things learned this week about the World of Cinder
- When dwarves build a magic weapon they construct it such that it will function perfectly after a millennium being used as an otyugh's toothbrush.
- Elves, on the other hand, make uber-powerful magic swords that start to malfunction wildly if you forget to rotate the tires annually.
- Fire can't kill a lycanthrope, but it sure can hurt it.
- Most lycanthropes only change into monster form when the big moon is full (as opposed to the two little martian-style jobbies). Most.
- Trolls live under bridges because they're the ones who build them. They usually get a franchise from a local ruler to charge fixed tolls in exchange for rights to build and operate them in choice locations.
- Dwarves don't brew beer in barrels, they grow barrels full of beer on vines. Like in a pumpkin patch but for drunkards. Charles came up with this one and I totally ran with it.
- The Lawful temple of Tyr will hand out free healing to folks who are fighting monsters threatening the city. The Chaotic temple of the Spider God still charges full price.
- Halflings like to hold family reunions in human cities. The primary activity of the reunion is a multi-day, sometimes weeks-long, pub crawl.
So, you're saying Dwarven magic items are a Honda, and Elven magic items are a BMW?
ReplyDeleteFun stuff. Especially the dwarven 'beer barrel melons'!
ReplyDeleteMostly, from what I have seen, enough fire kills most things. If it did not kill a lycanthrope, you probably were not using enough.
I am totally stealing this for my campaign. The pumpkin patch comment at the very least.
ReplyDelete"Dwarves don't brew beer in barrels, they grow barrels full of beer on vines. Like in a pumpkin patch but for drunkards. "
Ta !
Halflings like to hold family reunions in human cities. The primary activity of the reunion is a multi-day, sometimes weeks-long, pub crawl.
ReplyDeleteI can so totally use this. Thanks!
Top-notch stuff, though I am left wondering how exactly does one "rotate the tires" of Narsil.
ReplyDelete