How many areas near rivers need to be covered though? Obviously everywhere in Sylvania and Troll Country. But beyond that? Waystones near rivers are some of the least likely waystones to have fallen. The majority of fallen waystones will be away from rivers, where the Empire can't deploy armies.To my mind it's twofold.
Firstly, it really helps with network resilience. If there are a few Waystones with a riverine output added to the network, it means that it can effectively reroute to the river if a blockage happens somewhere down the chain if leylines. This means that less magic will build up at the point of the blockage and everything up the leyline chain of the dual function Waystone will continue to function rather than Dhar backing up the chain.
Secondly, it allows us to leapfrog past large holes in the Waystone network to protect 'islands' of land around a riverine Waystone without having to rebuild long chains of Waystones along leylines to get there.
Boney said that refining the enchantment would be a project unto itself. I am going to guess that means something like five years for just focusing on refining it. That's about how long the Waystone Project is taking. Maybe ten years before it is fully simplified with the focus being on producing the enchantment.Managed over how long of a time? We are talking about Elves and Dwarves here. They might have spend anywhere between 50 years to 500 years for all we know to cover Old World. Elves are long lived enough that they wouldn't really care for it and Dwarves would consider that just proper to ensure the job is done right.
Refining it to that extent would be an entire project in itself, not something that can be banged out in a few weeks.The two main reasons I could see it being valuable would be if the streamlined version is more easily applicable than the enchantment the grey lords came up with. The second reason would be it might potentially play better with certain configurations of waystone setups.
That's true, but I think we have evidence that it's possible to make the reverse engineered storage enchantment at massive scale, because that's what the Golden Age elves managed. I think one of the premises of the project is that as the original Waystone design was possible to manufacture and install them so widely then those components don't need archmages and Runelords to make, and can be made be significantly less skilled labour.
I think that can give us confidence that it's possible to refine the reverse engineered storage enchantment to something closer to the complexity of the other components.
Stealing magical secrets is all well and good, but if it shoots our main goal in the foot it's not worth it.[X] Plan Building A Better Future (With reverse engineering)
Since spirit leylines are not popular, I will instewd try to remind the thread that part of the point of this project was to steal magical secrets, and reverse engineering does allow us to do this. Plus, we are a follow of Ranald. Sneakily stealing secret is religiously mandated of us, really.
This was the Golden Age elves and dwarves. Both species can refine their personal compétences for centuries. What a average elf mage (who would have hundreds of years to practice) can do isn't the same as what the average human (with less than a century) can reach.That's true, but I think we have evidence that it's possible to make the reverse engineered storage enchantment at massive scale, because that's what the Golden Age elves managed. I think one of the premises of the project is that as the original Waystone design was possible to manufacture and install them so widely then those components don't need archmages and Runelords to make, and can be made be significantly less skilled labour.
How many areas near rivers need to be covered though? Obviously everywhere in Sylvania and Troll Country. But beyond that? Waystones near rivers are some of the least likely waystones to have fallen. The majority of fallen waystones will be away from rivers, where the Empire can't deploy armies.
The Drakwald doesn't have major rivers either.
Yeah, but the problem here isn't building it but designing it. We know the Golden Age Elves and Dwarves designed a relatively simple design that could be mass produced. We don't know how they designed it, and since this is Golden Age Elves and Dwarves there's a very good chance that the theoretical basis has been partially or completely lost (and I assure you the ones that designed it weren't just random mages and runesmiths).
For what we know, this could be like the Colleges trying to reverse-engineer the Grey Lord Foundation, and the design was made to be 'replicated without being understood'.
I do think trying to reverse-engineer it could be worthwile in terms of finding new magical secrets/tricks, but that should be in a future turn, not while designing our very first Waystone.
This was the Golden Age elves and dwarves. Both species can refine their personal compétences for centuries. What a average elf mage (who would have hundreds of years to practice) can do isn't the same as what the average human (with less than a century) can reach.
We don't have several hundreds, let alone thousands of unemployed high magic wizards.
We have average elf mages - and the leading competitor plan wants to use dwarven runecraft instead, which is always going to be something that needs to be done by a minority of an elder race, probably requiring greater than a human lifetime's training.
The reverse engineered version at least has the hope of eventually being made by human enchanters.
We don't have any unemployed runesmiths either though.
I feel like the Border Princes would have the problem of it being the Border Princes. Who would pay to deploy waystones there and why would we deploy them there over Kislev, the Empire, Bretonnia, Laurelorn, or Tilea and Estalia? Barak Varr probably wouldn't pay. Though it would probably be easier to convince Byrrnoth to attach the waystones to their network. Barak Varr's nexus is outside of Barak Varr proper, unlike the other Karaks. The Golden Age storage's difficulty would make it even more difficult to deploy them in the Border Princes of all places.The Border Princes where the dwarves are establishing client principalities is a candidate. The Black Water itself probably is as well.
