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  • File : 1274473206.png-(267 KB, 393x659, Giantess_color2.png)
    267 KB A Frost Giant is Thee ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)16:20 No.9965818  
    rolled 6, 2, 2 = 10

    #47: http://suptg.thisisnotatrueending.com/archive/9549247
    #48: http://suptg.thisisnotatrueending.com/archive/9672525
    #49: http://suptg.thisisnotatrueending.com/archive/9692576
    #50: http://suptg.thisisnotatrueending.com/archive/9713601
    #51: http://suptg.thisisnotatrueending.com/archive/9817416
    #52: http://suptg.thisisnotatrueending.com/archive/9856237
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)16:20 No.9965832
    rolled 4, 2, 4 = 10

    Once again, everything has come together. The Terror Saints have joined the Wallsmashers, forming a force of nearly 20,000 men, all under the command of Knight Commander Symon. Vast stockpiles of thermite, amassed before your arrival, are being distributed and converted. Some to chain-mines, many to bolas. Considering the firepower at the commander's disposal, you doubt this foul beast will last long.

    Corias took you into the friendly camp while his own soldiers set up their tents and dug trenches. You were surprised at how much the uniforms differ- many of the Wallsmasher troops seem to favor wide-brimmed helmets (for deflecting arrows), carry digging tools on their belts and packs, and wear or carry greatcoats covered in fire retardant. Since they are a siege-focused unit, you suppose it'd be odd for them to have the exact same equipment as everyone else.

    After reaching the command post, Corias caught up with the other commander, talking like the two were old friends. He went over your recent exploits quite thoroughly, embellishing a few bits, and suggesting that the army should hire more Frost Giants. While the officers were talking, you discussed digging machines with Mitchell and a few of the regular troops, describing the tunnel-borers of your world. Apparently, a few of their mages and engineers have been working on something like that, but it had to be left behind.

    When the commanders have finished their exchange, you introduce yourself, as modestly as possible. The next probing attack is scheduled for tomorrow, and, given the aid you've provided so far and your experience, you have some say in the tactics.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)16:21 No.9965839
         File1274473267.jpg-(30 KB, 299x276, fuckyeah_fgquest.jpg)
    30 KB
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)16:22 No.9965859
    >>9965832
    Let's try the method we used before, thumpers everywhere to distract it and a small elite force infiltrates and kills te head
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)16:25 No.9965899
         File1274473507.jpg-(54 KB, 477x999, spear.jpg)
    54 KB
    >>9965832
    Okay, can we make a few spears?
    Lay a few traps?
    Have some guys dig a few holes, put a ballista in the hole so that it'll shoot up, close up and reinforce the tops of the holes enough that the centipede can't get down but the ballista can still shoot up, and tell them to fire if they see a giant centipede climbing over them?
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)16:26 No.9965926
    >9965859
    iirc this particular monster doesn't respond to sound or vibrations.
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)16:26 No.9965927
    rolled 2, 3, 4 = 9

    >>9965859
    Thumpers are not guaranteed to work, since the centipede doesn't appear to rely on vibrations to sense prey, but it might be worth a try.

    >>9965899
    Yes, you can do that. Crafting spears with that design will require a bit of experimentation, since you'll have to use alchemy to get the tungsten.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)16:27 No.9965947
    >>9965927
    what does it seem to use then ?
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)16:29 No.9965968
    rolled 2, 4, 4 = 10

    >>9965947
    It doesn't use any visible method. So far, it has detected everything that enters the fog, so it probably uses some kind of scrying magic.

    Reposting something from the previous thread, in case it'll give you ideas.

    We'd have to agree on an ambush point ahead of time. Get the tunnelers to dig a huge hole below the ambush point, supported by wooden bulwarks.

    Then we could fill the bottom of the hole with thermite. High quality, low quality, doesn't matter. We might not need much thermite per square inch. No need for canisters or anything, just thermite.
    Then Maya (as the fastest runner and the only one covered in magma steel who can generate a personal cold aura) draws the thing to the ambush point and uses lightning on a strip of magnesium that pokes above the surface and leads to the thermite. Then we fight the thing for maybe a second and get out of the pit.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)16:29 No.9965978
    >>9965947

    Since it's centipede-based and doesn't use vibrations, I'd guess smell.
    But it could be magic. Just plain magic.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)16:32 No.9966048
    >>9965978
    Let's suggest that and put up the stinkiest thing they got.
    If they don't have anything, let's transmute some sulphur.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)16:35 No.9966093
    I guess we could have our guys dig a centipede-sized tunnel, with thermite carpeting the floor. And they could paint the roof and walls with pitch or some other such sticky incendiary, using electric lights or magic to light their way so as not to ignite the tar. We could dig this tunnel into the centipede's territory, have Maya blast open the last few feet with an ice grenade so it's exposed to the surface, have her exit and wait for the centipede, and when the centipede comes for her, withdraw into the tunnel, just slowly enough to make sure the damn thing follows her, and when it's well immersed in the trap and Maya's clear of the incendiary, we light it all up and run like hell. The pitch at least will stick to the monster and burn it even if it gets clear of the thermite before said thermite does serious damage to it, the whole conflagration should collapse the tunnel's (presumably wooden) supports and cave it all in on top of the centipede, the air should run out in the confined space, the thermite won't need air to burn, and everyone should be clear of the damn thing so nobody dies or gets hurt. Basically we trap it and then we light the trap on fire, under thousands of tons of dirt and rock.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)16:36 No.9966107
    >>9966093
    best idea yet
    >> Viscus Infirmus Est !!z66dphCR3tu 05/21/10(Fri)16:37 No.9966127
    >>9966093
    Sounds good.
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)16:37 No.9966134
    rolled 3, 3, 1 = 7

    >>9966048
    Rations long past their due and human waste.

    A barrel of horror is trundled out of the camp, set near the fog, and watched (at a distance) by a squad of fast-responders. After two minutes (the centipede's longest response time) the squad members relax noticeably. After ten, they push the barrel just past the edge of the fog. Thirty seconds later, the centipede roars out of the mist, pushes the barrel over, and retreats.

    So much for that.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)16:39 No.9966167
    I wonder if we could build a coal-powered steam engine, apply it to a cart, fill a back car of the engine with magnesium and thermite, and send the thing off at the edge of the centipede's range into it's lair? If the centipede attacks everything, it will presumably attack the steam engine, and (if the engine is JUST poorly-designed enough) cause a boiler explosion. If it eats it's prey whole, then some of the coals might possibly strike at the magnesium and trigger the thermite. If it eats it's prey whole and that never happens, then a thermite grenade someone chucks down it's throat might trigger the cartload of thermite. If it just strikes at it's prey, the engine might rupture and/or cause a boiler explosion. If nothing of the sort happens, then at least nobody died to find out.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)16:39 No.9966168
    >>9966134
    Okay, apparently it's magical then.
    Can we have an anti scrying item put into a barrel and then see if it happens the same ?
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)16:40 No.9966186
    rolled 2, 1, 4 = 7

    >>9966093
    It moves faster than you. Since you're armored with Magma Steel, though, you will probably not be harmed if the tunnel is ignited before you're out. If it manages to catch you, things will go very badly.

    If everyone agrees with this, it'll be your top plan.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)16:41 No.9966194
    >>9966167
    Making a steam engine would take a LOT of time. Way too much. Bad idea.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)16:43 No.9966226
    >>9966134
    I can just imagine what's going through the centipede's mind. "Puny barrel! You are no match for me! Bwahahaha!"
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)16:43 No.9966251
    rolled 2, 4, 2 = 8

    >>9966167
    Even a simple steam engine is beyond your skills right now. With a week or two, you could probably make one, though.

    Given your strength, and the creature's apparent lack of interest for anything outside the fog, you could just pile explosives on a regular cart and push it in.

    >>9966168
    One of the mages drops a small amulet in another barrel, and the same squad takes it to the edge.

    "If this works," says Symon, "It'll take a load off, that's for sure."

    The barrel is pushed into the fog, and the squad waits. A minute later, the centipede appears, screeches, tips the barrel over, and retreats again.
    >> Viscus Infirmus Est !!z66dphCR3tu 05/21/10(Fri)16:43 No.9966252
    >>9966186
    We can create and "ice cork" inside the tunnel to delay him (AFAIR we can summon quite big amount of ice if we don't need it to take any specific shape) if things go ugly.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)16:46 No.9966295
    >>9966093
    If it's intelligent this might also teach the son of a bitch to not enter or investigate any tunnels, which would then let us tunnel fucking everything and lay traps and collapse the surface everywhere like it was Dorf fucking Fortress.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)16:47 No.9966307
    >>9966251
    FUCKIN MAGIC
    HOW DOES IT WORK
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)16:48 No.9966334
    >>9966251
    SO he seems to find things by other means than scrying magic, most likely smell. So pushing something smelly into his territory at multiple points could distract him if we need it (we don't if we use tunnel plan).
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)16:50 No.9966390
    rolled 5, 4, 5 = 14

    >>9966334
    Do you want to test this hypothesis?
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)16:51 No.9966405
    >>9966390
    yeah I mean, we have plenty of time right ?
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)16:55 No.9966473
    rolled 3, 5, 3 = 11

    >>9966405
    Indeed you do. Against the protests of several of the lower-ranked soldiers, three more barrels of waste are gathered and taken to the edge at various points. An empty barrel is pushed in after, in between two of the others.

