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Can a wizard learn a spell from a bard, assuming the spell is on both class lists? This is related to Can a warlock teach a spell to a wizard? but is not exactly the same, since warlocks don't really understand wizards' magic, and bard is a different class.

Our party is only level 2 and we're trying to allay costs for transcribing spells a bit. Would this work out?

SevenSidedDie
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Brendan Hughes
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3 Answers3

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No

Your plan will not work for 2 reasons:

  • Bards cannot teach wizards spells
  • Even if they could, it would not help with transcription costs

Bards cannot teach wizards spells

The Player's Handbook outlines the ways that a Wizard can learn a new spell via Wizard class features:

  1. By leveling up (research)

    The spells that you add to your spellbook as you gain levels reflect the arcane research you conduct on your own, as well as intellectual breakthroughs you have had about the nature of the multiverse.

    Now, thematically, you might say that, as part of the Wizard's research, the Bard was able to help them learn and master the spell. However, this would not grant you any additional spells beyond what the Wizard would normally be able to learn on the occasion of their leveling up. So this would be a flavor-only thing and not mechanically helpful which it seems is what you want.

  2. By finding spells on scrolls or in spellbooks and copying them into their spellbook

    They can also learn them from other wizards, from ancient tomes or inscriptions, and from ancient creatures (such as the fey) that are steeped in magic. (PHB 112)

    In general, the way a Wizard learns spells is by deciphering some written form of the spell and then laboriously copying it into his own spell book.

    Copying that spell into your spellbook involves reproducing the basic form of the spell, then deciphering the unique system of notation used by the wizard who wrote it. (PHB 114)

    Note how this quote emphasises that the material they learn from is generally assumed to be 1) written and 2) written by a wizard specifically.

So there is no mechanical way for a Bard to teach a Wizard a spell.

Not only does it not work mechanically, it also doesn't make sense thematically since Bards and Wizards have very different ways of casting and their techniques are just not transferable.

It would not help with transcription costs

"We're trying to allay costs for transcribing spells a bit"

This part deserves some attention as well. Aside from leveling, using any other method in the Wizard class to add spells to your spellbook require you to take the time and pay the cost associated with adding that spell to your spellbook.

Copying that spell into your spellbook involves reproducing the basic form of the spell, then deciphering the unique system of notation used by the wizard who wrote it. You must practice the spell until you understand the sounds or gestures required, then transcribe it into your spellbook using your own notation.

For each level of the spell, the process takes 2 hours and costs 50 gp. The cost represents material components you expend as you experiment with the spell to master it, as well as the fine inks you need to record it.

So even if a Bard were to teach the spell, you would still have to transcribe it into the Wizard's spellbook and thus take the time and costs specified in the book.

Caveat

As always, the DM may allow this to happen in some form, but just know that that decision is neither supported by the rules nor the flavor of the Wizard and does not change what the rules say about it.

Rubiksmoose
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  • To clarify, is the one workaround if a DM allows magic item crafting and therefore giving the bard an opportunity to craft a scroll for the wizard to coy? – NotArch Dec 07 '17 at 18:39
  • But I would think that none of those things are a bard...unless they can craft a spell scroll. – NotArch Dec 07 '17 at 18:47
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    This answer takes a lot of liberties with regards to Bards and Wizard magic not being compatible, and flat out ignores the descriptions of how Bard's use their magic. As jacks of all trades, Bard's, especially College of Lore Bards, study in the same manner a Wizard does. The difference being that they don't devote all their time to it, hence the limitation on magical secrets. It also ignores the part about the schools of magic essentially all stemming from the same source, and that Wizards believe all magic, arcane or divine, are basically the same thing. – Lino Frank Ciaralli Dec 07 '17 at 21:49
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    Except that Bards don't study in the same manner a Wizard does. Bards have limited spells that they learn and know, that only can change when the Bard goes up a level. Bards don't write down their spells and do not have spellbooks. They use different focuses. There's really very little in common there. – Phil Boncer Dec 07 '17 at 22:59
  • It's less about the limitation of the Bard, and more about the limitation of the Wizard. The Wizard must write it down. The Bard can't teach a Wizard to write it down. If the Wizard wants to learn how to cast magic without it written down, they need to multiclass. – Luke Dec 08 '17 at 00:46
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Not directly; according to the rules, a wizard needs a written source to study and copy from, to add to his spellbook. So the bard would need to craft a scroll with the spell on it, for the wizard to use (assuming that PCs may create scrolls in their downtime at the table in question). This will not allay your costs.

The answers to the related question that is cited in this question, about wizards learning spells from warlocks, has all the information needed to answer this question. The only difference is that warlocks have a couple of possible workarounds that bards do not. The point is that, for the same reasons, adding any spells to a wizard spellbook, other than the two he gets for going up a level, requires a written source, according to the RAW and all of the examples and methods given.

