
|
show 6 more comments
up vote
15
down vote
Yes, the character can be resurrected.
Source, MM pg. 315 under Zombies, sub-section Dark Servants:
Once turned into a zombie, a creature can't be restored to life except by
powerful magic, such as a resurrection spell.
This is not specific to the spell Resurrection but rather resurrection magic in general. So killing the zombie and bringing the character back to life should be manageable within the rules of most spells so long as they qualify within the bounds of their own restrictions.
However, be careful on timing since the limits on resurrection magic start when the character dies. Animate Dead is not the same as Gentle Repose and does not extend the duration for which you are able to resurrect a dead character/npc. So for instance, Revivify only works if used within a minute of death. Raise Dead within the last 10 days.
5
It's not referring specifically to the resurrection spell; if it were, the name would be in italics. It is referring more generally to resurrection magic in general, without calling out a specific spell.
– V2Blast
Nov 19 at 12:14
1
@V2Blast - You're going to need to source that argument better since it very specifically states: "...such as a resurrection spell." and not, "...such as resurrection magics."
– Lino Frank Ciaralli
Nov 19 at 12:18
7
5e always italicizes actual references to spell names; it's not italicized here, so it's not referring to a specific spell.
– V2Blast
Nov 19 at 12:30
2
I think V2Blast is right on this, also because of the snippet in your last comment; it says "such as a resurrection spell", not "such as the resurrection spell". That said, the quote in your answer does also say "powerful magic", so your overall point still stands, just not on the fact that they said the word "resurrection" to mean literally "the spell".
– NathanS
Nov 19 at 12:43
2
I mean, the other indicator that it's not referring to the specific spell of that name is calling it "a" resurrection spell rather than "the"... But that's more ambiguous. Anyway, I'll leave it at that. At the very least, the answer should probably note that at best it might refer to the specific spell (which assumes that there is an error in the formatting), not that it does refer specifically to that spell.
– V2Blast
Nov 19 at 13:48
|
show 6 more comments
up vote
15
down vote
up vote
15
down vote
Yes, the character can be resurrected.
Source, MM pg. 315 under Zombies, sub-section Dark Servants:
Once turned into a zombie, a creature can't be restored to life except by
powerful magic, such as a resurrection spell.
This is not specific to the spell Resurrection but rather resurrection magic in general. So killing the zombie and bringing the character back to life should be manageable within the rules of most spells so long as they qualify within the bounds of their own restrictions.
However, be careful on timing since the limits on resurrection magic start when the character dies. Animate Dead is not the same as Gentle Repose and does not extend the duration for which you are able to resurrect a dead character/npc. So for instance, Revivify only works if used within a minute of death. Raise Dead within the last 10 days.
Yes, the character can be resurrected.
Source, MM pg. 315 under Zombies, sub-section Dark Servants:
Once turned into a zombie, a creature can't be restored to life except by
powerful magic, such as a resurrection spell.
This is not specific to the spell Resurrection but rather resurrection magic in general. So killing the zombie and bringing the character back to life should be manageable within the rules of most spells so long as they qualify within the bounds of their own restrictions.
However, be careful on timing since the limits on resurrection magic start when the character dies. Animate Dead is not the same as Gentle Repose and does not extend the duration for which you are able to resurrect a dead character/npc. So for instance, Revivify only works if used within a minute of death. Raise Dead within the last 10 days.
edited Nov 19 at 18:07
answered Nov 19 at 11:58
Lino Frank Ciaralli
22.8k564132
22.8k564132
5
It's not referring specifically to the resurrection spell; if it were, the name would be in italics. It is referring more generally to resurrection magic in general, without calling out a specific spell.
– V2Blast
Nov 19 at 12:14
1
@V2Blast - You're going to need to source that argument better since it very specifically states: "...such as a resurrection spell." and not, "...such as resurrection magics."
– Lino Frank Ciaralli
Nov 19 at 12:18
7
5e always italicizes actual references to spell names; it's not italicized here, so it's not referring to a specific spell.
– V2Blast
Nov 19 at 12:30
2
I think V2Blast is right on this, also because of the snippet in your last comment; it says "such as a resurrection spell", not "such as the resurrection spell". That said, the quote in your answer does also say "powerful magic", so your overall point still stands, just not on the fact that they said the word "resurrection" to mean literally "the spell".