    This time, the centipede responds almost immediately. It strikes at one barrel, knocking it over, and hits the remaining three, one after the other. It doesn't seem to distinguish between the empty and the full ones.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)16:56 No.9966491
    If we're going with the tunnel plan and we plan to ignite the incendiaries before we're clear of them, we'll want a rebreather (possibly magic) or at least an air filter mask of some kind, because the burning tar would fuck up our lungs.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)16:58 No.9966534
    >>9965899
    I've got a modified idea of this one, can we make normal steel tipped spears with thermite-filled heads? Just throw it then hit the shaft that is (hopefully) still sticking out with a bolt and *BAM*, we have an opening.
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)17:00 No.9966555
    rolled 1, 2, 3 = 6

    >>9966491
    The mages have no items that would make this possible, but at least one of them can cast a charm that would allow you to hold your breath for about five minutes.

    Unless you wish to try constructing a filter mask with alchemy.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)17:01 No.9966580
    >>9966555
    Let's try digging this time
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)17:02 No.9966597
    rolled 4, 6, 2 = 12

    >>9966534
    Yes, if the fuse was accessible enough for you to hit once the spear reached the target. Keep in mind that the centipede's carapace is very tough; your best shot would be to hit it in the eye, or strike one of the joints where the legs connect to the body.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)17:04 No.9966653
    >>9966597
    Hmm, yeah. Cooking it inside of the tunnel seems like the best idea then.
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)17:05 No.9966664
    rolled 1, 5, 2 = 8

    >>9966580
    Beneath the setting sun, several squads of sappers labor before the edge, as you and the commanders look on. In short order, they dig a tunnel wide enough for two men, directly underneath the fog and extending several feet in. After that, they withdraw, wait about two minutes, and head back in, extending it a bit more.

    They get to about twenty feet before Symon orders them out. The centipede does not appear.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)17:06 No.9966703
         File1274475995.jpg-(60 KB, 526x540, predatorsense.jpg)
    60 KB
    >>9966307

    If I had to guess, it would be something like this.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)17:07 No.9966729
    >>9966664
    Try throwing a stinkbarrel in
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)17:10 No.9966772
    rolled 5, 3, 1 = 9

    >>9966729
    In it goes. Two of the squad members wheel it to the end of the tunnel, and scramble out, barely restraining the urge to cough. Five minutes later, nothing has happened. Of course, the smell probably didn't penetrate the ground.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)17:11 No.9966800
    >>9966772
    Declare tunneling apparently safe, proceed to our main plan.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)17:13 No.9966841
    FUCK YEAH

    FG quest!

    ...

    But I'm so tired
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)17:14 No.9966870
    >>9966772
    hmm

    Have someone dig a trench into the scrying zone. Ready to run quick.
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)17:18 No.9966950
    rolled 2, 6, 2 = 10

    >>9966800
    With Symon's approval, you declare tunneling safe, and outline your main plan. Digging a tunnel large enough for the centipede, including legs, will take a while, so you won't be killing anything tonight.

    >>9966870
    Wary of exposing themselves to attack, the sappers dig a bit sluggishly, clearing a trench deep enough to hide a full-grown man if he ducks. Half a minute after they get past the edge of the fog, the centipede charges out, striking the trench just after the sappers clear out, shouting madly.

    The centipede turns in the general direction of the tunnel, hesitates for a brief moment, and retreats.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)17:20 No.9966993
    >>9966664
    >>9966772

    That might mean that our tunnelling plan will be a great success, OR it might mean that the monster won't follow us into the tunnel so our trap won't work at all. But even if the latter is true, at least then we'll have a giant tunnel directly into it's territory that we can go through without it attacking us along the way, which could help some other attack plan later.
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)17:23 No.9967076
    rolled 4, 5, 3 = 12

    Unless there is something else you wish to attempt, the sappers will start work on the large tunnel. A squad of scouts will stand by to warn them if the centipede appears, and a few groups of mages will attempt to hold the thing off if the sappers need more time to escape.

    If the sappers work through the night (which they will), the tunnel will be complete somewhere around lunchtime tomorrow.

    Orders?
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)17:25 No.9967116
    We could enhance our speed for the duration of tunnel plan to outrun the thing, no?
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)17:25 No.9967121
    While others are busy digging the tunnel, I guess we could spend our time making thermite spears. Thrusting spears for infantry, throwing spears and maybe a thrusting spear for Maya (hooray for automatic hits), and maybe thermite lances of some sort for cavalry.

    Or maybe we could try the same idea to make thermite bolts for the ballistas.
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)17:27 No.9967168
    rolled 6, 4, 2 = 12

    >>9967116
    Yes. The effect of a speed charm would be limited to a short burst, but that's all you would need anyway.

    >>9967121
    You can do both. Do you wish to make them out of steel or tungsten?
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)17:28 No.9967192
    >>9967168

    Tungsten. I'd prefer not to have the tip melt off before it has a chance to get embedded in a monster's face.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)17:29 No.9967197
    >>9967168
    Does either of them penetrate better than the other?
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)17:31 No.9967251
    rolled 1, 1, 2 = 4

    >>9967192
    Acknowledged.

    >>9967197
    They seem to be fairly equal, in your experience. Against the carapace, they will only be useful against weak spots, regardless of the material.

    Email field: dice+1d20 for alchemy. Success on 11, result determines quality.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)17:31 No.9967259
    rolled 5 = 5

    >>9967251
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)17:33 No.9967315
    >>9967259
    haha

    We try again
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)17:34 No.9967327
    rolled 3 = 3

    ooops
    >>9967315
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)17:35 No.9967343
    Dammit.

    Should we try again? We have time till tomorrow anyway
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)17:37 No.9967393
    rolled 5, 1, 4 = 10

    >Part of your comment isn't allowed to be posted. :(

    Well, thank you 4chan.

    You manage to make quite a lot of black goo, which sinks back into the earth after you're done. Mitchell remarks on how alchemy brings out bad luck.

    Roll again.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)17:37 No.9967404
    rolled 11 = 11

    .
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)17:38 No.9967413
         File1274477905.jpg-(114 KB, 543x436, reedrichards.jpg)
    114 KB
    >>9967259
    >>9967327
    >5
    >3
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)17:39 No.9967434
    rolled 14 = 14

    .>>9967393

    Let's have small talk with Mitchell in mean time. You know, about ... things.
    >> Researcher Sam 05/21/10(Fri)17:40 No.9967477
    rolled 2 = 2

    >>9967393
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)17:45 No.9967577
    rolled 5, 5, 6 = 16

    >Part of your comment isn't allowed to be posted

    I'm having a bit of a problem here. Hang on.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)17:46 No.9967610
    >>9967577
    Are you trying to post something that resembles a real geographical location?
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)17:46 No.9967614
         File1274478393.png-(13 KB, 685x228, post1.png)
    13 KB
    rolled 6, 3, 3 = 12

    >>9967434
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)17:47 No.9967631
    rolled 5, 4, 4 = 13

    >>9967610
    No, I don't think so.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)17:47 No.9967640
    >>9967614

    Let's test them
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)17:49 No.9967670
    >>9967610
    >a real geographical location

    W... why would something like that be banned on tg ?
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)17:50 No.9967694
    >>9967434
    Oooh, nice. >>9967404 doesn;t count since it doesn't quote.
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)17:50 No.9967706
    rolled 6, 3, 4 = 13

    >>9967640
    Very well. Do you want to lure the centipede, or use an archery target, or something else?
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)17:51 No.9967721
         File1274478673.jpg-(9 KB, 320x240, miles_edward_obrien.jpg)
    9 KB
    >>9967631

    Have you tried reconfiguring the phase variance of the plasma coils?
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)17:51 No.9967733
    >>9967721
    No, but I tried banging your wife.

    With my phaser.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)17:52 No.9967740
    Maybe it some shit to prevent posting how to make bomb? We are talking about fuses and stuff.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)17:52 No.9967751
    >>9967694

    But little did they know that >>9967404 and
    >>9967434 are, in fact, samefag
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)17:53 No.9967755
    >>9967706

    Let's try lighting them and stabbing them into a tree first.
    We want to see if they light properly, if the thermite all drains out through the hole where the magnesium fuse is when the aluminum liquifies, if the tungsten can stand being stabbed into something solid, if the heat shielding stuff works, etc.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)17:53 No.9967774
    >>9967706

    On a target, we need to see if the thing will ignite at all.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)17:54 No.9967787
    >>9967706
    Attach a rope to the spear.
    Do the barrel trick. When it comes out to push it away, SPEAR IT!
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)17:57 No.9967846
    >>9967706
    >Do you want to lure the centipede

    It would be entirely hilarious if we lured it, threw a spear in its eye (and auto-hitting) and killed it in process by burning the thermite to its brain.