Here are some of the other questions on this topic that may provide you with additional material: Can a warlock teach a spell to a wizard? , Can Wizards, Tome Warlocks, and those with the Ritual Caster feat use spells from each other's books? , Is there a difference between “spell scrolls” and “spells on a scroll” for copying purposes?

Phil Boncer
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Yes you certainly can.

Pertinent text for adding spells to your spell book PHB pg. 94:

The spells that you add to your spellbook as you gain levels reflect the arcane research you conduct on your own, as well as intellectual breakthroughs you have had about the nature of the multiverse.

Note that there are no restrictions on how you come about this knowledge. Most examples in this section cite finding written sources, however any research you conduct on your own could also qualify. Examples of research include practicing with other spellcasters, experimenting on your downtime with random components, studying books, talking to other casters, debates, etc.

Basically, it's up to you and the DM to come up with a way for your Wizard to add spells. The typical method is scrolls and books, but you aren't limited to just that. Since you are capable of adding spells through research, which is not limited to scrolls and books, then speaking with a Bard who has spells you do not, and having them show you how to do the spell, can indeed qualify as a method of adding new spells to your book.

Further supporting evidence can be found on PHB pg. 203 with reference to the schools of magic.

The Schools of Magic

Academies of magic group spells into eight categories called schools of magic. Scholars, particularly wizards, apply these categories to all spells, believing that all magic functions in essentially the same way, whether it derives from rigorous study or is bestowed by a deity.

The inference here is fairly clear. A wizard doesn't see a Bard spell functioning any differently from a Wizard spell. This is also clearly highlighted under the Wizard text oh PHB pg. 112, Scholars of the Arcane (emphasis mine):

Wizards live and die by their spells. Everything else is secondary. They learn new spells as they experiment and grow in experience. They can also learn them from other wizards, from ancient tomes or inscriptions, and from ancient creatures (such as the fey) that are steeped in magic.

So clearly a written version of a spell is not required in order to scribe one. Nevermind the very obvious inference from reducibility, in that the first wizard would have had no written references to scribe their spells from. This means that spells can and are able to be scribed from sources other than written mediums.

Lastly, the wizard itself serves as an example of something able to scribe a spell without having a written scroll or book to reference it from. If a wizard loses their spellbook, they can create a new one without having a written reference:

Replacing the Book. You can copy a spell from your own spellbook into another book—for example, if you want to make a backup copy of your spellbook. This is just like copying a new spell into your spellbook, but faster and easier, since you understand your own notation and already know how to cast the spell. You need spend only 1 hour and 10 gp for each level of the copied spell.

If you lose your spellbook, you can use the same procedure to transcribe the spells that you have prepared into a new spellbook.

This last bit is important because you aren't using anything written yet you are scribing a spell anyways.

However you want to look at it, your Wizard does not REQUIRE a written form of a spell in order to scribe it. The wizard simply needs the spell to be on their spell list, they need some way to learn it, most commonly a written form, but it could be an instructor capable of casting a spell on their class list, or it could be simple experimentation on their own using a DC set by their DM to reflect the difficulty of the spell.

The only thing the rules state you have to do is:

  1. Spend 2 hours per level of spell (unless a class feature says otherwise); and
  2. Spend 50 gold per level of spell (unless a class feature says otherwise).

This is all covered under PHB pg. 114, Copying a Spell in the Book:

Copying a Spell into the Book. When you find a wizard spell of 1st level or higher, you can add it to your spellbook if it is of a level for which you have spell slots and if you can spare the time to decipher and copy it.

Copying a spell into your spellbook involves reproducing the basic form of the spell, then deciphering the unique system of notation used by the wizard who wrote it. You must practice the spell until you understand the sounds or gestures required, then transcribe it into your spellbook using your own notation.

For each level of the spell, the process takes 2 hours and costs 50 gp. The cost represents material components you expend as you experiment with the spell to master it, as well as the fine inks you need to record it. Once you have spent this time and money, you can prepare the spell just like your other spells.

None of this says anything about you having to have a written version of the spell to copy it at all. It says you have to decipher the unique notation of the wizard who wrote it? Great. What if a wizard didn't write it at all? Step done, no deciphering needed, next step. Practice hand gestures? No somatic component. Step done. Practice verbal? Good, verbal component only spell. Nice and easy. Practice away my friend.

