T O P I C R E V I E W |
Razz |
Posted - 03 Aug 2014 : 05:26:28 I never noticed it the first time, but just tonight I flipped through Champions of Ruin and took a look at the epic spells in it. The spell Horrendous Dessication, after reading it, made me come to a sudden revelation. It's exactly the Lifedrain spell the phaerimms were casting that caused Anauroch to originate, once you read the spell description and realize it's no different than the spell written back in 2E.
Assuming a base caster level of 21st, that's 2,520 gallons of water destroyed. It causes the withering of plants, mummifying flesh, drying up pools/ponds, and turning lush land into dust within 300 ft/caster level (6,300 ft., over a mile; dealing 840 points of damage to all living creatures in that area, Fortitude for half).
Drawback was a limb of the caster withers away (not hard for a phaerimm to have something regenerate it back).
Just thought I'd share that. I wonder why the name change, though? |
1 L A T E S T R E P L I E S (Newest First) |
The Masked Mage |
Posted - 03 Aug 2014 : 09:11:06 There is definitely a similarity, but also some dramatic differences. Horrendous Dessication affects a wider area, is instantaneous (i.e. does not persist even a moment later), and withers a limb. In the old Life Drain spell (which was in the Ruins of Myth Drannor) the spell prevented water from entering the area of effect after the initial dehydration and had a duration of 1 year per level of the caster - MUCH longer than instantaneous. Also the penalty was not a limb but 1 hit point. I always suspected that they had a higher level variant of this spell that would cover more area and last even longer but have never seen such in print. |
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