    Later we would tell were were just practicing our new toy
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)17:58 No.9967872
    rolled 5, 3, 6 = 14

    >>9967721
    Yes. The main deflector is still non-operational. Go have a drink with Julian, I'll get this.

    >>9967755
    There are no trees nearby, so Mitchell suggests you throw it into one of the fire-retardant boards. You get the men to clear the area, anchor one of the boards in the ground, and strike it with a spear. It embeds itself in the surface, taking no damage. You light it with a storm knife, shielding your eyes.

    The thermite flares, transferring its heat to the spear. A pinpoint of light bleeds through the hole where the fuse was, but the thermite remains contained. It takes several seconds for the heat to eat through the board, and the edges of the strike-point soon blacken and curl away. The spear falls out and onto the ground, burning itself out.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)18:00 No.9967931
         File1274479232.jpg-(177 KB, 557x720, centipede.jpg)
    177 KB
    >>9967846

    In my long years of experience fighting magically empowered centipedes, I've learned that when you destroy the head, the next segment just becomes the new head.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)18:00 No.9967937
    >>9967872

    We should first light them and then throw them. Eliminates the possibility of missing the lighting attack that way.

    Useful to know.
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)18:03 No.9967988
    rolled 6, 2, 6 = 14

    >>9967787
    >>9967937
    Roll 1d20 for spear-throwing. Your auto-hit applies mostly to boulders, but you've got good aim anyway. Result determines effectiveness.
    >> Researcher Sam 05/21/10(Fri)18:04 No.9968008
    rolled 5 = 5

    >>9967988
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)18:04 No.9968013
    >>9967846
    Expanding upon this idea:

    By the results of >>9967872 it seems that the spear would burn for a while in the eye and fall of without damaging interior of the head.

    So my idea is:
    Since our scientist in Dreamworld has successfully made rocket powder (iirc) we could make these spears like rockets. We throw them, they impale in the eye, the rocket ignites and slowly burrows deeper in the head, melting the brain

    How does this plan look?
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)18:05 No.9968025
         File1274479515.jpg-(101 KB, 320x262, porkins.jpg)
    101 KB
    rolled 13 = 13

    >>9967988

    Hits away!
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)18:08 No.9968093
    >>9968013

    I think I'd prefer if the spear had jagged hooks at the back end or teeth. Or if the shaft right behind the spearhead could twist, bend, and break so the spearhead would be embedded away from the entry wound. The rocket spear just sounds too implausible.

    Also:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pilum
    >Most later pila were constructed such that the iron shank would bend on impact; early pila do not seem to have had this characteristic. A pilum, having penetrated a shield through a small hole and its shank having bent would now be difficult to remove.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)18:10 No.9968143
    >>9968093
    Oh, okay.

    I just wanted it to go deeper inside the head.
    Also, the jagged teeth idea is good, our spears should be like that
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)18:11 No.9968155
    Hey I think we should HEY EVERYBODY DID THE NEWS GET AROUND ABOUT A MAN NAMED BUTCHER PETE?
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)18:11 No.9968157
         File1274479901.png-(21 KB, 713x324, post2.png)
    21 KB
    rolled 6, 3, 5 = 14

    This is starting to annoy me.
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)18:13 No.9968200
    rolled 6, 4, 2 = 12

    >>9968013
    It is possible for you to make black powder, with time. However, getting the mix right, not to mention the design of the projectile, would take experimentation.

    >>9968093
    >>9968143
    Would you like to alter the remaining spears to reflect this?
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)18:13 No.9968202
    >>9968157
    Gorsh damn it
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)18:14 No.9968206
    >>9968157

    Maybe you should clear your cache and/or switch to a different browser.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)18:14 No.9968216
    >>9968155
    OH PETE JUST FLEW INTO THIS TOWN AND HE'S CHOPPIN' UP ALL THE WOMEN MEAT
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)18:15 No.9968230
    >>9968200
    Yeah do that.

    Also, let's skip to lunch time and deal with this centipede problem.
    I am really getting tired of these fortress recaptures taking so much time.
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)18:17 No.9968268
    rolled 5, 2, 1 = 8

    >>9968230
    Spears altered. Skipping forward, if no one objects.
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)18:26 No.9968400
    rolled 6, 1, 3 = 10

    For the remainder of your time, you practice alchemy and oversee further production of thermite, with Symon's blessing. Your armor still refuses to yield to your magical talents, but your lenses continue to increase in quality, making reliable (if limited) spyglasses. By mid-afternoon of the next day, you've armed several squads with thermite spears, and kept several for yourself, all with jagged teeth.

    When the tunnel is complete, the sappers emerge, tired and covered in dirt, having swapped out three or four times during the job. Thankfully, the centipede hasn't attacked the tunnel, and it has been reinforced just enough to hold for your escape. The floor is layered with thermite grenades just below thin planks, with a single linked fuse feeding them all. The walls and ceiling are thick with tar, ready to immolate anything that enters.

    At the commander's order, you enter the tunnel, reaching the end without trouble, stepping lightly. Your breathing charm gives you five minutes, which is more than enough time, and haste will carry you faster than the beast. Hopefully. Time to shine.

    Roll 1d20 for grenades. Success on six.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)18:28 No.9968437
    rolled 11 = 11

    >>9968400
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)18:29 No.9968444
    >>9968437
    Alright, proceed with the plan
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)18:32 No.9968492
    Don't forget to stay just out of its reach to lure it in the tunnel
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)18:33 No.9968523
    >>9968437
    Just as planned...
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)18:36 No.9968574
         File1274481378.jpg-(50 KB, 695x320, post3.jpg)
    50 KB
    rolled 6, 6, 2 = 14

    >>9968437
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)18:38 No.9968604
    >>9968574

    Cut the leg off
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)18:38 No.9968608
    >>9968574
    Try to break the leg with our flail
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)18:39 No.9968616
    rolled 6, 6, 1 = 13

    >>9968604
    You have a steel flail and a Magma Steel knife. Do you want to use these, a bola, magic, or something else?
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)18:39 No.9968617
    >>9968523
    >>9968574

    I wonder what would have happened if we failed that roll. Would the whole plan be botched? Or would we have to try again?
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)18:39 No.9968621
    >>9968574
    Thermite spear right next to the leg. Hope to embed it in a weak joint.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)18:39 No.9968630
    >>9968616
    Batarang.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)18:41 No.9968654
    >>9968617
    It's not like we didn't have backup plans.
    And backup plans for our backup plans.
    >> Researcher Sam 05/21/10(Fri)18:41 No.9968665
    >>9968574
    Run like fuck. We know that once it dies, the fog will clear in a very short time. So everyone run out of the fog, and wait to see if it disappears. If it does, it's dead. If it doesn't, it's still alive and we need to go and mop up.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)18:42 No.9968680
    >>9968665
    I thought the fog was just with the worm-type shoggoths, and that this one didn't have fog at all?
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)18:43 No.9968700
    >>9968665
    Are we sure that it's the only centipide? And that it is the source of the fog?
    We might need to go to the center to deactivate whatever is powering the fog and anti-scry
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)18:44 No.9968713
    >>9968665
    What? No. We need to summon ice grenades where the leg looks like it leads. Kill, not run away. Liberal application of thermite when the main body is exposed.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)18:45 No.9968744
    >9968713
    >Liberal application of thermite when the main body is exposed.
    We DID just cover it's entire body in thermite and burning tar, you know.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)18:46 No.9968760
    >>9968744
    Yeah, I meant with one of the spears. Internal application. If that doesn't work, make a hole for internal application.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)18:47 No.9968772
    >>9968744
    overkill is the best kill
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)18:47 No.9968780
         File1274482049.jpg-(37 KB, 706x246, post4.jpg)
    37 KB
    rolled 2, 5, 4 = 11

    Cache cleared. I'm going to switch to IE and see what happens
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)18:50 No.9968830
    I just realized, we haven't made a single one-liner yet.

    WE NEED FIRE-RELATED PUNS HERE, PEOPLE.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)18:51 No.9968856
    >>9968780

    I guess we just wait and see
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)18:54 No.9968925
    >>9968780
    Freeze the centipede into the ground. Or try dropping a large chunk of ice on the exposed body. Or summoning a huge block of ice to encase the exposed body where it emerges from the earth.
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)18:54 No.9968928
    rolled 5, 2, 5 = 12

    >>9968780
    Same result. I suppose I just have to deal with it for now. Moving on:

    >>9968680
    It has plenty of fog, of the same type and range.

    >>9968700
    You're not sure of either of these things yet.

    Target with grenades?
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)18:54 No.9968929
    >>9968780

    FOUL MUTANTS, MONSTERS, AND DEMONS ALIKE SHALL ALL BURN IN THE FIRES OF PROGRESS.
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)18:56 No.9968982
    rolled 2, 6, 1 = 9

    >>9968925
    Roll 2d20 for ice. First for drop, second for encasement/freezing. Successes on five and eight.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)18:58 No.9969004
    rolled 14, 8 = 22

    >>9968982

    don't fail
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)18:58 No.9969017
    >>9968928
    How effective have ice grenades been on this thing? Try blowing open the body where it's emerging with ice grenades, then chuck in thermite.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)18:59 No.9969029
    rolled 11, 6 = 17

    >>9968982

    Time to hit him with a one-liner. I mean a real ICE BURN here. Someone think of something, it's gotta be real cool and incredibly insulting and inflammatory at the same time.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)18:59 No.9969039
    >>9969004
    Just barely.

