Greater Invisibility will allow the invisible person to continue attacking – and therefore allowing all attacks to be made at Advantage. Invisibility will end as soon as the invisible person makes an attack or casts a spell – so is good to hide and sneak around, but once you start entering combat it’s over.
Does attacking break invisibility DND?
While you’re wrong, you were close to the point: the invisibility rules DO NOT say ‘use your action to attack or cast a spell’ but rather ‘attack or cast a spell’. Opportunity attacks break invisibility. Magic item spellcasting breaks invisibility.
Do invisible creatures have advantage on attacks?
Invisibility benefits attacking and defending Even though creatures typically discern the location of invisible creatures nearby, invisibility grants powerful advantages. “Attack rolls against the creature have disadvantage, and the creature’s attack rolls have advantage.”
When do you lose invisibility when making an attack?
But the Invisibility spell says that you lose invisibility when making an attack or casting a spell: A creature you touch becomes invisible until the spell ends. […] The spell ends for a target that attacks or casts a spell. Does an invisible creature lose the advantage/disadvantage when making an attack?
When do invisibility and opportunity attacks happen in combat?
Invisibility and Opportunity Attacks Tempers flair over whether invisible creatures provoke opportunity attacks. Sometimes in combat it happens. The caster is all alone, low on spells and hit points (HPs) when an enemy breaks through the line, sneaks up from behind, or emerges from the shadows to threaten you arcane spell caster.
What are the rules for attacking while invisible?
I can find no Sage Advice regarding the matter, but the rules about unseen attackers starts with this: Combatants often try to escape their foes’ notice by hiding, casting the invisibility spell (PHB 195)
How does invisibility work in combat in DND?
Adding to @Dale_M and @András answers above. There is a rule of attacking invisible enemies in the DMG, in wich the players calls where he think the enemy is, and then they roll the attack (At disadvantage). Only if they call the right position, the attack has a chance to hit.