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The Dresden Files => DFRPG => Topic started by: Blk4ce on June 11, 2014, 05:28:52 PM
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Would an evothaum ward still need a threshold to be built upon?
Can you use the Eastern philosophy "My body is a temple" to put a ward on yourself?
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I don't see why evothaum would be any different than regular thaum for the purposes of Wards. It's pretty clear how a ward functions.
Wards aren't really mobile. "threshold" can be a meta-physical threshold like a house or it can be a door-way or hallway/entranceway, window etc...
So a clever declaration would allow you to cast your ward where you need it.
You could represent "my body is a temple" with A Toughness/Stoicism power.
or
A mobile ward can be represented with Enchanted items.
Maybe you could have a hoola hoop enchanted item that has a Ward on it. The hoop acts as a circle/threshold.
It's mobile until you activate it. Then it is immobile.
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Wards can be built without thresholds, they just don't last very long. Until the next sunrise, probably, since that's the usual point where wards are degraded.
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Wards can be built without thresholds, they just don't last very long. Until the next sunrise, probably, since that's the usual point where wards are degraded.
I don't think this is true. I'll find the quote.
It’s intended to protect an area—usually a home
or sanctum—from physical or magical intrusion.
By default, a ward lasts until the next sunrise
unless you add complexity to make it last longer
Wards don’t have a “scale” concern, the way
that veils do, and they cannot move. They are
almost always tied to a particular place’s natural
thresholds—think of them as a super-boosted
immune system—so they are limited by the size
of that threshold. Without a threshold they can
only be set up to cover a small area at most—
usually a point of transition such as a doorway
or intersection.
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Then how did the Merlin and the Gatekeeper set up the mega-ward that stopped the entire Red Court/Outsider army in Dead Beat?
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Because not everything is easily translated from the books,
But my take is that the portal worked as a threshold between the Nevernever and the Mortal world.
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Then how did the Merlin and the Gatekeeper set up the mega-ward that stopped the entire Red Court/Outsider army in Dead Beat?
Feel free to also remember that you're talking about the most powerful and the most dangerous Wizard of the White Council working together.
Anyway, it was probably less a "ward", mechanically speaking, more a giant powerful block against movement/attack from the Reds. And it was just called a ward.
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Also, those guys probably have some funky Powers that go beyond the standard Wizard stuff. There's a Sponsored Magic variant for the Merlin on the list that lets him cast Wards without thresholds, IIRC.
Can you use the Eastern philosophy "My body is a temple" to put a ward on yourself?
I'd allow it. With the caveat that wards don't move.
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On Dresden Resources there is a Sponsored Magic called Superior Wards that allows evothaum wards with the benefit of not requiring a threshold. It specifically mentions Arther Langtree. If I am not mistaken Sancta generated it awhile ago.
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Anyway, it was probably less a "ward", mechanically speaking, more a giant powerful block against movement/attack from the Reds. And it was just called a ward.
Yeah. He could do a big block and then do another evocation to extend it for a bunch of exchanges to give everyone time to escape.
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Without a threshold they can
only be set up to cover a small area at most—
usually a point of transition such as a doorway
or intersection.
The way I interprete this, you can put a ward without a threshold, but its width can't be more than two-three zones. If you want large wards, you need a threshold.
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Small area is about a zone. See the portable Ward Harry gave to Molly in Turn Coat for example - it was a room sized sphere.
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That's subjective.
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Small area is about a zone. See the portable Ward Harry gave to Molly in Turn Coat for example - it was a room sized sphere.
Zone-wide block. I'm not sure it was actually a ward...but who knows.
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It had an attached Landmine - a big one. Chances are, it was a Ward.
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From what I remember, it was a small room. It created a zone within a zone.
Mutliple zones might be too much without a threshold because multiple zones would imply more than just "a point of transition or intersection"
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It had an attached Landmine - a big one. Chances are, it was a Ward.
I think that's more like the potion equivalent of a Warden Sword (an enchanted item with two effects/two enchanted items in a single physical object).
Mutliple zones might be too much without a threshold because multiple zones would imply more than just "a point of transition or intersection"
Yeah, that's probably not even one full zone -- just a doorway or whatever. A zone is big enough for people to swordfight in it.