    But wouldn't that hinder our burning process?
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)19:01 No.9969079
    >>9969039
    Maybe, but maybe the rapid temperature shift would make the carapace crack and make the rest of our job that much easier when it inevitably rises, howling and furious from the lake of fire where it laid entombed.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)19:02 No.9969096
    >>9969079
    I like your style.
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)19:06 No.9969184
    rolled 2, 2, 2 = 6

    Oh, how you hate things that don't want to die.

    >14

    An enormous block of ice forms in the air, congealing from ambient vapor. It drops like an anvil, pinning the centipede's body against the ground and shattering into several pieces. The screeches become more frantic.

    >8

    The creature's legs begin to freeze within the solidifying ground, trapping the strange thing as it tries to extract itself, its cries weakening. Spreading ice takes its body, wrapping around the segments and keeping them together, slowly freezing the centipede whole. The carapace splits open in several places, revealing the soft white flesh beneath.

    The screeches die out. The legs stop moving. Yet the fog remains.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)19:08 No.9969230
    >>9969184
    Time for some soft white flesh to burn. Take it apart. It oughta be safe enough for the men to help too.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)19:11 No.9969297
    >>9969184
    >The screeches die out. The legs stop moving. Yet the fog remains.
    Well let's be rigorous about this.
    We've got to dispose of the body first, I for one would hate to find out it had just entered a hibernation cycle or something when we froze it, so let's smash the thing's face and remove all the legs from the body. By removing the legs, we both cripple it if it decides to resurrect suddenly, and we follow it's body to it's source, which might be another tree thing, or a nest full of these god-awful things, or nothing at all. We'll have to make our judgements based on what we find as we desecrate it's corpse.
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)19:14 No.9969364
    rolled 1, 4, 5 = 10

    >>9969230
    With Symon's approval, the troops approach the centipede, cautiously prodding its exposed body with swords and spears. When it becomes apparent that it can do nothing to stop them, they tear into it with gusto, ripping it to pieces and burning it with thermite. The frozen legs are smashed, the brittle carapace peeled away, and the beast becomes so much meat, lying in scattered pieces on the ground.

    The head, or what's left of it, has almost completely liquefied, and the rest of the body is inactive. The commander has decided against destroying the rest of it, at least for now, since there's no way to know how long it actually is, and he doesn't want anyone getting trapped in the fog.

    For now, the immediate threat has been eliminated, and nothing else has come calling. But still the mist refuses to dissipate.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)19:14 No.9969367
    >>9969297
    Chop off the body forward of the ice block. Unearth the head and destroy it.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)19:16 No.9969412
    >>9969364
    Get permission to follow the body back to its source. Have the men help by being obvious distractions near the edge of the fog. They can also make more traps while we're gone.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)19:17 No.9969438
    >>9969364
    Also, have the men keep destroying the body as it leads into the fog. Keep them at safe exposure limits, however.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)19:17 No.9969439
    >>9969364
    Well, fuck

    I knew whatever was holding the mist was at the center. Let's go there. Assemble a squad if necessary
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)19:17 No.9969441
    rolled 5, 6, 6 = 17

    >>9969297
    Legs removed, up to about a hundred feet from the head.

    >>9969367
    The head and anything forward of the commander's range limit has been destroyed, torn apart, or otherwise rendered useless. The flesh is being burned in piles.
    >> Researcher Sam 05/21/10(Fri)19:18 No.9969456
    >>9969364
    Huh. I don't suppose that this was just a small tendril and that we've yet to see the actual head, thus explaining the fog still being here?
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)19:19 No.9969465
    >>9969364
    >For now, the immediate threat has been eliminated, and nothing else has come calling. But still the mist refuses to dissipate.
    Know what I'm thinkin'?
    Tunnel network.
    Burrow under the mist, following along the creature's body. Place light enchantment shield things at all tunnel openings to keep the mist out. That way the men stay out of the mist, we follow along the thing's body and see what we can see, and if any more aboveground abominations show up the men can gtfo back underground right quick.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)19:22 No.9969524
         File1274484157.gif-(2 KB, 256x256, centipede.gif)
    2 KB
    >>9969456
    see
    >>9967931

    If you destroy the head, the next healthy part becomes the head. And smaller centipedes move faster.
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)19:23 No.9969534
    rolled 3, 2, 6 = 11

    >>9969412
    >>9969439
    The Knight Commander takes a bit of convincing, but in the end, he agrees, mostly due to Corias's insistence. He refuses to allow his own men to accompany you into the fog, but Corias clarifies that that restriction does not apply to the Terror Saints. You gather a dozen men of good constitution, half of them mages, and move forward.

    After you reach the end of the corpse, you order the squad to separate the legs, cleave apart the segments, and burn everything. Momentarily bringing up your aura, you clear the fog in a wide radius, and see, thankfully, that the centipede doesn't go on forever. Another hundred and fifty feet and that'll be it.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)19:24 No.9969561
    >>9969439
    Yes, assemble a squad. Hopefully unexposed so far. Kill it at the source.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)19:26 No.9969586
    >>9969534
    >>only 150 feet
    But what will we find at that end?

    DUN DUN DUN!
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)19:30 No.9969658
    Perhaps the centipede wasn't the monster at all.
    Perhaps the centipede had simply been touched by the Colour Out of Space.
    Perhaps the true battle at this fort will be against a shade of octarine.
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)19:31 No.9969677
    rolled 6, 1, 2 = 9

    It takes a while, but you and the squad manage to hack the entire corpse apart, burn the flesh, and scatter the pieces. You can't imagine anything regenerating that much damage.

    The way ahead is clear enough, mostly flat, and devoid of everything but grass. There are no vibrations, no sounds of any kind, and nothing to suggest anything out of the ordinary. The squad is in good spirits, and doesn't expect to find much. All there is is fog, extending as far as you can see.

    To the center?
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)19:33 No.9969704
    >>9969534
    Use freezing again in case the other end decides to rise up
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)19:33 No.9969721
    >>9969677
    To the center, but tell the men to stay frosty. We have no idea what to expect here, but whatever it is, it's snow pushover. We need to keep cool heads, ready weapons, and keep our ice open.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)19:37 No.9969782
    >>9969677
    yes
    >> Researcher Sam 05/21/10(Fri)19:38 No.9969803
    >>9969658
    If we come across anything octarine then we'd better hope there's a chap with a worn hat with the faded letters W-I-Z-Z-A-R-D on it waiting that we can convince to help us.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)19:40 No.9969852
    >>9969803
    He would probably run away very fast before we can even start talking
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)19:41 No.9969867
    I would like to participate more
    but its late and I'm exhausted

    Goodnight DM, thanks for quest
    >> Researcher Sam 05/21/10(Fri)19:45 No.9969932
    >>9969852
    Good thing we have that speed enchantment, are fast and could freeze him in place.
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)19:47 No.9969959
         File1274485674.png-(17 KB, 691x222, post5.png)
    17 KB
    rolled 3, 1, 3 = 7

    >>9969721
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)19:48 No.9969972
    rolled 4, 4, 5 = 13

    >>9969867
    Thanks for being here.

    Sorry about the delay, I had to bring in groceries.
    >> Researcher Sam 05/21/10(Fri)19:50 No.9969995
    >>9969959
    Didn't that game come out AFTER we'd left Earth?
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)19:52 No.9970026
    rolled 5, 6, 3 = 14

    >>9969995
    Perhaps you had inside knowledge. Or maybe you left from the future. Or maybe I just thought it was funny.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)19:55 No.9970066
    >>9969959
    >pits much larger than the puncture marks
    >the puncture marks are centipede footprints
    Did we just kill a babby or something?
    Okay, I want a view of the area above the fog in case there's something truly HUEG out there somewhere, like another dark tower or something. Ice staircase?
    Also, if the pits were dug by the centipede, we might need to do something to them. So while we're doing the staircase, have the men dig in the pits. We might find an "Aliens"-esque underground egg creche or something.
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)20:00 No.9970124
    rolled 2, 6, 5 = 13

    >>9970066
    Roll 1d20 for ice staircase, success on seven.
    >> Researcher Sam 05/21/10(Fri)20:01 No.9970149
    >>9970026
    I just think that it will be interesting to see what other pop culture references will happen over the course of Frost Giant Quest that Maya won't know about. It's interesting to look at, you know? To think that the quest has been going for so long that ass these kinds of memes and references have come and gone. Fifty three sessions is a long time.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)20:03 No.9970187
         File1274486621.jpg-(178 KB, 640x550, stairway to heaven.jpg)
    178 KB
    rolled 19 = 19

    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)20:05 No.9970212
         File1274486702.jpg-(103 KB, 725x545, StairwayToHeaven.jpg)
    103 KB
    rolled 6 = 6

    >>9970124
    Dammit, forgot to quote the post.

