Devour
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Abbreviation: | DEVOUR | |
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Prerequisites: | Circle 50, Consume Flesh | |
Signature: | Yes | |
Spell Slots: | 3 | |
Mana Type: | Arcane Magic | |
Spell Type: | standard / utility | |
Difficulty: | advanced | |
Prep (min/max): | 30 / 100 | |
Skill Range (min/max): | 250 / 1000 | |
Valid Spell Target: | Self, Special | |
Duration (min/max): | Instant | |
Justice: | Unknown | |
Corruption: | Unknown | |
Description: | The Devour spell draws from the power of a ritual of consumption that has been placed upon a corpse, savaging the corpse for the purpose of generally healing the caster. Devour is less precise than its cousin, Consume Flesh, and the practitioner will find its cruder pattern decidedly more painful. Fed by a fresh corpse, the spell will linger if it cannot find any injuries, only acting when wounds afflict the caster. | |
Effect: | Wound heal | |
Example Messaging: | You gesture.
Large streams of viridian and copper leap from your outstretched hand, coalescing around the orc raider's body and exploiting the thanatological link. The streams flare a sanguine red, ravaging the orc raider's corpse. | |
Devices/Tattoos: | No devices or tattoos documented. |
Notes
- Casting this spell will heal the user. It can be cast in one of two ways: using a corpse or using a harvested material.
Corpse
- Functions similarly to Consume Flesh, in that the consume ritual must first be performed on a dead creature or player, and then cast. Like the Empath's Heal spell, Devour seeks out the worst injuries and attempts to heal them, so is generally cast, not cast targeted at a specific spot.
- If all wounds are healed and excess spell power is left over, the healing effect will linger for the spell's duration or until all power is used up healing new wounds.
Harvested Material
- Using a harvested material instead of a corpse will result in a reduced-power heal that does not linger there is excess power after all wounds are healed. This allows the Necromancer more convenience when using the spell for a trade off in strength and utility.
- This will destroy the harvested material.
- The strength of the heal is based on the quality of the material. I.e. parts from more challenging creatures will produce a stronger effect as will a more perfectly harvested part.
- Even with the best part from the most powerful creature the effect will be noticeably less than when using a corpse directly.
- You do not need to use material that you have harvested yourself, since it functions the same when using materials harvested by others.
Trivia
- "If you want to trade in butchered flesh that's totally okay." - Armifer
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