It occurred to me a little bit ago that aiming a spell at a ward is much like aiming at the broad side of a barn. You can't really miss. You can't really hit badly even. So, why do we use the aiming mechanic? Just because it can get us more shifts of damage? Doesn't seem to make much sense.
Should we just assume +4 on the attack roll and roll to control separately?
Should we consider the aiming roll to be just a bit of randomness from spell to spell? Do rotes just take zero and assume a hit or do you still aim?
Could you declare an aspect on the ward of I'd Have To Be Facing The Wrong Way To Miss? Would you invoke it for a +2 to hit? Or for effect and what would the effect be?
Thoughts?
Quick question (really a confirmation...) When you mean "aiming" a spell at a Ward, you're talking about using an Evocation, correct?
If so, then you're not really "aiming" the spell at all. You make a Discipline roll* to control the number of shifts of power you put into the Evocation. Assuming you make the Discipline roll to control the spell, then the number of shifts for control also count towards targeting the spell vs. a Dodge or Block. Since the Ward attempting to Dodge, then the need to target it basically goes away. Now this could mean that someone attacking a Ward using a Rote basically automatically 'hits' however spellcasters aren't realistically going to have a Rote Evocation attack powerful enough to damage most decent Wards, and there is the little matter of whatever doesn't penetrate or damage a Ward gets reflected back...
An alternate way to think of it (depending on how ones group wishes to play it since the RAW doesn't specifically) is that the discipline roll to control and/or target the Evocation is looking for weak points in the Ward. This would then have the Discipline roll contested by the block strength of the Ward, with anything equal to or under the strength of the Ward doing nothing, and any shifts of success past the block strength of the Ward adding to the power behind the Evocation to either harm those protected by the Ward, or used to weaken the Ward.
-Cheers