    >>9970187
    >19
    DAMMIT.
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)20:06 No.9970237
    rolled 5, 2, 3 = 10

    >>9970149
    Indeed it is. Since it was brought up, I might as well ask: How's the pace? I'm perfectly all right with speeding things up, or slowing them down, or focusing on certain things more than others. If the players want to skip a few weeks at a time and just see the highlights, I can do that.

    >>9970187
    >>9970212
    I'll give you the 19. It's just a staircase, after all.
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)20:11 No.9970307
    rolled 6, 4, 6 = 16

    Since you're here, you might as well search the area before you give up and head back out. After all, if you can't clear the fog, the return trip will make your minds that much worse. You make a couple of shovels for the non-mages with alchemy, and have them start digging into the pits, just in case. The steel implements probably won't last very long, but you don't want to stay here very long either.

    >19

    Twenty-four icy pillars descend from the heavens, forming out of the mist itself. Wide, ornate steps slide out, connecting to each other to form a spiral staircase extending out of the fog. Unknown runes adorn the sides, and the face of each step is imprinted with the marathon symbol. You climb, proud of yourself.

    What you see is quite surprising. The misty edges are retreating towards you at great speed, and at least two miles of fog have already been erased. However, you are still blocked from contacting the gods, the Conclave, and everyone else, so the anti-scrying field must still be up, at least in the immediate area.

    Orders?
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)20:13 No.9970355
    >>9970307
    Whatever we're looking for, it's probably underground. Go to the exact center and dig or something.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)20:15 No.9970392
    >>9970307
    Sounds like we've done everything we can here.
    Leave, contact everyone, report in, and move on. I don't know if a giant ice-mage would even be necessary for whatever comes next. Maybe those spider creatures who use magic senses instead of eyes to see would have better chances of telling what's what around here.
    >> Researcher Sam 05/21/10(Fri)20:16 No.9970398
    >>9970237
    I think the pace is fine so far. Granted, some days we talk and talk for hours and get very little done, but that's pretty normal. If I had any complaints, it would be that the war arc is dragging on a bit. It feels like every time we finally start to get a handle on things, take one step forwards, something new comes up and it's two steps back. I'm not sure if I'm the only one who feels this way, but I'd be very happy if these fortresses are the last thing that need to be taken care of before the army can finally invade Forus for good and take them out.
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)20:22 No.9970497
    rolled 6, 6, 5 = 17

    >>9970355
    You climb back down and return to the center, seeing that the squad members have found nothing yet. Constructing a nice, icy shovel, you dig in, rapidly excavating a large pit after breaking up the courtyard. It doesn't take long, but you don't find anything of note, and neither does anyone else.

    >>9970392
    With nothing else to do, and no idea what you're supposed to be looking for, if there's anything out here at all, you decided to depart, quickly reaching the moving edge, less than half a mile from the center. You contact the command post.

    "Nothing, eh?" says Corias. "I thought not. Some of my people think it was a delayed reaction. Others believe there is still something out there. For now, I think you should head back." He pauses for a moment, then laughs softly. "Oh, and by the way, this is not a hallucination." Another laugh, and the link cuts.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)20:32 No.9970677
    >>9970497

    Well I guess we should contact the Conclave, tell them we killed the giant monster and the fog is starting to fall back but there are possible shenanigans afoot.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)20:39 No.9970813
    Maybe it laid its eggs?
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)20:39 No.9970832
         File1274488796.png-(28 KB, 721x374, post6.png)
    28 KB
    rolled 2, 3, 6 = 11

    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)20:50 No.9971024
    >>9970832

    Well, we already told these people the story of the Spartans at Thermopylae, so how about we tell them about the English at Crecy, how normal people managed to utterly crush a force far more powerful than themselves by cleverly using new technology. Spin it into a sort of morality tale with French aristocracy as obvious expies of Forusian magocrats.
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)21:01 No.9971227
    rolled 6, 5, 2 = 13

    >>9971024
    Time for a story. At dinner, you begin the tale of Crecy, of the great victory of the common English against the bickering, lofty-headed French. Of course, you have to go into some of the history, since neither of those nations exist here. You speak of the close proximity, the French raids into English land, the constant warfare, and the Brits getting right proper pissed at having their tea interrupted by frog-eating dipshits with spears.

    The English, outnumbered and outgunned, after protecting their bowstrings during a short rainstorm, take the superior position on the battlefield, forcing the French to slog through muddy ground to reach them. The enemy's mercenaries, with wet, damaged crossbows and pavises a mile behind them in the train, fall in droves to English bows. The knights, aristocratic bastards with their own code, are massacred with ease by an army of peasants.

    The comparison is obvious. Perin's army is composed of conscripts and commoners, villagers and city folk fighting for their lives against an evil empire in which battle-skill and magical talent determines the worth of a man. It is an inspiring story, telling of the victory of an inferior force through tactical awesome.

    If they remember nothing else of you, they will remember Crecy.
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)21:06 No.9971330
    rolled 2, 5, 4 = 11

    >>9971227
    If there's nothing else, timeskip?
    >> Researcher Sam 05/21/10(Fri)21:07 No.9971352
    >>9971330
    Sure.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)21:08 No.9971354
    >>9971330
    Sure.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)21:09 No.9971387
    >>9971227
    And yet, the French WON the Hundred Year War....
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)21:12 No.9971447
    rolled 1, 6, 5 = 12

    >>9971387
    You happened to omit that part.
    >> Bad Newbie !u8dVJyyGAs 05/21/10(Fri)21:12 No.9971451
    Say, I got an idea. We keep trying unsuccessfully to recreate magma steel, maybe we could get some tips from the forge god in the bro network?
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)21:13 No.9971461
    >>9971387

    This is one of those things we should never, ever tell these folks.
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)21:18 No.9971564
         File1274491125.png-(23 KB, 712x334, post7.png)
    23 KB
    rolled 4, 6, 6 = 16

    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)21:23 No.9971651
    rolled 4, 4, 3 = 11

    >>9971451
    He's told you to keep at it until you get it right; all metals will bend to your will with constant pressure. Of course, he doesn't work with Magma Steel much, but it really isn't that different from standard metals.

    None of the alchemists you've talked to think that it's anything more than a temporary problem. The armor is not magically immune to alchemy, as far as anyone can tell, so it should work eventually.
    >> Bad Newbie !u8dVJyyGAs 05/21/10(Fri)21:26 No.9971712
    Battlestations, men! get your gear out and prepare for a fight. Keep in mind the guys we're meeting up with may have had exposure to the fog!
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)21:26 No.9971720
    >>9971447
    Oh, and the British were the original aggressors. And the French were often outmatched and suffered many defeats of their own. And Joan of Arc. Ect.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)21:28 No.9971761
    >>9971720
    Sorry, English, not British. I can't brain tonight.
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)21:32 No.9971840
    rolled 1, 6, 3 = 10

    >>9971712
    "And stay frosty!"

    The entire detachment prepares to meet the enemy head-on. Corias orders ranged and mages to the front lines, getting everyone ready to soften up whatever's out there. The Conclave deploys several spirit scouts as close as they can, gathers some information, and reports back to the command staff and to you.

    It's not the hybrid. It's the Forusians. They must have 'ported right into place, accounting for the anti-scrying field. The Perinese are surrounded, encircled on three sides by the enemy and with their backs to the fog. They have nowhere to run.

    >>9971720
    Fortunately, there's no way for anyone here to verify what you tell them. You could have everyone totally convinced that the Brits sent a squadron of M1 Serenities against the French Death Ball in 1492.
    >> Researcher Sam 05/21/10(Fri)21:37 No.9971917
    >>9971840
    Excellent, I'm finally online for an infantry engagement. We simply need to engage the Forusians on one of the sides, pincering them between us and the other detachment. Drive through their lines like a spear, then on one side of the new breach, set up a strong defense to hold while the majority of the troops head over to destroy the other half. In this way, an army that is initially outnumbered can split an enemy force in half and devour them one by one,.
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)21:41 No.9971976
    rolled 3, 4, 2 = 9

    >>9971840
    The Forusians are bearing down, crushing your 10,000 allies with the weight of numbers. There are siege beasts mixed in with the middle ranks, pouring flame into a massive light shield. No siege engines are present, but they don't need to be. It's a grinder; there are at least three times as many Forusians as there are Perinese, not to mention the beasts. According to the Conclave, a shield of the size they see could only withstand the beasts' attacks if it was being maintained by nearly all of the mages in the detachment.

    >>9971917
    I'm assuming you wish to engage the closest side. The fog is to the right of the detachment, seen from where you are. If the enemy has an even distribution, they have about 10,000 per side, in addition to the 2-3 beasts per side.
    >> Bad Newbie !u8dVJyyGAs 05/21/10(Fri)21:44 No.9972022
    Focus fire on bringing the beasts down, just like usual.

