magic_scroll
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The ability of mere paper to store such potentially vast amounts of energy, even single use, has led to the restriction of import on paper in certain totalitarian nations in order to prevent the creation of [[Scroll Bomb|magic bombs]], which are often used by insurrectionary elements in these nations as a tool of revolution via guerilla warfare. | The ability of mere paper to store such potentially vast amounts of energy, even single use, has led to the restriction of import on paper in certain totalitarian nations in order to prevent the creation of [[Scroll Bomb|magic bombs]], which are often used by insurrectionary elements in these nations as a tool of revolution via guerilla warfare. | ||
- | In general, scroll media which is less heavily impacted by degradation upon use will cost more potentia to imbue. There is a correlation between reuse potential and imbuing cost of a scroll media. The more times a scroll can self-refill from leylines, the more difficult it is to imbue it in the first place. This relationship is not wholly linear, however, as certain types of media (namely, [[gold]]) can refill nearly indefinitely, | + | ==== Scroll Media ==== |
- | These numbers are not absolute, but they are general | + | In general, scroll |
- | | ^ Multiplier | + | Single-use scrolls are almost always paper, and spellbook pages are almost always either copper or silver. There are niche applications for scrolls of other materials, but these are rare. |
- | ^ Paper | 1 | 20 MJ/g | 1-2 | | + | |
- | ^ Wood | 5 | 1 MJ/g | 8-12 | | + | |
- | ^ Stone | 10 | + | |
- | ^ Iron | 20 | + | |
- | ^ Plastic | + | |
- | ^ Amber | 40 | + | |
- | ^ Copper | + | |
- | ^ Silver | + | |
- | ^ Platinum | + | |
- | ^ Pure Gold | 1000 | + | |
- | Of these materials, paper is especially notable | + | These numbers are not absolute, but they are general guidelines |
- | Iron is useful for storing vast amounts of energy in a durable form, and is common | + | | ^ Multiplier |
+ | ^ Paper | | ||
+ | ^ Wood | ||
+ | ^ Stone | | ||
+ | ^ Iron | ||
+ | ^ Plastic | ||
+ | ^ Amber | | ||
+ | ^ Copper | ||
+ | ^ Silver | ||
+ | ^ Platinum | ||
+ | ^ Pure Gold | | ||
+ | |||
+ | In theory, any material other than glass can be used as a spell scroll medium, but these are the only materials common enough to be noteworthy. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Of these materials, paper is especially notable for its extremely high potentia limit per gram relative to its abundance and ease of imbuing. As it has a nearly perfect 1:1 ratio compared to casting the spell manually, as well as a respectable refill rate, it is almost always more efficient to imbue a spell scroll rather than waiting for the right moment to cast the spell, considering in many cases, this allows you to gain an extra cast "for free" if in an area with good leyline coverage. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Iron is useful for storing vast amounts of energy in a durable form, and is not uncommon | ||
Plastic is notable for its extremely high potential reuse count compared with its low imbuing cost, but it is scorned among serious mages for its low potentia limit and unreliability. | Plastic is notable for its extremely high potential reuse count compared with its low imbuing cost, but it is scorned among serious mages for its low potentia limit and unreliability. | ||
+ | |||
+ | === Precious Metals === | ||
+ | |||
+ | Owing to its excellent conductivity, | ||
Copper is considered the lowest grade of material from which a usable [[spellbook]] may be made, and its use is common among magic students who cannot afford finer metals. | Copper is considered the lowest grade of material from which a usable [[spellbook]] may be made, and its use is common among magic students who cannot afford finer metals. | ||
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Silver is the material favored by most mages for the creation of their personal spellbook, as a mage very rarely needs to cast the same spell more than 1,000 times in their lifetime. | Silver is the material favored by most mages for the creation of their personal spellbook, as a mage very rarely needs to cast the same spell more than 1,000 times in their lifetime. | ||
- | Platinum | + | === Platinum Scrolls |
