The choice between prepared or spontaneous spellcasting should align with the creature’s theme. A spontaneous spellcaster is suitable for one-off creatures, as it allows greater flexibility in battle. Prepared spellcasters can heighten a spell by preparing it in a higher-level slot than its normal spell level, while a spontaneous spellcaster can cast it. Grappling or pinning only allows spells without somatic components and whose material components (if any) are present.
Spell preparation time is crucial for wizards after resting, as they must study their spellbook to prepare spells. If a spell can be cast as a counterspell, it can be prepared. However, there is no general way to store a finished spell for later use without using items.
There is no 100 correct spell selection, and first levels can be forgivable for experimenting with spells if the GM doesn’t throw +3 enemies daily. You can change your list of prepared spells when you finish a long rest, but preparing a new list requires time spent studying your spell book.
You can prepare fourteen spells of 1st, 2nd, or 3rd level in any combination and can cast a prepared spell in a higher level spell slot. Scorespell is an Excel spreadsheet accompanying Pathfinder Scoreforge, an automated spreadsheet designed for character record-keeping. For bards, eldritch knights, rangers, arcane tricksters, sorcerers, or warlocks, they do not prepare spells and can cast any spell they know. The number of spells a character is capable of preparing depends on their level and spellcasting ability.
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