– NathanS
Nov 19 at 12:43
2
I mean, the other indicator that it's not referring to the specific spell of that name is calling it "a" resurrection spell rather than "the"... But that's more ambiguous. Anyway, I'll leave it at that. At the very least, the answer should probably note that at best it might refer to the specific spell (which assumes that there is an error in the formatting), not that it does refer specifically to that spell.
– V2Blast
Nov 19 at 13:48
|
show 6 more comments
5
It's not referring specifically to the resurrection spell; if it were, the name would be in italics. It is referring more generally to resurrection magic in general, without calling out a specific spell.
– V2Blast
Nov 19 at 12:14
1
@V2Blast - You're going to need to source that argument better since it very specifically states: "...such as a resurrection spell." and not, "...such as resurrection magics."
– Lino Frank Ciaralli
Nov 19 at 12:18
7
5e always italicizes actual references to spell names; it's not italicized here, so it's not referring to a specific spell.
– V2Blast
Nov 19 at 12:30
2
I think V2Blast is right on this, also because of the snippet in your last comment; it says "such as a resurrection spell", not "such as the resurrection spell". That said, the quote in your answer does also say "powerful magic", so your overall point still stands, just not on the fact that they said the word "resurrection" to mean literally "the spell".
– NathanS
Nov 19 at 12:43
2
I mean, the other indicator that it's not referring to the specific spell of that name is calling it "a" resurrection spell rather than "the"... But that's more ambiguous. Anyway, I'll leave it at that. At the very least, the answer should probably note that at best it might refer to the specific spell (which assumes that there is an error in the formatting), not that it does refer specifically to that spell.
– V2Blast
Nov 19 at 13:48
5
5
It's not referring specifically to the resurrection spell; if it were, the name would be in italics. It is referring more generally to resurrection magic in general, without calling out a specific spell.
– V2Blast
Nov 19 at 12:14
It's not referring specifically to the resurrection spell; if it were, the name would be in italics. It is referring more generally to resurrection magic in general, without calling out a specific spell.
– V2Blast
Nov 19 at 12:14
1
1
@V2Blast - You're going to need to source that argument better since it very specifically states: "...such as a resurrection spell." and not, "...such as resurrection magics."
– Lino Frank Ciaralli
Nov 19 at 12:18
@V2Blast - You're going to need to source that argument better since it very specifically states: "...such as a resurrection spell." and not, "...such as resurrection magics."
– Lino Frank Ciaralli
Nov 19 at 12:18
7
7
5e always italicizes actual references to spell names; it's not italicized here, so it's not referring to a specific spell.
– V2Blast
Nov 19 at 12:30
5e always italicizes actual references to spell names; it's not italicized here, so it's not referring to a specific spell.
– V2Blast
Nov 19 at 12:30
2
2
I think V2Blast is right on this, also because of the snippet in your last comment; it says "such as a resurrection spell", not "such as the resurrection spell". That said, the quote in your answer does also say "powerful magic", so your overall point still stands, just not on the fact that they said the word "resurrection" to mean literally "the spell".
– NathanS
Nov 19 at 12:43
I think V2Blast is right on this, also because of the snippet in your last comment; it says "such as a resurrection spell", not "such as the resurrection spell". That said, the quote in your answer does also say "powerful magic", so your overall point still stands, just not on the fact that they said the word "resurrection" to mean literally "the spell".
– NathanS
Nov 19 at 12:43
2
2
I mean, the other indicator that it's not referring to the specific spell of that name is calling it "a" resurrection spell rather than "the"... But that's more ambiguous. Anyway, I'll leave it at that. At the very least, the answer should probably note that at best it might refer to the specific spell (which assumes that there is an error in the formatting), not that it does refer specifically to that spell.
– V2Blast
Nov 19 at 13:48
I mean, the other indicator that it's not referring to the specific spell of that name is calling it "a" resurrection spell rather than "the"... But that's more ambiguous. Anyway, I'll leave it at that. At the very least, the answer should probably note that at best it might refer to the specific spell (which assumes that there is an error in the formatting), not that it does refer specifically to that spell.
– V2Blast
Nov 19 at 13:48
|
show 6 more comments
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