    The thermite cans shouldn't be as useful in this instance, so have the men drop them first if they're too weighed down.
    >> Researcher Sam 05/21/10(Fri)21:45 No.9972039
    >>9971976
    You assume correctly. Now, what I'd do if I was in charge, is form up the men in a wedge formation to pierce the enemy line. Move fast, and quickly secure a foothold and communications with the second detachment. This should leave a total of 15000 Forusians on either side of the breach, minus however many we've killed by that point. As I said in my previous post, set up a defense to hold one of those groups while the majority of our two detachments engage one of the remaining Forusian groups, which should now be outnumbered themselves. Once that is dealt with, turn to mop up the other half.
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)21:48 No.9972078
    rolled 6, 3, 4 = 13

    >>9972022
    >>9972039
    Corias is already ahead of you. He is relaying orders to the forward lines, bunching them up into a breaching formation. All non-essentials have already been abandoned; only the carts of thermite are still being towed, since command isn't ready to leave them behind. The Conclave is attempting to gather reinforcements from the detachment after this one, but they will not arrive for days even if they leave now. The Terror Saints will be on their own for this rescue.

    The commander requests that you use your long-range skill to take out the beasts when they're in range. He'd rather have you picking them off then attacking the infantry. This time, you're ahead of him.

    Roll 1d6 for boulders. There are only two targets at the edge of your range, but you can hit them easily.
    >> Researcher Sam 05/21/10(Fri)21:49 No.9972093
    rolled 3 = 3

    >>9972078
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)21:53 No.9972154
         File1274493209.jpg-(82 KB, 600x450, large rock.jpg)
    82 KB
    rolled 3 = 3

    >>9972078
    Let's rock.
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)21:55 No.9972176
    rolled 2, 1, 2 = 5

    >>9972093
    You break off from the rest of the group, calling one of your favorite weapons.

    >3

    Three hollow iron spheres burst from the ground and into your hands, ready for action. You fill each of them with as many ice grenades as you can fit, and fire 'em off, one by one.

    The first strikes a beast in the leg, detonating marvelously and tearing the limb from its joint. The four-legged abomination, surprised and thrown off-balance, tips over, losing its aim and vomiting magma into its own ranks. With your second shot, you puncture its stomach, letting the rest of the foul brew engulf the nearby infantry.

    Your second target rears up, clamping its mouth shut and coming about, as the men atop it bring the ballista to bear. You shatter its jaw, sending it reeling, and the ballista fires, embedding a menacing-looking bolt in a depression off to the left.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)21:55 No.9972182
    >>9972078
    If we're not able to use the thermite in this engagement but we don't want to leave it behind, use our earth magic to bury it. We don't want to be occupied with protecting military secrets when we should be combat mobile.
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)21:58 No.9972232
    rolled 5, 3, 1 = 9

    >>9972176
    Two more siege beasts have broken off their attack and are heading to you. The injured one is groaning horribly and refuses to get up, as magma dribbles from its gaping wound. The lines ahead are in disarray, losing at least a thousand men to the flames and trying to recompose to meet the Terror Saints.
    >> Researcher Sam 05/21/10(Fri)21:58 No.9972238
    >>9972232
    More rocks, take out the beasts.
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)22:00 No.9972261
    rolled 3, 6, 4 = 13

    >>9972182
    Acknowledged. At this point, about half of the men are armed with grenades, so there is no real need for the rest of the stockpile. Against infantry, thermite is not nearly as useful.

    >>9972238
    Roll 1d6 again.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)22:03 No.9972299
    >>9972176
    you know covering a thermite grenade in a block of ice should give us a fairly lethal shrapnel grenade that requires no rolls and is a guaranteed hit
    >> Researcher Sam 05/21/10(Fri)22:03 No.9972301
    rolled 5 = 5

    >>9972261
    >> Bad Newbie !u8dVJyyGAs 05/21/10(Fri)22:07 No.9972355
    >>9972261
    At this point, we're like some kind of giant, blue demoman, grenade-spamming the battlements on 2fort.

    Make sure to toss in a good ol "They'll have ta glue you together in HELL!"
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)22:10 No.9972392
    >>9972299
    Maybe, but filling a boulder with exploding ice grenades does the same thing, is way heavier and harder-hitting, and doesn't waste thermite.
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)22:12 No.9972425
         File1274494346.png-(19 KB, 692x369, commentcannotbeposted_imad.png)
    19 KB
    rolled 5, 3, 6 = 14

    This is ridiculous. I even switched computers.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)22:17 No.9972528
    >>9972261
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)22:18 No.9972565
    >>9972425
    Can we provide some close-order artillery support by sending some ice grenade-filled boulders into the oncoming Forusian lines?
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)22:20 No.9972597
    rolled 6, 3, 2 = 11

    >>9972565
    Absolutely. Roll another 1d6 for boulders. Do you want them to airburst, come in at ground level, curve?
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)22:23 No.9972658
    rolled 6 = 6

    >>9972597
    Airburst should do the most damage.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)22:27 No.9972735
    >>9972658

    well shit. we might as well start wearing an eyepatch and heading out into battle with a big ol bottle of scrumpy.
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)22:35 No.9972865
         File1274495702.png-(21 KB, 703x430, thankyou_moot.png)
    21 KB
    rolled 6, 2, 3 = 11

    >>9972658
    >> Researcher Sam 05/21/10(Fri)22:37 No.9972908
    >>9972865
    What's this? Fear? That's unusual. So these one's aren't mindless drones like the others. Curious.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)22:38 No.9972933
    Looks like you-know-who is coming again. Let's prepare a few welcoming iron balls for him.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)22:38 No.9972934
    rolled 5 = 5

    >>9972865
    Shit! Incoming enemy teleport!
    Is that column of ash within range of our boulders?
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)22:40 No.9972961
    rolled 4, 2, 4 = 10

    >>9972934
    Yes. However, the lack of horns, or of any sound at all, suggests that it's not a summoning, but rather a preparation for extraction.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)22:41 No.9972979
    >>9972908
    Well, the others were either part of a massive force that grossly out numbered our troops, or were killed too quickly to show fear.

    That and word travels slowly with no computers, phones, etc. I am guessing now that stories of us just been reaching the rank and file infantry, and that their command structure has been informed that we are a serious roadblock to anything they attempt to do.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)22:41 No.9972983
    Keep up the bombardment, all damage to both morale and their troops is another victory for us!

    Also: With this fear thing i just realized how incredibly powerful Maya has become, this is awesome.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)22:42 No.9972989
    >>9972961

    Let's fire up the ice lazers, just for fun.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)22:42 No.9972990
    >>9972961
    Shall we give them something to remember us by?

    And I like that we're now like Dr. Gordon "The One Free Man" Freeman in being able to inspire fear in our enemies.
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)22:43 No.9973005
    rolled 6, 2, 1 = 9

    >>9972983
    Roll 1d6 for boulders. Target the ranks in front, the other 20,000, or both?

    >>9972989
    Roll 1d20 for ice laser, success on five. Result determines effectiveness.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)22:44 No.9973007
    >>9972961

    Can we block off their retreat? Wall of ice in front of the ash clouds?
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)22:44 No.9973011
    >>9972961
    DOOM COMETS!

    Doom comets into one of the extraction portals. Lets make them think twice about thinking with portals. If we are lucky, maybe we can take out some of the mages who have been trained to do these mass teleportations, and / or damage any equipment and materials they are using to do this.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)22:44 No.9973017
    rolled 12 = 12

    >>9973005

    Lazer roll
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)22:45 No.9973026
    rolled 8 = 8

    >>9973005
    lasers
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)22:45 No.9973035
    >>9972865
    "RUN, COWARDS! RUN BACK TO YOUR CRAVEN MASTERS AND TELL THEM THAT I AM *COMING* FOR THEM!"
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)22:46 No.9973037
    >>9973005
    Hold off on rolls against the infantry right now please, I wanna see if I can get a consensus about targeting some doom comets into the portals.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)22:46 No.9973040
    rolled 2 = 2

    >>9973005

    Boulders.

    Both, if possible.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)22:46 No.9973044
    rolled 3 = 3

    >>9973005
    Boulder roll.
    Target the remaining 20,000. The Forusians in front of us are already demoralized; let's give the others something to fear.
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)22:46 No.9973049
    rolled 6, 6, 1 = 13

    >>9973007
    No. To create a wall that long, and thick enough to resist mage fire, is beyond your power. Even with potions to restore your energy, you would have to do it in many sections.

