[X] Plan: Mass leyline
[X] Plan Building A Better Future (With reverse engineering)
[X] Plan Building A Better Future (With reverse engineering)
Runesmith: I'm just making a set
You're right concerning what Boney said, but i'be always thought that High Magic was taught to elves only after they had mastered all 8 Winds, and those who succeed to learn Qaysh become Archmages.I'm not sure, but Boney's option list suggests note reverse engineered storage requires Archmages while the Stone Flower just requires High Magic suggests they're different.
I think Realms of Sorcery EE says that elves can start learning high magic after they reach acceptable mastery of their second wind, each of which I think takes about a human lifetime.
That suggests that not all elves that can cast a bit of high magic qualify as archmages.
it has to be, because otherwise all possible combinations of Runes would have been use already after a few centuries, and they wouldn't be used as regularly in infrastructures. The Rule of Pride is an abstraction used to justify why a player can't just spam a particular combination of Runes in his army.I'm pretty sure it has come up previously.
But i think the Rule of Pride has to be more of a guideline to avoid Runesmiths from just mass producing single items and stop training and advancing.
So somethng like waystones would probably get past it, as long as the runesmith in question kept doing other things as well.
Depending on how easy they are to make, you might see senior apprentices asked to make like half a dozen or so waystone parts to show they can do it reliably.
If all the Dwarves added to Waystones was having Runesmiths carve the one rune on it, it must have been a very significant improvement. We know that the Karaz Ankor gained a lot of concessions from Ulthuan for their assistance, as evident in them having their own separate network.
Or the 'just have apprentices do it', exception, these are still pretty simple runes.
it has to be, because otherwise all possible combinations of Runes would have been use already after a few centuries, and they wouldn't be used as regularly in infrastructures. The Rule of Pride is an abstraction used to justify why a player can't just spam a particular combination of Runes in his army.
You're right concerning what Boney said, but i'be always thought that High Magic was taught to elves only after they had mastered all 8 Winds, and those who succeed to learn Qaysh become Archmages.
Also, Kragg placed tose detection runes around K8P to protect the hold from Skaven attacks.it has to be, because otherwise all possible combinations of Runes would have been use already after a few centuries, and they wouldn't be used as regularly in infrastructures. The Rule of Pride is an abstraction used to justify why a player can't just spam a particular combination of Runes in his army.
Being an apprentices isn't an exception to the rule against a runesmiths duplicating their own work, only to the rule against a runesmith directly copying from another runesmith.
@Boney, do the enchanted and runed storage options involve expensive materials, or just expensive labour? If the former, what option would best fit the description of "Not quite valuable enough to be worth the effort of dismantling/moving a giant piece of rock to steal the materials"?
Also, Kragg placed tose detection runes around K8P to protect the hold from Skaven attacks.
So it can't be as simple as "no doing same set of runes".
There was also the fire resistance rune Kragg made for the metalsmith when making Branulhune, presumably it was not the first time he had made one.
Easiest explanation might be that runesmith don't consider single runes like that being under Rule of Pride?
And/Or maybe runic protections of a hold are considered part of hold and hold is considered a singular item?
I mean it kind of has to be, there is no way you can learn something without a degree of repetition, unless they destroy every copy of say the Rune of Stone they made while learning to strike the Rune of Stone, which does not sound like a very respectful attitude to the craft.
Kragg also mentioned that in the past they used to build large amounts of shields with a stone rune and a linking rune to form nigh-unbreakable shieldwalls. He said that was a standard apprentice test, but simply doing a bit of math shows that unless back then every hold had a thousand runesmiths, those must have been built over time by the same makers.
Nice, so no risk of peasants trying to steal it.
I doubt he could do so dozens of times.Or Kragg's just that good that he invents a new slightly different rune with very similar effects every time.
My interpretation of the rule of pride is that it is a safety tool.
Dwarves are very good at finding flaws. Obsessively so. A runesmith who has just struck a rune is likely to look at it and see something wrong with it.
And it would be very tempting to try again. But that second attempt would also have a flaw in it, and now a third attempt has to be made.
Alaric the Mad pretty much killed himself doing this, attempting to perfect this one rune over and over and over again (... although the warpstone didn't help).
So the Rule of Pride is a commandment to runesmiths that they need to take pride in their work, no matter what flaws it has, or how shoddy it is. They need to own it. Rather than trying to repeat the same rune over and over again, they should instead let go of it, and move onto a new project.
And that's why a runesmith would never repeat themselves, because they would invariably compare the old version to the new version, and risk having some sort of obsession sink in.
Obviously exceptions exist for sets, and for practicing and learning runes, but ultimately, the Rule of Pride exists to protect runesmiths from their own obsessive perfectionism.
At least, that's the explanation that makes the most sense to me.
Since the other plan does not seem to have any traction I'm just going to vote against the boondoggle that is reverse engineering. People are not going to be impressed by us slapping a storage only the Grey Lords can hope to make just because Mathilde promises and crosses her heart that people will learn.
I think this depends on how she sells it. The leaders of the Colleges may be much keener if she internally presents it as a Trojan Horse to give them an opportunity to pirate the principles of advanced elven enchanting.
The thing is runesmiths are not in any way psychologically different from other dwarfs. If they were in danger of that engineers should have long since worn their fingers to the bone trying to make the Perfect Grudge Thrower, or a brewer to brew the Perfect Barrel of Beer. Traditions can just be about percection of sanctity and overall a net negative to the people who hold them and this one in particular was made worse by trauma we know that much so I do not expect it to have a good reason.
I'm sure those principles will be worth something to someone eventually, the thing is at the moment we are trying to get more help with our project. I'd rather stay focused on the goal than attempt to do a touch of industrial espionage at the last moment.