REVISIONS
2 - Crystal Construction: Chiefwaffles, Helmacon
1 - Buoy of Forever Frost: FallacyofUrist
0 - Crystalclad reshaping:
0 - Rotting Escargot ammunition:
0 - Furrybooms:
0 - Exploding falcons:
Exploding falcons could be useless if they increase their altitude, or create a much more effective lightning defence, but it seems that they ought to work well enough and probably won't increase our falcon losses.
manually detonated fireballs might be vulnerable to antimagic, so a timer was used. We already have spells with durations so it shouldn't be that much of a stretch. It would also give us some movement in the direction of an explosive that can actually make a rifle work...
Discarding sbots are what we need right now to make our artillery effective against the greater altitudes or heavier armour that they are likely to produce next turn.
Ooooh, ooh, idea: tracer rounds. Should be dead easy if someone wants to make a revision for it.
Crystalclad reshaping would block that obvious hole that has been sinking all our ships, along with some minor performance enhancements, and give us some hydrodynamics as well if we are lucky.
The buoy makes sense. We do need to quell their storms and if we can do the celestedemorte then this would put it at sea... I do not see anything else being this powerful in a revision. Kind of risky though.. Frozen seas would be unstable and I would expect less "frozen sea" and more" lots of little ice flows that could cause problems. But turning off their weather magic would be nice. I am still not entirely certain how they are using weather magic to make storms and not forcing their air force to scrub the mission due to bad weather. One would think that they are spending their entire magical reserve just keeping their airships from capsizing...
Crystal construction does, to me, seem a bit optimistic. Lightning does destroy crystals, and metal is actually extremely good at protecting against lightning, it is just a matter of having enough of it. Honestly, their fire pots are doing more harm to our crystalclads than the lightning is and it is sort iof ridiculous that lightning would strike a metal boiler that is sitting in a crystal tub. The lightning only veers into metal if it is a faster route to equalisation. If the boilers are positively charged for some reason, then making them out of crystal won't change their lightning suction at all. If they are not positively charged, then the lightning should find the big slab of crystal around them, say "huh, well it is a fast road but it goes sideways to my destination, so why would I go ther when these rickety old roads will still get me there faster..." and go another way. It seems tht crystal must be at least equal with air in conductivity which would mean that it doesn't really address that issue much. Still a good thing, mind, just that it is pretty minor at actually protecting our crystalclads.