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April 12th, 2009, 05:43 PM
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Lieutenant General
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Join Date: Sep 2007
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Re: New pretender: Deep Dagon
another thing for Wayward : I would increase his leadership value though. I'm not sure if it's usually a fixed value but I think it usually is and pretty high at that. Fitting for a pretender I think. I greatly applaud your insight to be able to nerf your pretender a bit but on this I would give him a lil boost.
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April 12th, 2009, 06:50 PM
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Second Lieutenant
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Join Date: Dec 2008
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Re: New pretender: Deep Dagon
Why would Cold Resistance make more sense than Fire Resistance for a sea creature?
Water doesn't go below freezing (and ice floats, so the coldest "water" goes on top).
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April 13th, 2009, 01:15 AM
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BANNED USER
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Join Date: May 2004
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Re: New pretender: Deep Dagon
Quote:
Originally Posted by Redeyes
Why would Cold Resistance make more sense than Fire Resistance for a sea creature?
Water doesn't go below freezing (and ice floats, so the coldest "water" goes on top).
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Perhaps because fire doesn't exist under water? Difficult (not impossible of course - this is magic) to get resistant to something if it doesn't commonly occur.
Besides as a matter of physics in an ice/water mixture, both the water and the ice are at a temperature of 32 degrees.
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April 15th, 2009, 06:09 PM
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Major General
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Location: Scotland
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Re: New pretender: Deep Dagon
Quote:
Originally Posted by chrispedersen
Quote:
Originally Posted by Redeyes
Water doesn't go below freezing (and ice floats, so the coldest "water" goes on top).
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Besides as a matter of physics in an ice/water mixture, both the water and the ice are at a temperature of 32 degrees.
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...and 32 degrees is not _below_ freezing point. By definition, water cannot have a temperature below its freezing point (although if you try extremely hard you can get it below zero centigrade/32 F. Brine freezes at noticeably below zero anyway).
It's worth noting that air is a rather good insulator, by the way. Cold water strips heat away from you much quicker than cold air, and hot water damages you faster than air at the same temperature. Since abyssal vents present both extremes of temperature to the life forms that inhabit them (and they're probably the best place to be at that depth if you're a large organism and like eating), a degree of both FR and CR seems pretty reasonable.
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April 15th, 2009, 09:36 PM
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Private
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Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: Madison, WI
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Re: New pretender: Deep Dagon
actually completely pure water won't freeze at 0 Celsius, you can actually get it much colder than that. Until you introduce some sort (any sort) of impurity, at which point it will all freeze.
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April 16th, 2009, 02:13 AM
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BANNED USER
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Re: New pretender: Deep Dagon
Quote:
Originally Posted by Gregstrom
Quote:
Originally Posted by chrispedersen
Quote:
Originally Posted by Redeyes
Water doesn't go below freezing (and ice floats, so the coldest "water" goes on top).
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Besides as a matter of physics in an ice/water mixture, both the water and the ice are at a temperature of 32 degrees.
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...and 32 degrees is not _below_ freezing point. By definition, water cannot have a temperature below its freezing point (although if you try extremely hard you can get it below zero centigrade/32 F. Brine freezes at noticeably below zero anyway).
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~ ~ ~ ~
water often has a temperature below its freezing point - if you think that its freezing point is 32 degrees. The behavior of water varies markedly under pressure, and as I recall from highschool, I believe every 33 ft of water is 1 atm. Ergo, water 2 miles down.. is under rougly 312 atmospheres of pressure.
~ ~ ~ ~
CR would be required to dwell on the ocean bottoms. FR might be useful if the creature lived in or near vents. CR > FR
This is magic, arguing which is more reasonable is a bit moot. The author can do as he likes. But, if a creature wasn't completely immune to cold, he would still be *AT* the vent. Whats he doing here?
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