The Elemental Blade
Author: D&D
Online
E-Mail: keable@videotron.ca
The Elemental blade is a very rare and powerful blade, it requires
a very high level mage and a lot of time to create one. These
blades are fire red or dark blue depending on it's power.
The Fire Blade
The red ones are fire
blades. They add +2 to touch your opponent and +2 to the damages.
They also protect their owners (when he holds it in his hand)
from fire giving him a +5 on every magical fire resistance test.
It also allows him to throw 1 fireball of 5d6 of damages to his
opponent every week. To throw it he only has to point it at his
enemy and say a keyword of DM's choice.
The fire blade also gives
the player an immunity to natural small fires (a candle or a torch
would not hurt him but if he is in his house while it burns he
won't get out without any damages).
If fire blade is be used
by a warrior (or gladiator) who has a specialization in the blade
type of weapon, he gets one more attack every turn (if he is level
8 he would normally get 2 attacks every turn but has 3 with the
blade).
The Ice Blade
The ice blade is a dark
blue blade. They add +2 to touch and +2 to damages like the fire
blade. It also protect it's owner (when he holds the sword in
it's hand) from ice, giving him a +5 on every ice resistance test.
The ice blade can't throw anything but it has a few very useful
power described below.
If the player rolls a
natural 20 (without modifiers) on the to touch roll he can freeze
it's opponent for 1d6 rounds if he is smaller than 2,5m (8 feet)
tall. If it is taller than that roll a 10 faced dice to determine
the number of supplemental damages that he takes. The ice blade
also extinguishes every fire it is put in.
The blade also gives the
player a +1 to his AC.
My Guest Book
Sign
Panamon's Lists
Read
Panamon's Lists
HOME | The
Generators | The
Links | The
Archive | The Galleries
The Fine Print
The names of all or most
of the games on this and subsequent pages are trademarks or registered
trademarks of the owning company. Any use on this or subsequent
pages should not be misconstrued as a challenge to said trademarks,
nor as an attempt to infringe upon any copyrights that may be
owned by said companies.