11-21-2012, 03:16 AM | #21 | |
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: Land of the Britons
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Re: Meteoric Metal vs Magic
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I'd still rule that you can use meteoric shields to block magical attacks (although note that things such as fireball tend not to be magical once thrown), and that meteoric armour grants full protection against magical attacks unless its aimed at a hit location not covered by it. Just because your meteoric helm doesn't stop you getting mind-controlled, doesn't prevent it from being useful against that Magical Bolt to the skull - which may I add very much hurt. Armour is meant to stop you getting injured from attacks, and that's very much what the helm does here, why should it do anything else?
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11-21-2012, 05:03 AM | #22 |
Join Date: Jun 2011
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Re: Meteoric Metal vs Magic
With an invisible cloak, the cloak is invisible; with an invisibility cloak, you are.
This is the same, it's a magic resistant shield, not a shield of magic resistance. If you want the latter, then go buy that instead. |
11-21-2012, 05:51 AM | #23 |
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: Land of the Britons
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Re: Meteoric Metal vs Magic
Whilst a magically resistant shield is an ordinary shield enchanted with extra DR? =D
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11-21-2012, 06:08 AM | #24 |
Join Date: May 2006
Location: Denmark
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Re: Meteoric Metal vs Magic
I'd allow a meteoric helmet to protect against mind control spells.
It would make the world of fantasy less fantastic if it didn't. This is why you want meteoric stuff - to have cool effects like this without overly technical jargon of whether or not it needs to completely encapsulate to protect etc. It's [anti-]magic! In fact, it is well known that the Emperor of Hyathan wears a crown of star metal precisely because it shields him from the magical manipulations of evil sorcerers. Just as it is well known that the archway into the grand court is composed entirely of star metal that will for a brief moment suspend ongoing enchantments on people passing through, in order to prevent shapeshifters and illusionists from infiltrating the court. |
11-21-2012, 09:51 AM | #25 |
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Austin, TX
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Re: Meteoric Metal vs Magic
I always assume that the entrance to any prosperous town or city has been drained of mana for exactly that reason. The ability to disrupt magical disguises (especially those of demons and devils) is just too valuable to pass up.
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11-21-2012, 10:08 AM | #26 |
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Gothenburg, Sweden
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Re: Meteoric Metal vs Magic
I suggest you apply targeting penalties to the spell. So if the eyes are the only non-protected area, you roll at -10. If the face is the only non-protected area, roll at -3 (? IDHMBWM), etc.
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11-21-2012, 10:37 AM | #27 | |
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: Jacksonville FL
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Re: Meteoric Metal vs Magic
Quote:
Talk about this a bit more. Throw your ideas out there.
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11-21-2012, 01:19 PM | #28 |
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: Land of the Britons
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Re: Meteoric Metal vs Magic
Okay, well lets discuss the practicality of implementation.
Lets work out the regular meteoric armour first, DR = magic resistance (I'm shortening this to MR from this point on) seems easy enough but how are we applying this? Total DR from all meteoric armour worn? This could be very high if heavy armour is worn in all locations - although that would be very expensive to produce so perhaps this is fair. Another approach might be the average between the best and worse or - the same as large area damage - or simply using the best DR. Of cause both of these promotes a wearing a single piece of heavy meteoric armour as the cost and effort of armouring all your hit locations in order to bring up your lowest DR is too great. You might consider using more complex means of calculating averages or using partial contribution from additional pieces of meteoric armour to encourage you to wear as more than one item - but this will just lead to annoying maths each time someone takes off their meteoric helm whilst still wearing their meteoric boots. Also, if you're using DR (of meteoric armour) as magic resistance then how does a meteoric shield work? It doesn't provide DR (but does have a DR for itself) so does it provide any magical resistance? Lets say it provides MR equal to its DB - as this seems reasonable and easy to add in - in addition to its normal characteristics of being meteoric (can't cast shatter on it or use magical telekinesis to disarm it etc). Then you have the question of if this contributes to the MR from your meteor armour or not too! Then comes the question of if all of this MR is additive with innate MR, or again if just the best between the two is used. The former rewards everyone equally and makes sense why 'star-metal' is valued by everyone, however the latter stops naturally MR creatures (like Ogres, Goblin-kin and Gnomes) becoming truly unstoppable by magic when they don heavy meteoric armour! Although, this may be a feature rather an a terrifying bug - and magic resistance does only stop magic affecting you, so you can still be toasted in your armour by fireballs and the like. The final thing to consider is if you want to go through the effort of using MR per hit location, considering you're only armouring those areas and so its logical that this might be the case (as we've already discussed with helms making you immune to mind-control). The first thing to worry about here is the huge amount of numbers you now have to look up, and the scale to which it actually impacts the world - of cause a meteoric helm stops mind-control, and meteoric boots might stop flying spells... but what do meteoric greaves do? Is the only benefit to wearing a meteoric codpiece MR against the Strike Barren spell? Do I need to make meteoric mail to add Arming Garments to my meteoric plate so that it grants full MR to my torso? This neatly leads on to other basic questions like "does meteoric Medium Scale (DR 4) grant the same MR as meteoric Fine Mail (DR 4)? and if so why when it weighs so much more as has less gaps in it?"... Of cause I'm not even going to try and answer all of these questions, but I will point out that there are some far reaching consequences for these choices and it will cause some tactics in armouring to become more popular (and optimal) than others - which may then also have a noteworthy decrease in the potency of magic users in the setting (although they get so many free meal tickets anyway that I wouldn't mind too much).
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...like a monkey with a wrench. Last edited by PseudoFenton; 11-21-2012 at 01:22 PM. |
11-21-2012, 02:13 PM | #29 |
Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: Berkeley, CA
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Re: Meteoric Metal vs Magic
For touch effects, DR of the location touched. Otherwise, average of torso and worst armor, like large area damage.
It lets you block melee spells, which normally cannot be blocked. |
11-21-2012, 02:39 PM | #30 |
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: Canada
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Re: Meteoric Metal vs Magic
Another idea to throw into the ring, inspired by discussion upthread:
Instead of adding immunities or MR, allow the DR to be applied to Melee spells that bypass DR, and double DR against the rest of those MR-bypassing Melee, Jet, Area, and Ranged spells that otherwise interact normally with DR. So now Meteoric Iron armor does protect especially against Fireball, and Deathtouch, and Create Fire, and so on and so forth.
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