Mopman43
Mountain-Hermit of Nitpeak
- Location
- Vermont
His head isn't gilded.No they would they would break their teeth trying to bit him if he even still smells like food.
His head isn't gilded.No they would they would break their teeth trying to bit him if he even still smells like food.
Also he knows the armor spell.
I thought it was just the eyes.
It's his whole head that isn't gilded, the eyes were his first foray into doing a head part, because of the risks involved, almost everything else you can survive and keep trying again the head is one that will kill you dead if you fuck up no take backsies.
Well there it is
[X] Attempt to save any Dwarves left in the ship
-[X] Burn the power-stone on your person in order to cast illusion to warn the dwarfs inside to extinguish all lights.
Taking into account the risk and lack of reliability of the proposed action, 5 CF and the other things we'd risk are worth more than the number of dwarves we'll rescue.
Added:
[ ] Use your spare Power Stone to save any Dwarves left in the ship
Added:
[ ] Use your spare Power Stone to save any Dwarves left in the ship
hey @BoneyM
What would you have done if Mathilde rolled three consecutive nat 100's on those chain casting miscast checks?
Would Mathilde have gotten something utterly rediculous like no longer suffering penalties from miscasting?
or is that a step too far even for three consecutive nat 100's.
I assume Mathilde would attempt to bang on the door to see if any one is inside to answer and not enter if no one does answer?
The theory is that the bandits were a patsy and the bomb was magical in nature. If it was made by Skaven, there'd be Warpstone, for instance.
Ok, so we send a message to whole ship to, turn of the lights, then start SoS'ing into rooms hoping to find the last survivors?
Potentially saving dozens of dwarves.
Also potentially killing ourselves, and them, through a miscast.
The light was only the biggest issue we had, we remain in no condition to be casting complex spells, let alone chain casting them dozens of times.
So they should also cost roughly one fourth in CF or gold on average. A one time Stoke The Forge item that gets triggered when a large amount of metal comes close enough it should be well in Marienburg's budget.As a general rule of thumb, a non-permanent enchantment takes as many weeks as a permanent one takes months.
Does Inscription glow in the dark? And can it inscribe im large letters on the opposite site if the target item?Yes. The Gold spell Inscription might also work in the same circumstances.
I'm not sure how to properly picture the ship, but if we also ask the dwarves to maybe rap to wood etc every 20 sec or so, so we know the largest concentrations - could we SoS inside a compartment, then Branalhune our way upwards?
Does Inscription glow in the dark? And can it inscribe im large letters on the opposite site if the target item?
Also, how does casting the original MMAP work from inside a metal or stone wall? Could we cast SoS, enter, but not fully penetrate the wall/door and cast MMAP a few centimeters away from the other side, using Ulgu present there?
And those breaks mean more casting to move her, and more time to get tired.It's less than 50 dwarfs as opposed to the over 300 we did already. I think we have that much left in us. Especially since they are not all in one big room so she would have to take breaks between each room
Google tells me it takes about 4000 joules to raise one liter of water one degree C. The ship I'm using as a mental model for these monitors has a displacement of a bit over 1000 tons, which isn't the same as internal volume but let's go with that. One kilo of water equals one liter of water because yay for metric, so we've got one million liters of water, so it would take four gigajoules per degree of warmth, which is surprisingly close to the amount of energy in a ton of TNT. To raise water from something that will kill you in a few hours to something that will give you long enough for Barak Varr to arrive, you'd want about ten more degrees C. So 40 gigajoules or ten tons of TNT.
I don't know how to go about comparing the dragonflask to TNT, but I'm pretty sure it's not in the neighbourhood of ten tons.
If it truly vitrified the sand during the test, ten tons of TNT might actually be on the low end, I think.