Lino Frank Ciaralli
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    I think this would stand better / be more persuasive if it also cited the rules for researching spells as supporting evidence, so that the reader doesn't have to go hunting for them to see if this answer is correct. – SevenSidedDie Dec 07 '17 at 19:31
  • Sure, updating now, not think I think it will actually change the obvious bias. – Lino Frank Ciaralli Dec 07 '17 at 21:28
  • Wouldn't Wizards being able to learn spells from any other arcane caster break the balance a bit by giving the Wizards access to many more spells than usual? – Rubiksmoose Dec 07 '17 at 22:21
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    Spell still has to be on your class list for you to be able to cast it unless a feature says otherwise. Thats also in the rules. This answer doesn't mean he can learn all the bard spells, it just means he can learn a spell that's on his class list from a bard if they happen to know it. – Lino Frank Ciaralli Dec 07 '17 at 22:28
  • Right, but there is a spell economy of sort because they only learn so many normally. Having them be able to just import spells from other classes easily just seem so out of line with the intent. Do you not think so? – Rubiksmoose Dec 07 '17 at 22:31
  • Ease is relative to setting and how deep their pockets are. I don't know about you, but taking 8 hours a day and spending 200 gold to copy a single level 4 spell isn't fast by any means. If you find a caster with 3 level 4 spells you want, that's 600 gold and 24 hours of training gone, plus whatever his fee is to teach you. As you go higher in levels, This gets more expensive and time consuming. Seems balanced just fine. Any examples of how this would be unbalanced? – Lino Frank Ciaralli Dec 07 '17 at 22:36
  • No I guess not. Just mulling your points is all. – Rubiksmoose Dec 07 '17 at 22:44
  • As you can see it's an unpopular opinion. I've reached out to the rule maker himself reference this for an official ruling which I will update either my post, If I'm right, or the current accepted answer if I'm wrong. – Lino Frank Ciaralli Dec 07 '17 at 22:48
  • There's a heavy implication in the wording of rules you cite: "other wizards, from ancient tomes or inscriptions, and from ancient creatures... steeped in magic" or "the wizard who wrote it", that the only character class acceptable for teaching a spell is another wizard. The rules don't use the word "spellcaster", or "Sorcerer" or "Bard" at any point. Also, the line of reasoning that they don't see a functional difference in magic is a little shaky, in that there is a difference. Without multiclassing, they could never, ever use a spell not specifically on their list. – keithcurtis Dec 08 '17 at 00:57
  • I think your answer is good at supporting not specifically needing a wizard to teach or to copy from, but needs a bit more support to make the case for a bard teacher. – keithcurtis Dec 08 '17 at 00:58
  • I didn't say anything about learning spells outside of their class list, and I literally quoted the book on spellcasting, it's in the answer. As for the rules not saying stuff, I don't care what they don't say. It's what they say that matters. And with respect to the wizard, absolutely nothing states that they can only copy spells from written sources. That's why I've asked Crawford to clarify that. – Lino Frank Ciaralli Dec 08 '17 at 01:59
  • I wish this answer would address the persistent use of the word "copy" in the rules and why that doesn't mean that there must be an original, written instance of the spell from which to work. I'm not disagreeing, it just seems to me that there's the rub. They could have talked about "scribing" or "recording" a spell, but instead chose "copy" and "decipher the notation of the wizard who wrote it." – nitsua60 Dec 08 '17 at 03:26
  • Copy doesn't mean exclusively from written. I can copy a number down while listening to somebody recite it for me, or copy down what's being said in a court room on my computer, or copy down things I'm thinking in my head. Copy just means something made to be similar or identical to another. For instance, Simulacrum makes a copy of whatever creature you choose. It doesn't need to write down the creature from a scroll to do it. Copying it down could be as simple as: "Somatic = You wave your arms in the pattern drawn here. Vocal = x'kryztlz! (kru-zin-cellz). Material = thin metal rod, red hair." – Lino Frank Ciaralli Dec 08 '17 at 03:46
  • I agree with you in that there ARE clearly non-textual copy options, but to equate (in this case) a 3rd level bard with ancient creatures that are steeped in magic is a bridge too far for me. I would even still say that a 20th level adventurer isn't equivalent to one of those creatures and that the intent here is the 'ancient creature steeped in magic' is a deus ex machina way of bypassing the standard other wizard/other written spell options. – NotArch Dec 08 '17 at 13:46
  • Sure. Or it's a clear demonstration of another method of learning spells that doesn't require a written medium, which seems to be the common thread people are pulling at here. Since the rules do not explicitly state that written is the only method, there is plenty of room for extrapolation. More to the point, how are you supposed to know if the spell on your scroll was written by a wizard, bard, cleric, warlock, or hell I'll make this really easy, Arcane Trickster Rogue, whose casting is based off a Wizard's but lacks a spellbook? – Lino Frank Ciaralli Dec 08 '17 at 16:19
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    There's definitely another method besides the written medium, it's just that in order to access it you need to connect to an ancient creature steeped in magic. I may be misinterpreting, but you seem to be saying while it requires I get permission from my gov't leader, the gov't leader is a guy, and Bob is a guy, so I'll just ask Bob. The who wrote it issue really isn't a concern to me. It just had to get written - and in order for that to happen, you have to be able to craft magic items (which not every table allows.) – NotArch Dec 08 '17 at 22:39