Rune-based ID
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A point of terminology
So far, we've been calling this ID system "rune-based". At least in my mind, though, it has not been explicit that, for example, every item with resist fire has a particular physical rune engraved (stamped, burned, whatever) onto it which gives it the "makes the player resist fire" property. I have just taken learning the resist fire rune to mean being able to detect on inspection that the item gives resist fire.
I'm starting to think, though, that it should actually be made explicit that items carry physical runes. In particular, if we want to be able to examine what runes the player has learned, and get explicit messages on learning a new one, then the hand-wavy ambiguous approach starts to become confusing.
Opinions?One for the Dark Lord on his dark throne
In the Land of Mordor where the Shadows lie.Comment
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So far, we've been calling this ID system "rune-based". At least in my mind, though, it has not been explicit that, for example, every item with resist fire has a particular physical rune engraved (stamped, burned, whatever) onto it which gives it the "makes the player resist fire" property. I have just taken learning the resist fire rune to mean being able to detect on inspection that the item gives resist fire.
I'm starting to think, though, that it should actually be made explicit that items carry physical runes. In particular, if we want to be able to examine what runes the player has learned, and get explicit messages on learning a new one, then the hand-wavy ambiguous approach starts to become confusing.
Opinions?
You can then have a new knowledge screen along with objects and monsters etc. that has runes.Comment
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So far, we've been calling this ID system "rune-based". At least in my mind, though, it has not been explicit that, for example, every item with resist fire has a particular physical rune engraved (stamped, burned, whatever) onto it which gives it the "makes the player resist fire" property. I have just taken learning the resist fire rune to mean being able to detect on inspection that the item gives resist fire.
I'm starting to think, though, that it should actually be made explicit that items carry physical runes. In particular, if we want to be able to examine what runes the player has learned, and get explicit messages on learning a new one, then the hand-wavy ambiguous approach starts to become confusing.
Opinions?
1) Innate properties of an item should not be bestowed by a rune. A longsword isn't 2d5 because it has a Rune of 2d5 Dice inscribed on it; it's 2d5 because that's the damage that you take when you get whacked in the face by a sharp piece of steel of that size. IMO this speaks towards such "basic properties" (dice and base AC) being automatically known.
2) When your average armor gets hit by acid, it suddenly acquires a negative AC rune. This is weird, but I think it's also enough of an edge case that it's not really worth worrying about.Comment
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Innate properties of an item should not be bestowed by a rune. A longsword isn't 2d5 because it has a Rune of 2d5 Dice inscribed on it; it's 2d5 because that's the damage that you take when you get whacked in the face by a sharp piece of steel of that size. IMO this speaks towards such "basic properties" (dice and base AC) being automatically known.
Actually, I think this throws up a problem with acid damage. Disenchantment reducing armor enchantments makes sense; acid doing so doesn't. My suggested fix is that acid reduces the base armor class.One for the Dark Lord on his dark throne
In the Land of Mordor where the Shadows lie.Comment
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So far, we've been calling this ID system "rune-based". At least in my mind, though, it has not been explicit that, for example, every item with resist fire has a particular physical rune engraved (stamped, burned, whatever) onto it which gives it the "makes the player resist fire" property. I have just taken learning the resist fire rune to mean being able to detect on inspection that the item gives resist fire.
I'm starting to think, though, that it should actually be made explicit that items carry physical runes. In particular, if we want to be able to examine what runes the player has learned, and get explicit messages on learning a new one, then the hand-wavy ambiguous approach starts to become confusing.Comment
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1) If acid damage, scroll fixes all acid damage, then adds magical bonus upon subsequent reading?
2) Tries to add +1 to acid and +1 to magical bonus?
3) randomly picks either acid or magical bonus?Comment
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My instinct is just attempt to increase the enchantment as currently; base AC is physical properties, + to_a is magical. Acid damaged gear can't be fixed.One for the Dark Lord on his dark throne
In the Land of Mordor where the Shadows lie.Comment
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If that's too irksome, we can add a Scroll of Repairing that restores a point of non-magical AC to damaged armor. I can't imagine it'd be too difficult to implement.Comment
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What will happen when it reaches 0? Get destroyed? Not a good idea because some useful ego items don't have IGNORE_ACID.Comment
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What you propose is more or less like Diablo where armor degrades, except here you aren't allowing it to be fully repaired.Comment
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Considering that Iron Crowns can be damaged by acid and have an AC of 0, I assume "fully-damaged" armor just stops providing an AC bonus. Full-out nonvoluntary item destruction would be supremely unpopular with our players.Comment
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(Mostly) flavor suggestion- some races/classes should know a few runes at outset.
For Race, know runes based on their intrinsics if any, e.g. gnomes should know FA
Class specific runes- Warrior knows pFear, Priest knows Slay Undead, Paladin knows Slay Evil, etc...Comment
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Also with a rune-based approach you could have flavourful new messages on disenchanting gear: "your sword's runes slip away"takkaria whispers something about options. -more-Comment
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