- Location
- Canada
would prefer dissassembly, as even if grafting the arm onto somebody gives us some insight into how it works, it seems unlikely that this insight would be more useful than what we could figure out by taking the thing apart.
You assume we would learn anything useful from taking it apart.would prefer dissassembly, as even if grafting the arm onto somebody gives us some insight into how it works, it seems unlikely that this insight would be more useful than what we could figure out by taking the thing apart.
Mathilde: "Yeah, sure, I'll handle both those things."Wow. This has got to be one of the most unanimous votes I've seen in a while. Poor Thorek, thinking he's asking some great burden, and Mathilde just Grins and says sure.
Technically they probably can't rule out Ind definitively either! I feel that'd be significantly less likely, but it'd still be a distant possibility.It's either Lustrain, Cathyian, or Nehekharan, and Egrimm confirmed it wasn't Tomb Kings. He's actually the one who suggested it's from the New World in the first place as well.
Honestly my guess would be it was something the alchemists that became the gold order were already doing a worse version of, but teclis's wind teachings allowed them to greatly refine the process.Honestly it makes you wonder, who the hell even invented gilding and came up with how to do it to your vital organs? Because I don't see an elf ever doing this, but on the other hand how would a human invent it, performing all the tests on themselves?
"A big part of the mystery is that the network isn't just an Elven creation. The heart of it was supposedly an adaptation of an already-existing network built by precursors to the Elves, which we know basically nothing of.
started building entirely Elven Waystones throughout the world, but that didn't last long until they entered into their Golden Age partnership with the Dwarves and started incorporating Runecraft into the Waystones, and as far as I've been able to uncover, the details of those Runes are no longer known to modern Runesmiths."
But a third problem is that there's a lot more to the network than Ulthuan's Waystones, even when you account for the differences between purely Elven and Elven-Dwarven hybrid designs. From the runes found on them, they're believed by most to have been made by early human tribes - Belthani in the west, Scythians in the east."
They have a variety of plant they cultivate that acts as a tributary to the Waystone network, though I'm not sure if that was an original part of the network, or if it postdates or even predates it."
Max looks up from the notes he's been taking. "So by my count, you've got four nations, three tribes, four Cults, and two Orders that could all have pieces of the puzzle, and most of them aren't inclined to share, and some of them might not even still exist."
"At least." You hadn't mentioned the Hedgewise, after all.
Ok, so we have an explicit ask of any runesmiths we actually recruit to come out to stay with us in Laurelorn: take a look at the runes and see what conclusions can be drawn from a thorough analysis.
Mountain sized runes!Close examination of the mountain itself reveals nothing; it's not until you move away and examine it from afar that the natural-seeming crags, cracks and gullies combine to form a massive Rune you don't recognize.
I like this post, but I would like to add a few info points for your consideration:Ok! So I was rereading the bits at the start of the waystone project, especially now in the context of needing to have something for our direct recruits to do, and there were a few things that stuck out to me:
This is, I think, the key to approaching the creation of waystones in theory from the same perspective as those who did it the first time. I think finding information on this pre-waystone network might be a good first ask from the elven library.
Ok, so we have an explicit ask of any runesmiths we actually recruit to come out to stay with us in Laurelorn: take a look at the runes and see what conclusions can be drawn from a thorough analysis.
Fortunately, the historical record suggests that the creation of waystones is possible with just mages, so we are looking to understand runecraft as applied to a pre-existing design, like runes applied to an elven bolt thrower. And this means that the runecraft research portion can be started later, since we have the buy-in of a runelord.
And this is fascinating, because it gives us two things. First, the clue that once theory had been worked out, manufacture was possible through a few different magical grammers. Second, evidence that humans on their own also contributed to the build out. Which gives us some focus as to which inheritors we want to get buy-in from.
And this is where I really want a jade side project.
In fact, this might be a great way to get buy-in from the jade order. In exchange for their secrets, get them access to a few cuttings or saplings or seeds, put up the coinage needed to see how much it takes in terms of precious metals to get them to grow. I think the usefulness and novelty of a plant that can manipulate magic would be something they would jump at. (ideally we don't write the book on waaaghsoak mushrooms until after this...)
So about fourteen leads to chase down and cross off. I think we have one solidly handled with Thorek, which leaves us with thirteen.
I think we might have done luck with the hedgewise if we approached the closest ones through the ranaldites? Jades for the obvious pre-empire human traditions too, but I think we aren't going to know how much they inherited until we get them to commit.
So I think I want to try and pursue the pre-waystone network as our foundation, and I think that sounds like a colab with Egrimm and Mathilde. I think diplomancing the jades could be a Mathilde/Johann colab.
It's Max I'm unsure of at the moment. I'm actually toying with the idea of using his efforts to get better at smithing to get us some more elven connections- Max's sole condition when he joined was that he have a forge to hand. And here we are now, in the middle of a very large house that represents a TON of money in a space constrained city like this... So: assuming most smiths have to rent space to work, we can offer space to work in exchange for tutoring. Max gets to learn from elven smiths, we get a perspective into the city elf working class, and we perhaps start to turn the property we've been granted into an income source as well as income sink, especially since we have the stewardship to do it.
Well, time to change my vote away from this because Jesus is that a bad argument.[X] [THOREK] Both
[X] [ARM] Amputee
Should be easy enough to find a sentenced-for-death human we're confident of being guilty.
Safety concerns could be mollified by mind bending, restraints for body and magic, and lethal failsafes.
The same can be used on a loyal and worthy mundane, and honestly wouldn't be too huge a loss if removing the armifact (arm + artifact, hohoho) again required their death, as opposed to losing the shoulder.
Either is infinitely more bearable a loss to the Empire than a magister.
They aren't literal keys. He wants to know how to undo everything they did to seal it, runically and otherwise.
I'm not sure what sort of Con you would use to get the access to a dwarf hold/their rune passwords/bypass methods out of some dwarves, but I theorize that it might be possible.Even if Thorek would be okay with torturing innocent citizens of the Empire and then giving them calcification lobotomies to cover it up - and he wouldn't be, for the record - ask yourself if that's the sort of thing you really want the quest to explore. Mathilde delves into some pretty dark shades of grey at times, but doing that sort of thing in the name of political expedience rather than actual necessity would be several levels beyond that.
Those Dwarves have been living safely within Middenheim ever since they left Karaz Ghumzul, so to a Dwarven perspective there's no reason they would have lost any of that information.
Sure! Let me get my hammer!Wow. This has got to be one of the most unanimous votes I've seen in a while. Poor Thorek, thinking he's asking some great burden, and Mathilde just Grins and says sure.
I'm not sure what sort of Con you would use to get the access to a dwarf hold/their rune passwords/bypass methods out of some dwarves, but I theorize that it might be possible.
You know how old people fall for internet scams wanting their passwords and credit card info all the time. The people living in this era will have even less exposure to common forms of Con.
Maybe some wizard gilded a part of himself by accident, via a miscast? Then he realized that it was rad as hell and try to replicate it. Because honestly I can't see a human wizard saying « lol, I'm gonna put liquid gold at 1064 degree C on my body to see what happens » without having already some idea of the potential benefits.Honestly it makes you wonder, who the hell even invented gilding and came up with how to do it to your vital organs? Because I don't see an elf ever doing this, but on the other hand how would a human invent it, performing all the tests on themselves?