Yeah, there should be a “roll a 1 on a d20, fail your save, and you just die a horrible death 9 days later”
It’s actually worse as-is. Everyone in range who fails that con check twice just dies ( 6 exhaustion == death)
And yet still less awful than a Deck of Many Things.
In my previous campaign, we had a segment with the deck of many things. My character drew the card that gave him 3 wishes. Next character drew a card and it was bad, so I wished he could have stopped that other character from drawing from the deck.
DM decides my character’s wish puts him back at the beginning of the scene, so he gets to draw the card with 3 wishes again.
Spent the rest of the campaign very carefully choosing what to spend my 5 wishes on.
Was your DM chaotic evil?
There were times I regretted giving my party magic beans :D
He was chaotic neutral, for sure.
“Fiend pact warlock? No, you misheard- I took Pact of the Demon Core”
Now, THIS is homebrew i can get behind
I can get behind [a lead wall]
Wouldn’t the damage start hours later?
I’m more concerned about the weilder
Play as Warforged, problem solved. Additionally, you will eventually start emitting radiant damage yourself, an added bonus!
Aren’t warforged partly made of organic material? That’s why you can heal them. Idk, I need to brush up on my Eberron lore.
Idk if dnd or warforged have fucking DNA, but that’s what extreme radiation exposure messes with. Your body basically forgets how to make new cells. Idk if warforged have DNA.
I think this might be the nerdiest conversation I’ve ever had lol
Truly a vile, cursed weapon.
Organic? Yes. Living? Nope…
They are made from wood, metal or stone frames with “root-like cords infused with alchemy” as muscles and covered in armored plates. They don’t sleep, don’t eat, don’t drink, don’t breath and are immune to disease.
Their “living quality” is basically just being sentient and not the dumb mindless constructs formerly build.
The part about getting healed normally is mostly balancing… After all healing in D&D terms is mostly magical so why wouldn’t it apply to a magically created sentient creature? It’s not like magic needs (micro-)biology concepts to work. Sentience being the deciding factor between an object and a creature from a view point of magical theory works, too.
(Funnily enough that’s in fact even consistent with rest of D&D magic where a dead body -at least strictly speaking- stops being a creature and becomes an object the moment the concience/soul/whatever leaves…)
Cherenkov’s blessed aura
The weilder is completely fucked. Probably the most fucked because they’re literally carrying the damned thing on a chain.
What is that in the pic?
Dam, that scary
Demon core on swingy stick
Yeah, talk about cursed items