Back to the main page

Mailing List Logs for ShadowRN

Message no. 1
From: Ubiquitous <weberm@*******.net>
Subject: [SR2] Spell lox
Date: Fri, 28 Jun 1996 18:23:25 -0400 (EDT)
At 12:42 PM 6/28/96 -0400, Jeffrey wrote:

> Now here is a thronier problem. Heal spells in locks
>do you allow them and if so how do you judge their
>effectivness against wounds, how often can you use
>them on people, etc...

Only sustained spells can be put into spell locks, I think.
I twisted the rules a bit the one time I had them knock someone off
by activating a Ignite spell lock, though, heh heh.

--
"I remember my first sexual encounter because I kept the recipe."
- Jeff Dahmer
Message no. 2
From: "Mark Steedman" <M.J.Steedman@***.rgu.ac.uk>
Subject: Re: [SR2] Spell lox
Date: Tue, 2 Jul 1996 11:19:48 GMT
Ubiquitous writes

> At 12:42 PM 6/28/96 -0400, Jeffrey wrote:
>
> > Now here is a thronier problem. Heal spells in locks
> >do you allow them and if so how do you judge their
> >effectivness against wounds, how often can you use
> >them on people, etc...
>
> Only sustained spells can be put into spell locks, I think.
> I twisted the rules a bit the one time I had them knock someone off
> by activating a Ignite spell lock, though, heh heh.
>
Permanent spells have to be sustained for so many rounds before they
are perm (the figure listed with the perm notation) 5/10/15/20 for
L/M/S/D wound levels for the curing spells (its in SR2). So you might
be able to argue the locked heal works but probably once per person.
However thats easily solved as Anchored 'heal me when i get hurt'
with a 'detect injury (diagnose out of awakenings would do)' spell
certainly works.

Mark

Further Reading

If you enjoyed reading about [SR2] Spell lox, you may also be interested in:

Disclaimer

These messages were posted a long time ago on a mailing list far, far away. The copyright to their contents probably lies with the original authors of the individual messages, but since they were published in an electronic forum that anyone could subscribe to, and the logs were available to subscribers and most likely non-subscribers as well, it's felt that re-publishing them here is a kind of public service.