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The Great Old One warlock patron's Create Thrall feature (PHB, page 110) says:

At 14th level, you gain the ability to infect a humanoid’s mind with the alien magic of your patron. You can use your action to touch an incapacitated humanoid. That creature is then charmed by you until a remove curse spell is cast on it, the charmed condition is removed from it, or you use this feature again.

You can communicate telepathically with the charmed creature as long as the two of you are on the same plane of existence.

  1. Can someone please provide an exhaustive list of all the ways in the Player's Handbook to counter this class feature using strictly RAW?

    Excellent answers should keep methods of prevention (example, the Oath of Devotion paladin's Aura of Devotion class feature) separate from methods of curing (example, Remove Curse spell or the Monk's Stillness of Mind class feature).

  2. Since Create Thrall does not explicitly mention a saving throw, am I correct in assuming that the target cannot benefit from any ability or feature (racial or otherwise) that grants advantage on saving throws against being charmed, such as Fey Ancestry?

Dyndrilliac
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    @Zachiel that's utterly ridiculous. If that were so, then answers wouldn't need markup elements for expressing both ordered and unordered lists. Additionally, there are many valid questions where the most efficient and useful answers are in the form of lists. Examples:

    http://rpg.stackexchange.com/questions/46882/how-to-protect-a-cha-based-caster-against-feeblemind/46886#46886

    http://rpg.stackexchange.com/questions/46326/what-rules-in-the-players-handbook-are-new-different-from-the-basic-rules/46337#46337

    – Dyndrilliac Sep 09 '14 at 22:10
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    In general, list-based questions are hard on Stack Exchange. However, if they're relatively constrained, I think they can be okay. Right now, with very little 5e material, it's pretty easy to do as a list — but if (when, probably) a lot more material is published, my answer probably should be revised to generalities. I did the list, though, because it's mostly proving a negative — there aren't many ways to counter this, so it's kind of scary. – mattdm Sep 10 '14 at 00:08
  • I would ask for things such as "which are the methods for dealing with this that work in your experience?" that can be answered with a list. Asking "which are all the methods ..." is asking too much for me. Like, go search all the books (now it's a few chapters, but in the future?) – Zachiel Sep 10 '14 at 08:55
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    His list request was constrained to only the PHB, so I would say it is well restricted and valid as a request. – Aviose May 12 '15 at 18:32