The other thing is that riverine Waystones on rivers can effectively substitute for missing Waystones well away from rivers, where one link in a chain has broken, allowing the blockage to be temporarily but quickly mitigated by adding a dual purpose Waystone on a river 'upstream' of the blocked leyline.
It would be much easier to deploy large standing stones by river than to transport them through forests, swamps, hills, etc to get to the locations of blockages.
Elves are considerably longer lived than dwarfs and have even longer to perfect their craft with the vanishingly small exception of Living Ancestors. Also there are just many many more dwarfs in the whole of the Karaz Ankor than there are elves in Laurelorn.
We have a few average elf mages, and a lot of average human wizards. And the reverse engineered requires a runesmith, who are in much greater supply than Archmages. Sure, we could maybe allow average human wizards to build it, but it's by no lean certain.We have average elf mages - and the leading competitor plan wants to use dwarven runecraft instead, which is always going to be something that needs to be done by a minority of an elder race, probably requiring greater than a human lifetime's training.
The reverse engineered version at least has the hope of eventually being made by human enchanters.
they could be doing the flower.And this is where my question of opportunity cost comes in? What else would those Eonir be doing that we care about if we don't need them making Waystone storage components versus what would those ruensmiths be doing?
You don't actually address my point. Yes, it is easier to deploy waystones near rivers. But those areas are also the areas where they are least needed. Especially if we use the Golden Age storage mechanism, it would be a waste to deploy waystones in areas that are already covered.
No you did not and you have not. We have somewhere between 1,000 and 2,000 waystones to erect to fully cover the Empire. I assume that number includes Laurelorn. Kislev might add another thousand to that number. I don't know how much Bretonnia would add.I hope I did. Just because the Waystone of the settlement on the river has survived doesn't mean that every Waystone on the leyline going through the wilds 'downstream' linking it to its nexus has.
If we install a dual purpose Waystone where a leyline crosses a river then all the Waystones on the 'upstream' leylines can then discharge into the river, allowing us to quickly bypass downstream blockages and restore network functionality without having to locate destroyed Waystones deep in the wilds, transport a new Waystone there, install it, and protect it from whatever nasties live there.
We have a few average elf mages, and a lot of average human wizards. And the reverse engineered requires a runesmith, who are in much greater supply than Archmages. Sure, we could maybe allow average human wizards to build it, but it's by no lean certain.
Rn, legendary wizards specialized in enchanting are the only humans who can build that, and the only elves are Archmages. That's a tiny bottleneck given that there's less than 20 people who can cast Qaysh in Laurelorn, let alone Archmages. And there's no guarantees it will become easy enough to make that as many human wizards than runesmith can make.
I'd like to point out very simple runic items are uniquely suitable as an export from Karak Vlag. Their Rhunkit seem to compromise a significant proportion of their population, and tying them to their neighbours economically is intrinsically valuable.For example, if an Eonir high Mage is making a Stone Flower rather than making another item or casting a spell or performing research in ToR Linathel, do we care? As opposed to, if we go with the runic inductor, a runesmith has made one of them rather than a minor runic item for a dwarf warrior in preparation for the Silver Road War.
You know since I only tap in when there are boney updates, until the second paragraph, I thought this was responding to a particularly bad skull river theory rather than responding to a leyline take.Okay. Say for the sake of argument that a Skaven or Necromancer digs a tunnel directly under a riverbank, and let's posit that gravity is feeling kind that day and it doesn't immediately become a slightly deeper river. They tap into the Dhar. They are now full of Dhar, famously something that it is perfectly okay to be. They use it to... what, exactly? Curse the dirt? Raise any dead bodies that happen to be buried directly beneath the river?
Dhar is horrifically easy to get. You take any Wind, of which there is always some around, and you smack it into any other Wind and you get it. If you're feeling too lazy for that you can go to any one of dozens of places that are just awash with it, or you can wait until Morrslieb pays you a visit. You probably don't perform a hydroengineering feat that Dwarves make look easy but Skavenslaves or Zombies would make look like a way to very quickly lose a lot of Skavenslaves or Zombies.
No you did not and you have not. We have somewhere between 1,000 and 2,000 waystones to erect to fully cover the Empire. I assume that number includes Laurelorn. Kislev might add another thousand to that number. I don't know how much Bretonnia would add.
You're suggesting that, rather than covering areas that don't have any coverage, we erect new waystones in areas that already have waystones covering them. That is a complete waste of time. If you want to do that, then we need literally any other storage method than the one the thread is voting for right now.
Edit: Huh I thought the thread was voting for the Golden Age storage. But still, if you are going to do it, vote for cheap components.
I'd like to point out very simple runic items are uniquely suitable as an export from Karak Vlag. Their Rhunkit seem to compromise a significant proportion of their population, and tying them to their neighbours economically is intrinsically valuable.
Are there many more runesmiths than elves in Laurelorn.
And this is where my question of opportunity cost comes in? What else would those Eonir be doing that we care about if we don't need them making Waystone storage components versus what would those ruensmiths be doing?
I think the opportunity costs of the runesmiths being dedicated to this are higher.