A child.
- BrockthePaine
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*Waves to AnlaShokSe* <*> B5er, eh?
It does not take a majority to prevail ... but rather an irate, tireless minority, keen on setting brushfires of freedom in the minds of men. - attributed to Samuel Adams
“To preserve liberty, it is essential that the whole body of the people always possess arms and be taught alike, especially when young, how to use them.” - Richard Henry Lee
“To preserve liberty, it is essential that the whole body of the people always possess arms and be taught alike, especially when young, how to use them.” - Richard Henry Lee
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I have GURPS, and it actually works like this.. In Low Mana area, only mages can cast spells, and all spells perform at -5 to skill, for all purposes. But at least critical failures have mild or no effect at all.Wanderwolf wrote:This is something actually covered in the GURPS magic system; that, when going from Low Mana or Normal Mana to High Mana, someone who isn't used to the ambient level has "problems"... in much the same way as a man who lights a match in an oxygen tent.
Ouch.
Yours truly,
The wolfish,
Wanderer
In Normal Mana areas, only mages can cast spells, and all spells work normally. But critical failures can possibly have very bad effects (The worst involve accidentally summoning a demon or other maling entity)
In High Mana areas, anyone who knows spells can cast them.
In Very High Mana areas, anyone who knows spells can cast them. A mage who spends Fatigue Points to power a spell on his turn gets those FP back at the start of his next turn. But all failures are treated as critical failures, and actual critical failures produce spectacular disasters...
Now, in game terms, Antilla is actually a Normal Mana area thanks to the Luxfont, while the rest of the world is a Low Mana world.
- NydaLynn
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Hmm... would using lux take up alot of personal energy? Perhaps the child has a very high matabolism.MikeVanPelt wrote:Hm... The Frog Mage has never seen a human...
How does he know that this is a human child? Size? Do they have pictures of humans, showing the differences? It makes sense that an educated mage would know this, while the swamp folk didn't.
The kid looks very thin, and may be starving. This wouldn't be surprising if he's been fleeing witch hunters for some time. I think they have a good chance to gain his trust if they don't blow it.
Note, the Frog Mage is reporting stuff that happened however long ag it takes to get from the swamp to Sanctuary City. So I think it's safe to say they didn't muff it badly enough for the kid to do a "Carrie" on the whole village...
"Que Sera Sera..."
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- Tom Mazanec
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- SolidusRaccoon
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*cackles* POWER!!!!!!!!! UNLIMITED POWER!!!!!!!!!!Tom Mazanec wrote:I was thinking...what if the child learns some of the techniques of lux developed over the centuries by the Racconans? With their knowledge and his power....
Yes, sir. I agree completely. It takes a well-balanced individual... such as yourself to rule the world. No, sir. No one knows that you were the third one... Solidus. ...What should I do about the woman? Yes sir. I'll keep her under surveillance. Yes. Thank you. Good-bye...... Mr. President.
We know that they have pictures of humans. There are a few examples (stained glass window, questor museum exhibit) that would give proportions. This would have been seen by any college trained wizard. Even if he didn't know the size of humans exactly the proportions for children are off across all species. This would give an immediate signal of immaturity.MikeVanPelt wrote:Hm... The Frog Mage has never seen a human...
How does he know that this is a human child? Size? Do they have pictures of humans, showing the differences? It makes sense that an educated mage would know this, while the swamp folk didn't.
The kid looks very thin, and may be starving. This wouldn't be surprising if he's been fleeing witch hunters for some time. I think they have a good chance to gain his trust if they don't blow it.
Note, the Frog Mage is reporting stuff that happened however long ag it takes to get from the swamp to Sanctuary City. So I think it's safe to say they didn't muff it badly enough for the kid to do a "Carrie" on the whole village...
- Madmoonie
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Ture enough. Although, I must admit, this kid does not look like a of 6 or 7 but more like 11 or 12. As in an early teenager. So I wonder if puberty has some play into it.Axelgear wrote:The Frog Mage also mentions a few stumbling through now and then, so it's likely he's probably even interacted with one before.
Jesus said to her, 'I am the resurrection and the life. He who believes in Me, though he may die, he shall live. And whoever lives and believes in Me shall never die. Do you believe this?' John 11: 25-26
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AAaeeaiiheeaiyahh!
Tom Mazanec:
Tarzan, of the Rac Conan!
AAHHH eeeyah HEEYAHH EEEE- Cough, cough, wheeze.
Can you say,I was thinking...what if the child learns some of the techniques of lux developed over the centuries by the Racconans? With their knowledge and his power....
Tarzan, of the Rac Conan!

AAHHH eeeyah HEEYAHH EEEE- Cough, cough, wheeze.

You can fool some of the people all of the time
And all of the people some of the time
But you can't fool all of the people all of the time.
And all of the people some of the time
But you can't fool all of the people all of the time.
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The title of that exhibit is 'The Kings of the Seven Villages" Not "The Seven Kings of the Villages". The Seven Villages is a nation, and the exhibit was about those that tried to conquor it, no numbers were given.Earl McClaw wrote:(Let's hope he's more like Thanatanous the Mage than anyone else.)
(Hmm - "Seven Kings". And we see only three described.)
"Come on Sam, it can't be as hard as blowing up a star."
"I tell you, blow up one star and suddenly everyone thinks you can walk on water."
*Beepboop* [connection established]
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"I tell you, blow up one star and suddenly everyone thinks you can walk on water."
*Beepboop* [connection established]
"Okay. Up next, parting the Red Sea."
Gen. Jacob Carter and Lt. Col. Samatha Carter, Stargate SG-1, "Reckoning"
- Earl McClaw
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Ack! My bad! I guess I was rather "fuzzed" from hunger (supper time) and the Holidays.Nikas_Zekeval wrote:The title of that exhibit is 'The Kings of the Seven Villages" Not "The Seven Kings of the Villages".
You have to wonder how long ago these people got through the Mistwall.
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- Wanderwolf
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Long enough that there was no Mistwall to get through, to judge by the stories.Earl McClaw wrote:Ack! My bad! I guess I was rather "fuzzed" from hunger (supper time) and the Holidays.Nikas_Zekeval wrote:The title of that exhibit is 'The Kings of the Seven Villages" Not "The Seven Kings of the Villages".
You have to wonder how long ago these people got through the Mistwall.
Oh, and thank you for the correction, LoneWolf23K. Long time no Generic Universal Role Playing System.
Yours truly,
The wolfish,
Wanderer
Last edited by Wanderwolf on Mon Jan 08, 2007 2:46 am, edited 1 time in total.
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No problem. And FYI, now's a good time to get back into GURPS, ever since 4th edition came out...Wanderwolf wrote:Long enough that there was no Mistwall to get through, to judge by the stories.
Oh, and thank you for the cotrrection, LoneWolf32K. Long time no Generic Universal Role Playing System.
Yours truly,
The wolfish,
Wanderer
- Wanderwolf
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Grrr... edited typo, edited getting your name wrong...LoneWolf23k wrote:No problem. And FYI, now's a good time to get back into GURPS, ever since 4th edition came out...
Unfortunately, you're talking to someone whose childhood home is turning into a money pit, and who only makes $8/hour since he moved to a better-paying job. Barring presents, I'm not getting any new RPGs anytime soon, if ever again. Less than $700 in the bank, $2,000 in property taxes, $200 to fix a broken water pipe IF I can get it dug up, then throw in the leaky roof, the new hole in the guest room ceiling...
<sigh> This is not going well...
Yours truly,
The soon-to-be-bankrupt,
Wanderer