You know you play too much Angband when...

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  • Grotug
    Veteran
    • Nov 2013
    • 1637

    You know you play too much Angband when...

    Yesterday I was playing scrabble and my starting letters were:

    T G R [blank] S A H. I quickly saw SHAGRAT, and after a little more effort found a word I could actually play. Right after I played my turn the next person put down DREADS and I looked at the word and was like "okay, I know what that is in Angband, but what is it in RL? Ohhh... of course, dreadlocks!" Too bad I don't have any RL friends that play Angband otherwise I'd play Angband Scrabble. (Finally get to play a word that ends in J!)
    Beginner's Guide to Angband 4.2.3 Part 1: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m9c9e2wMngM

    Detailed account of my Ironman win here.

    "My guess is that Grip and Fang have many more kills than Gothmog and Lungorthin." --Fizzix
  • Estie
    Veteran
    • Apr 2008
    • 2347

    #2
    Hilarious

    Where do druj actually come from ?

    Comment

    • wobbly
      Prophet
      • May 2012
      • 2633

      #3
      Just think about how many points Qylthulg is going to be worth...

      Comment

      • wobbly
        Prophet
        • May 2012
        • 2633

        #4
        Originally posted by Estie
        Hilarious

        Where do druj actually come from ?
        Apparently it's the Distal Radial Ulnar Joint & we need wrist drujs

        Comment

        • Gwarl
          Administrator
          • Jan 2017
          • 1025

          #5
          It's a zoroastrian demon

          Druj, meaning “demoness,”[2] is commonly used as a prefix for Nasu and other female daevas. Druj is a feminine Avestan language word meaning “falsehood,” the opposition of asha, or “truth.”[3] Druj is the root for the adjective drəguuaṇt, meaning “owner of falsehood,” which “[designates] all beings who choose druj over asha."[3] Druj is used in various texts of the Avesta, with varying meanings. Depending upon the context, druj may be used to refer to specific demons, or as a general term for that which is false, immoral, or unclean.
          Avestan druj, like its Vedic Sanskrit cousin druh, appears to derive from the PIE root *dhreugh, also continued in Persian دروغ / d[o]rūġ "lie", German Trug "fraud, deception". Old Norse draugr and Middle Irish airddrach mean "spectre, spook". The Sanskrit cognate druh means "affliction, afflicting demon".[10] In Avestan, druj- has a secondary derivation, the adjective drəguuaṇt- (Later Avestan druuaṇt-), "partisan of deception, deceiver"
          So like everything else from duergar to drow it's an evil beastie who lives underground

          Comment

          • Sphara
            Knight
            • Oct 2016
            • 504

            #6
            Angband player playing Wordz 2, will notice druj before drum.

            Comment

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