It was clear. And it is not anywhere near enough to make any kind of planet, small or otherwise. Especially an inhabitable one. It is roughly a fourth of what you would expect to pay for a moon-at least a tenth of what you would have to pay for an actual planet.
Ah, I should've price-checked before posting, next time I will. In the meantime, the Desert Moon will have to wait...
Quick Question: If a Deity spends 10 Crux, is it immediately lethal?
$$$ How much would it cost to create a small Elemental cloud-like species made of Salt, with the following traits?
They are 2.5 feet tall and wide, much weaker and clumsier concerning object or tool manipulation than an average Human, have only half the intelligence of an ordinary Human, have no Magical capacity beyond their natural abilities, live for roughly 20 years, and reproduce by splitting into two identical copies of the original Creature after the end of their natural lifespan. They float roughly a foot above the ground, but if they focus, they can move as much as five feet above ground. They move at the speed of a normal Human jogging.
They have the ability to manipulate the sand, dry dirt, and salt within a 20 foot-radius around them, and passively drain and feed off of the moisture in the environment around them, with roughly half a gallon of moisture being consumed to sustain them every day. They can focus their moisture drainage onto a single living creature 10 feet from them, and drain the moisture from it's body, with the downside that it requires near total focus one that living creature to use properly, must defeat the willpower of the living creature before working, and only drains small amounts without extensive training. Being a small cloud of Magical Salt, they are very resistant to mundane weaponry, and can literally suffocate a breathing creature within their body, (damaging themselves in the process) are somewhat resistant to most kinds of magic and elemental attacks, but are extremely vulnerable to wind, or water based attacks, which rip them apart or scald them.
They have an innate nomadic tendency, and most wander constantly in large nomadic tribes, consisting of individuals that move together in a large cloud of up to 500, but more commonly only one or two hundred. They lack empathy for other species, and the ecosystem around them. Sometimes, individuals will travel in small groups of 5-10, and very rarely, one or more will settle down in a moisture filled area and build a tiny 'village' consisting of a handful of extremely crude mud huts. They speak with an extremely complicated language consisting of extremely high-pitched keening noises, that is impossible for many species to hear, let alone decipher.
Lethal: Probably
Salt clouds: Lets say 4E+ for 1k.
mechanics check. if I made a race with an instinctive desire to serve others, or a simi-sapient creature with the instinctive desire to serve others, would they turn out the same as the faithful?
Its unlikely.
Name: Celwyddau, Father of Rebellion
Primary Sphere: Independence
Secondary Sphere: Mountains
Primary form/associated symbol: Celwyddau appears primarily in the form of a great stone snake, typically spread out along the ground so that his body resembles a mountain range. He can however appear in some others forms such as a great bear or a large thunderous bird. His most associated symbol is a distant and untamed mountain range or a dangerous and unruly snake.
Description/Background: Celwyddau despises laws and regulations and tends to love underdogs. He is very active in everyday mortal life and loves to create ballads for heroic mortals.
Accepted, sorry I missed this.
to be fair the world is kinda big.
also you kind removed reasons for the faithful to be angry. your blessing them might make it easier to convert them though,
I think Stirk removed their anger via the power of retcon. Either that or someone secretly used power to make them angry. Because otherwise this sentence doesn't make sense
The Faithful don't seem to be nearly as angry as they where last tick, with the majority being apologetic and not knowing what came over them. They are, in fact, the final version.
The Faithful where angry on Tick 1. On Tick 2, they are not angry. No retcon was involved.
I'm not sure if Stirk would rather I be vague like I have been so he can work with it more easily and not have to keep track of endless things, or is annoyed because he doesn't have as much specific material to work with.
Would you rather one way or the other, Stirk?
This game is supposed to be a creation game, and you all are the players. As such, it is better for you to do more of the detail, with Stirk just filling in the gaps and saying what is going on.