- | Pure gold is the ultimate material for spell scrolls, but it must be absolutely pure gold with no scratches or imperfections of any kind. The presence of any impurities or imperfections increases the imbuing cost and re-introduces the potentia limit and reuse limit of lesser grades of material to be similar to the lowest grade material present in it. 18 karat gold sheets are often passed off as gold by unsavory merchants, resulting in efficacy similar to silver or even copper depending on which metals are present in the alloy. The most common use of gold spell scrolls is for ceremonial use by institutions like churches, or to project magical barriers around a city. There have been only a few truly pure gold spellbooks, almost all of which were in the possession of [[speaker|speakers]] from [[Feyndraig]] who had the longevity for the high imbuing cost of pure gold to be worthwhile. | + | Platinum is uncommonly used for spellbooks due to its rarity and relatively high imbuing cost, but it is slightly easier to come by than pure gold, has a higher tolerance for impurities and scratches, and much easier to imbue, so it isn't unheard of for a spellbook to primarily use platinum. Scrolls made of platinum are considered to be functionally permanent, although it is known to mages that they are not truly permanent in much the same way that one knows a knife cannot be re-sharpened forever. |
+ | |||
+ | This is the highest-grade scroll media which is in widespread use among sapes. Due to the very high refill rate, and the fact that the energy limit of a spell scroll is tied to the mass of the scroll, platinum scrolls may be made using a thicker sheet to enable them to store a more powerful spell. Certain platinum scrolls are kept in the armories of nations, for use as weapons of war. Imbuing such a spell into a platinum medium, considering the multiplier of roughly 250, and the extremely high energy limit, is entirely beyond the capability of any individual. | ||
+ | |||
+ | === Golden Scrolls === | ||
+ | |||
+ | Pure gold is the ultimate material for spell scrolls, but it must be absolutely pure gold with no impurities, | ||
+ | |||
+ | With almost zero exceptions, gold spell scrolls are imbued by dragons or fae folk, who have far more potentia to draw upon, and far more time to spend, than sapes do. Such scrolls have on rare occasion been created in collaboration with sape mages who have rendered extraordinary services to a dragon or fae. There should in theory be a limit | ||
+ | |||
+ | The most common use of gold spell scrolls is for ceremonial use by institutions like churches, or to continually | ||
+ | |||
+ | === Gemstone Media === | ||
+ | |||
+ | Large gemstones may be used to carry many different spells, but are more useful as carriers of enchantments than they are as scrolls (due to manaflow degradation). | ||
===== Usage ===== | ===== Usage ===== | ||
- | Depending on whether | + | The usage differs slightly for an encrypted vs unencrypted scroll. |
+ | |||
+ | ==== Encrypted ==== | ||
+ | |||
+ | An encrypted scroll must be utilized with the sincere focus and intent of its user, with the memory of what was happening while they were creating the scroll firmly in their thoughts. For this reason, most mages prefer to imbue scrolls in the dark with no intrusions or distractions, | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==== Unencrypted ==== | ||
+ | |||
+ | An unencrypted scroll is created in such a way that the end user need only intend to activate the scroll. The end user doesn' | ||
===== Regeneration ===== | ===== Regeneration ===== | ||
- | In areas of sufficient leyline coverage, | + | In areas of sufficient leyline coverage, |
+ | |||
+ | ===== Storage ===== | ||
+ | |||
+ | The optimal storage of a spell scroll depends upon several factors. The fragility of the scroll, the refill rate of the scroll, and the power of the spell contained in the scroll. If a spell scroll has a very high refill rate and contains a powerful spell, the scroll itself may heat up significantly while refilling. It is considered good practice to leave a scroll with a high refill rate (in essence any scroll made of copper, silver, platinum, or gold) on a bed of dry sand (which is a good thermal insulator) in order to prevent it from inadvertently igniting anything nearby. |
magic_scroll.1714149279.txt.gz · Last modified: 2024/04/26 16:34 by bearglyph