    >>9973011
    >>9973037
    You can do both, you know. Even in full retreat at maximum speed, they wouldn't reach the ash clouds for several minutes.
    >> Researcher Sam 05/21/10(Fri)22:47 No.9973059
    >>9972979
    No, see, before we were facing troops with literally no mind or emotion, acting in concert as if with a hive mind, not caring how many fell, eagerly stepping over the forms of their fallen comrades to get to us. This is different.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)22:47 No.9973061
    If we cast Doom Comets into one of the portals, we will be taking out both the infantry and whatever is on the other side. I think its better than trying to take out some of just the infantry with our normal bag of tricks.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)22:49 No.9973089
    >>9973059
    Hmm, those were the ones that were coming out of the portals from the dark towers that ran on death magic. Perhaps they had mages altering their minds before going through the portals, causing them to attack with reckless abandon, thus providing more power to the death magic towers.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)22:50 No.9973100
    Sure, putting a few through the portal sounds like a good idea. It sounds as if we'll have quite a lot of time to do so anyway.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)22:50 No.9973105
    >>9973049

    Doom comets @ retreating Forusians, after we've softened up those still fighting first.
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)22:51 No.9973115
    rolled 5, 3, 1 = 9

    >>9973061
    >>9973100
    Roll 1d20 for doom comets. Result determines effectiveness.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)22:51 No.9973116
    >>9973049
    May I suggest then creating a few small wall barriers, maybe just sections of icy spikes jutting out of the ground, to funnel them together in a clump, thus slowing them down and creating one central killing ground for our future attacks, such as the Doom Comets.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)22:52 No.9973121
    rolled 2 = 2

    >>9973115

    Let's do this
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)22:52 No.9973132
         File1274496770.jpg-(19 KB, 400x250, burning_finger.jpg)
    19 KB
    rolled 9 = 9

    >>9973115

    Breaking the pic out for the big rolls, also we have a line to say :D
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)22:53 No.9973138
    >>9973121

    Alright. fair enough. It's not like we're sticking our head into a fire god's asshole without our armor again.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)22:53 No.9973139
    >Fear.
    I thought the Terror Saints accounts said the Forusians had become like CoC cultists at 0 SAN, unshakeable and unbreakable.

    ...maybe these aren't soldiers. Maybe all the soldiers got brainwashed or whatever, and maybe this lot are just civilian conscripts, warm bodies pressed into service.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)22:53 No.9973146
    >>9973121

    facepalm.jpeg
    >> Researcher Sam 05/21/10(Fri)22:54 No.9973155
    >>9973089
    It wasn't just that. Remember, when we first met up with the Terror Saints, the commander mentioned that their fear tactics weren't working anymore since several weeks before, since the enemy had grown emotionless and unresponsive. This was while fighting them in Forus, long before they invaded and took the fortresses.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)22:54 No.9973159
    >>9965818
    Say, have there been any pictures of maya in the nude?
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)22:56 No.9973177
    >>9973139
    It may be that a combination that the enemy got used to their tactics now, and maybe they have mages who are able to alter the minds of the infantry before major engagements.

    Or maybe now since the war has dragged on so long, those that are fighting are the hardliners or fanatics, or even the desperate. Maybe they believe they will all be killed or turn into slaves if Perin wins the war.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)22:58 No.9973214
         File1274497131.jpg-(15 KB, 450x338, Hey You.jpg)
    15 KB
    >>9973159
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)22:59 No.9973225
    rolled 1, 2, 5 = 8

    The allied commander is quick. Very quick. All the forces he can spare are moving up to break through the infantry ahead, probing for the weakest point. You call yet more boulders as the Perinese find their mark, and rush in, cleaving the enemy ranks in two.

    >2

    There is only enough iron beneath you to make two more, and you don't have time to focus on transmutation. You work with what you've got, filling both with explosives and tossing them in. The first curves into the 4,500, shearing them apart with shrapnel. The next careens through the bulk of the enemy forces, rolling almost to ground level and bouncing up, crushing dozens and slaying many with its exploding shards.

    The wedge contacts the disorganized and demoralized 4,000, crushing them against two fronts. Blood runs like a river, and men die like ants beneath the heel of your boot.

    >12

    You level your gauntlet, pouring your will into your runic ring, sweeping a fine white beam across every enemy line you can see. Hundreds of soldiers freeze to the ground and are shattered by their retreating comrades, now forming an enormous mass of bodies trampling all in its path. The other detachment is pursuing them, blasting mage fire into their backs and slaughtering them.

    >2

    Using what remains of your energy, you attempt to call forth a mighty storm, succeeding only in making a light drizzle. The battle being what it is, the retreating mass attempts to stop, believing this to be only the beginning of another insane attack. Hundreds stumble and fall as the army collapses on itself, a herd of frightened animals without control.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)23:00 No.9973235
    Honestly, I don't think we should cut off the enemy retreat completely. An army that believes the only way to stay alive is by fighting and breaking out is a dangerous enemy. As long as the chance of escape is dangled in front of a broken enemy, humans will choose to run rather than fight.

    Do no make this death ground for the Forusians.
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)23:01 No.9973250
    rolled 4, 4, 3 = 11

    >>9973116
    You're nearly out of power at this point, but you can always chug a potion if you want.

    >>9973177
    >Maybe they believe they will all be killed or turn into slaves if Perin wins the war.

    And they would be mostly right. If Perin does manage to finally conquer Forus, mercy will be in short supply.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)23:06 No.9973307
    >>9973250

    hold off on the potion; let's melee our way through for a bit, and chase them back into the ash. Focus on the division that's turning the fire magic on their own retreating forces. Jazz it up with some storm knife strikes.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)23:06 No.9973315
    >>9973250
    Nevermind about the ice wall sections, >>9973235 makes a good point. Maybe we could get them to surrender, I think it would be a much more useful tactic than simply killing them. Demoralize the rest of their army with their surrender, maybe slowly start planting the idea the only way to survive is to surrender.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)23:08 No.9973338
    >>9973307

    Wait, I misread an earlier post. Though one set of Forusians were attacking some of those retreating my bad. Just go for the thickest mass of troops still standing.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)23:08 No.9973345
    rolled 7 = 7

    >>9973235
    >>9973315
    Agreeing with these guys.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)23:09 No.9973359
    agreed. If we can get some surrenders happening, we'll have potential information coming our way. Make every attempt at possible at a capture.
    >> Researcher Sam 05/21/10(Fri)23:10 No.9973366
    >>9973139
    I find this to be the most likely explanation.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)23:13 No.9973407
    >>9973315
    Further thoughts, if we could start spreading propaganda, that those who get sent through these portals are slaughtered by a Perin "special division." And that the only way to survive is to quickly surrender, that could help us out.

    The propaganda will probably be ineffective targeting those who are fighting in Forus defending their homes, but if we could demoralize those who get sent through the portals, that might have some interesting effects.

    Might be possible to get someone higher up in their command structure to surrender a large force, instead of porting in and getting slaughtered.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)23:14 No.9973424
    You have to remember that these are Medieval armies, for all their usage of slightly modern tactics due to magic. To them, surrender doesn't mean a clean POW camp with 3 meals a day far from the fighting until the war is over. It means torture, enslavement, and/or death (unless you were a noble and could afford paying a ransom). The idea that you are guaranteed safety if you lay down your arms and will be given your freedom at the end of the war is a totally alien concept, perhaps one we can exploit.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)23:14 No.9973429
    If we're going to try taking prisoners, should relay our plans to Corias first.
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)23:15 No.9973445
         File1274498134.png-(17 KB, 702x360, seriously.png)
    17 KB
    rolled 2, 3, 2 = 7

    >>9973307
    >>9973315
    >>9973345
    >>9973359
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)23:15 No.9973446
    >>9973407

    We might end up bringing more heat down on ourselves. Don't forget that other giant thing that won't stay dead.
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)23:18 No.9973485
    rolled 6, 5, 1 = 12

    >>9973407
    >>9973424
    >>9973429
    Job's done. A few of the quicker men probably managed to get through the portals before they disappeared, but you'd estimate less than a dozen, at the most. Corias is extremely pleased that you saved him some subjects to interrogate, though he expresses concern about taking an amount of prisoners only a quarter less in numbers than both Perinese detachments.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)23:18 No.9973486
    Hooray! We win!

    Now what the heck're we gonna do with ~15k Forusian POWs? Let's sort things out with Corias and the Conclave.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)23:20 No.9973511
    >>9973485

    Guess we've got to babysit them until reinforcements show up?
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)23:22 No.9973547
    >>9973424
    True, but it doesn't mean that it might give us a shot a brokering a deal with someone who is higher up in their command structure. Tell them when this is over, Perin will need people to control the population of Forus, and it will be much easier coming from someone who was part of their military, a lot less problems. Make the argument that perhaps the only way to truly protect your homeland and its people would be to surrender.

    I am guessing that there is probably a lot of people that might be looking for a way out now, kinda similar how there was a lot of the nazi high command who wanted to broker a deal with the allies and end the war. They just ended up either being executed by the SS under orders from hitler, or making an offer way to late.

    Even if no one takes the offer, the fact that its there will make them suspicious of one another. That alone could wreak havoc on their morale and tactics. I wouldn't be so eager to march my troops to go save another division if I thought it might be a trap set by a traitor general.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)23:23 No.9973557
    >>9973486
    Well, we could build some sort of encampment, where Forusians would be concentrated...
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)23:23 No.9973558
    >>9973485

    Let's ring up the Conclave; the anti-scrying field's down right? Also, confer with the commander of the guys we rescued.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)23:24 No.9973572
    >>9973511
    >>9973486
    >>9973485
    Maybe we can offer some advice on how POW camps were set up in our world? Things to avoid, like Andersonville, the Bataan Death March, and the Hanoi Hilton?
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)23:26 No.9973599
    rolled 6, 2, 1 = 9

    >>9973486
    Though there are obviously no treaties between Perin and Forus that could possibly be counted on, there are internal rules about treatment of prisoners, interrogation, exchange, torture, and all that. Considering the situation, not just here but in the larger picture, and the scarcity of supplies, the Conclave finds it hard to justify keeping more than a few hundred, and even then only officers and those who might have useful information.

