Does freedom of movement negate hold person?

Since it’s not specifically focused on just impeding movement, and it is a mental, not physical impediment, freedom of movement would not help a stunned creature to act or move normally.

What is DND freedom of movement?

You touch a willing creature. For the Duration, the target’s Movement is unaffected by Difficult Terrain, and Spells and other magical Effects can neither reduce the target’s speed nor cause the target to be Paralyzed or Restrained.

Does freedom of movement stop slow?

Yes it should prevent Slow. Though the ddo wiki page for the spell does not lists Slow, but it does for the items enhancement.

Does freedom of movement cancel paralyzed?

Freedom of Movement (PHB, p244): For the duration, the target’s movement is unaffected by difficult terrain, and spells and other magical effects can neither reduce the target’s speed nor cause the target to be paralyzed or restrained.

Can a person be stunned with freedom of movement?

Freedom of Movement explicitly disallows the application of two conditions to the subject of the spell, namely they can’t be paralyzed nor restrained. Stunned is also a condition. It is not listed under FoM as disallowed. Stunned also does not reduce the target’s speed.

Which is more specific freedom of movement or grappled condition?

Freedom of Movement is more specific than the Grappled condition, therefor it takes precedent over the Grappled condition. If Freedom of Movement says you can spend 5 feet of movement, you can spend the movement (despite the larger situation that would cause you to lose all your speed). – Ifusaso Jan 26 ’18 at 20:56

Can a person be paralyzed from the waist down?

A quadriplegic is someone with impairment in all four limbs. For me it is my triceps and dexterity that are affected and so paralysis doesn’t always occur in one straight line across the body. I feel like people often think you are either paralyzed from the waist down or the neck down. But the body is so much more complex than that.

Are there any barriers to living with paralysis?

Other barriers include the fact that benefits essential for survival could be lost. For example. If you require a caregiver, then it might be very difficult to start work and lose Medicaid or Medicare. Regular insurance does not cover caregivers and it could cost upwards of $12,000 out of pocket to pay for one.

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