no tou carkou michaj hrusky s jabkama. ale kdyz tu carku prectes tak jak jsme ji podal posledne tak jabka doplnis prave tak jak by to melo byt.. teda asppon podle mne :-)) navic ted jsem si dal praci a nasel jsme state i v manulalu.. tam je to napsano skoro stejne ale v cileni nevideneho maji zase dve veci ktere vyvraci i napopak potvrzuji mou variantu..
If you’re fighting a creature you can’t see—when a creature
is invisible, you’re blinded, or you’re fighting in darkness you
can’t see through—you have to target a square rather than
the creature. You also have to figure out which square to
attack. Here’s how it works.
Invisible Creature Uses Stealth: At the end of a concealed
creature’s turn, it makes a Stealth check opposed
by your passive Perception check. If you beat it, you know
there’s a creature present that you can’t see, and you know
the direction to its location. If you beat it by 10 or more,
you know exactly what square the creature ended its turn
in. The concealed creature also makes a Stealth check if it
takes an immediate action or an opportunity action.
Make a Perception Check: On your turn, you can make
an active Perception check as a minor action, comparing
the result to the concealed creature’s last Stealth check. If
you win, you know the direction to the creature’s location,
or its exact location if you beat it by 10 or more.
Pick a Square and Attack: Choose a square to attack,
using whatever information you’ve gleaned so far about
the target’s location. Roll the attack normally (taking the –5
penalty for attacking a creature that has total concealment).
If you pick the wrong square, your attack automatically
misses, but only the DM knows whether you guessed the
wrong square or your attack just missed.
Close or Area Attacks: You can make a close attack or
an area attack that includes the square you think (or know)
the concealed creature is in. Your attack roll doesn’t take a
penalty from the target’s concealment.