Voted best in category in the Users' Choice awards.
On a related topic, what do you guys think we'd name an Apparition spell based on the Whispering Darkness?
 
This isn't a great conversion rate for living space, and something the scale of the Grey College is wildly impractical using just the one Asp, but it's a pretty solid rate for creating a Bag of Holding type thing or a secured vault. Or to pull an Algard and have a paperless office.


Ideally I'd like to present the morbs stored within a snall chest that's just big enough on the outside to hold one orb.

Just drop it on the table in front of Algard and Dragomas and then pull out the Ulgu orb. Wait a second and then pull out another one for maximum effect. Finish off with handing out copies of the book, along with some small vials of AV.
 
After some consideration, I think that since it manifests as a fog-like being and it can silence its victims and drive them insane, we could go with alliteration and call it either a Harrowing Haze or a Fatal Fog.
 
After some consideration, I think that since it manifests as a fog-like being and it can silence its victims and drive them insane, we could go with alliteration and call it either a Harrowing Haze or a Fatal Fog.
Mathilde's Mysterious Mist.

Or Mathilde's Misterious Mist, though that has the downside that we've already used that one.

(I'd try to do something with Weber, but I can't think of a synonym for fog that starts with w)
 
Ehhh. 'Witch' has serious negative connotations in the Empire.

Apart from those connotations, 'Weber's Witchfog' would be a great alliterative name tho.
 
It means dusk light because we Germans love to stick words together. Pretty much means last light.

Ohh riders of the last light!
Could you clarify how Dämmerlicht means last light? I tried to use Google Translate and Wiktionary but I couldn't find anything about Dämmer being etymologically descended from any word meaning "last" or "final", nor could I find anything saying that Dämmerlicht means "last light" in particular, it seems to mean twilight as in both dawn and dusk as opposed to just dusk, though the related word abenddämmerung does seem to mean specifically dusk. But I'm not a native speaker so I'm probably missing something that I hope you can explain for me.
 
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