    Corias is against killing them after they've surrendered, but accepts that there is no way all of them can be supported and guarded while a slaving force is arranged to take them for processing. Cursory inspection reveals them as shock troops, carrying enough rations per man for a day at best. If no way can be found to feed them, they will die anyway, not to mention the wounded.

    The allied commander, Lucio, is also against killing them, but sees no alternative to a cull, humane or otherwise. Neither of the Knight Commanders is willing to share their own troops' meager resources with prisoners, especially Forusian prisoners.

    You can say whatever you like, generally, but you are a Captain, and you have no command in this matter.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)23:26 No.9973618
    >>9973572
    I hate to say this, but Dreamwood currently has more food, more support, and more personnel than it currently needs, and is out of the way enough that the Forusian military won't liberate a prison there and escaped prisoners won't be able to wreak havoc on the nation.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)23:29 No.9973648
    >>9973618

    Nonononono.

    There's like, 100+ people in Dreamwood. Ignoring the logistics of getting them there, there's no way they've got the manpower to keep an eye on 15,000 prisoners.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)23:29 No.9973650
    >>9973599
    We could establish a concentration camp for them and have the gods beam them there. There they would perform valuable labor for the agriculture and industry of the Reich, farming crops and manufacturing goods to make up for the absent adult male workforce.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)23:30 No.9973652
    >>9973618

    And how would you get them there?
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)23:30 No.9973662
    >>9973652
    Divine teleportation, in groups.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)23:31 No.9973673
    >>9973618
    We'd need to run some calculations on how much food Dreamwood has available. I guess we can make them help farm in order to produce the much larger harvest required. The threat of Maya coming back if they try anything funny might be enough to keep them from running.
    We still need to find a way of teleporting them there, though.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)23:31 No.9973682
    >>9973599

    Is there anything between our current position and Forus? If not, why not order them to march back home. Say we'll be keeping an eye on them via scrying; if they try to turn around and head into Perin, we'll come after them.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)23:31 No.9973683
    >>9973662

    That would take some time, hmm, but I think it could work out.
    >> Researcher Sam 05/21/10(Fri)23:32 No.9973692
    >>9973599
    Que sera sera. What will be will be. No one ever said war was nice.
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)23:33 No.9973700
    rolled 5, 1, 6 = 12

    >>9973650
    That is an idea, but the gods only have enough power to teleport, at most, several hundred people at a time, and it would take up to a month to move all 15,000. Besides that, they would not be able to reincarnate Erivrus without all that power.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)23:33 No.9973711
    >>9973673

    Doubt the citizens of Dreamwood would like the idea of feeding Forusians, given all the sons they've got fighting the war.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)23:33 No.9973717
    >>9973599
    Send them right back to the enemy, preferably to an area where the enemy's resources are stretched to breaking.

    Let the enemy have the problem of figuring out how to feed its men, and the morale issues of having to execute them.

    Alternatively, we could just freeze them all, then thaw them back out as we have the chance to process them.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)23:34 No.9973731
    >>9973599

    Keep some to interrogate, tell the rest to march home. If they starve on the way, though nuts.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)23:35 No.9973739
    >>9973700

    Could we have them port -in- supplies then?
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)23:35 No.9973744
    >>9973717

    I don't think freezing works like that.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)23:36 No.9973755
    >>9973717
    Are we capable of fine-tuning our ice magic for cryogenic suspension? And if we don't currently, are we willing to...experiment? I'd rather not turn Maya in this world's Josef Mengele, or our mage unit into Unit 731.
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)23:36 No.9973757
    rolled 2, 2, 1 = 5

    >>9973673
    Enough to support about triple the current population, and barely meet quota for taxes. All excess has been either sold or stockpiled. Note that that's with an average harvest. If something goes wrong, there will be problems.

    >>9973682
    There are other border fortresses, but if these were warned in advance or an escort was supplied, there would probably not be an issue.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)23:36 No.9973763
    >>9973717
    I don't think the freezing process works like that. This isn't Encino Man.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)23:36 No.9973765
    Does Forus take prisoners? Is an exchange out of the questions?
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)23:37 No.9973789
    >>9973599
    Mention this nifty little tactic that has been used. If there is ever a large city or fortification that is being sieged, marching the prisoners to city and releasing them will cause all sorts of interesting things to happen.

    First what ever supplies they were counting on to outlast the siege, they are gonna run out a whole lot sooner.

    Second, the issue of command structure becomes a problem if they are some officers in with the regular infantry, which will cause our third and most important result:

    Infighting. Short on supplies, more mouths to feed than expected, control issues, all of these in an already tense and stressful situation, fighting will break out in no time. Whatever morale they had before this incident, will be shot to hell. Other outcomes include the military presence becoming so weakened that a successful attack can be launched. Hell, even disease and sickness might spread like wildfire and leave their force in no condition to fend off a siege.

    Would be entirely possible to take a city or fortification without having to fight.

    Worst case scenario is that they enemy commander is able to see all these problems and is forced to kill or send away their comrades to die. This too will crush morale.
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)23:39 No.9973808
    rolled 6, 1, 1 = 8

    >>9973739
    Yes. Teleportation is done by mass, so you could feed a lot of people with a hundred-man-weight in food.

    >>9973755
    Possibly. Normal physics do not apply to magic, so even though it would be impossible in our world, you could potentially devise a spell to freeze and preserve a person for later thawing. It is also possible to induce hypothermic hibernation, though keeping someone in this state (in the real world) will kill them.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)23:39 No.9973810
    >>9973757

    Let's send warning to the other fortresses, and send them on their way. Let the Forusians know if they attempt to attack any of Perin's holdings on the way out, it wouldn't be much trouble for you to be teleported in and lay waste to their faces.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)23:39 No.9973815
    >>9973789
    This is an anonymous I wouldn't want to have to face in a war.

    Do it.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)23:40 No.9973831
         File1274499620.jpg-(63 KB, 500x358, hitler's head.jpg)
    63 KB
    >>9973744
    It worked when they saved Hitler's brain.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)23:40 No.9973832
    >>9973744
    >>9973755
    >>9973763
    Well, it'll probably kill them all, but maybe not. It's better odds than the prisoners will have if we just outright execute them.

    >>9973765
    Logical question. I was assuming they didn't, because if they did prisoner exchange would have been the first option mentioned.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)23:42 No.9973864
    >>9973808

    I suppose we could 'port in some supplies, with the Conclave's and the commander's okay, but we should send the bulk of the prisoners on their way after that. Too much dead weight.
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)23:42 No.9973869
    rolled 2, 3, 2 = 7

    >>9973765
    They do, occasionally, but when they did exchange, they did it very rarely, and only for specific, high-value prisoners. There have been no exchanges since before your arrival to this world.

    >>9973789
    This simple, effective tactic appeals to the two commanders, but the Conclave deems it useless. Even if the prisoners could be brought to a Forusian city under siege, they would not be allowed in. Paranoia and ruthlessness makes such an act ridiculously improbable.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)23:42 No.9973871
    >>9973789
    Excellent idea.

    If we wanted to be real bastards, though, just teleport random groups of them into the enemy countryside, and give them very simple weapons before we do.

    Ready-made bandit gangs looting everything outside the cities should screw with the enemy war effort nicely.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)23:44 No.9973895
    >>9973869
    Teleport the prisoners into the enemy cities.

    Or use them as literal meat shields for assaults.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)23:45 No.9973909
    >>9973815
    >>9973789
    I think the important question we have to ask first, is the most personal one: how ruthless do we want to be? Maya has read history, knows the things that humans can do to each other, has read of things that the military leaders of Perin or Forus could never dream of in their darkest nightmares. How far are we willing to go?
    >> Researcher Sam 05/21/10(Fri)23:46 No.9973921
    >>9973869
    Then there's nothing to do but kill them.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)23:49 No.9973965
    >>9973869

    Let's teleport in some supplies, and send the bulk of the prisoners back home.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)23:49 No.9973975
    >>9973808
    Teleport in food for them. Set up a camp or something. And send an envoy to the Forusians under flag of truce to mention the concept of paroling ordinary soldiers.

    If they throw it back in our face, then we go to our prisoners and explain to them how their leaders just sold them down the river. See how many we can get to join us.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)23:50 No.9973983
    >>9973921
    How do you want to go about it? A forced march? Trenches? Furnaces?
    Shall we have them dig pits in the ground, line up on the lip, and shoot them?
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)23:50 No.9973984
    >>9973869
    >Even if the prisoners could be brought to a Forusian city under siege, they would not be allowed in. Paranoia and ruthlessness makes such an act ridiculously improbable.
    Really?
    So the enemy will be too paranoid and too ruthless to ever trust or deal with prisoners who were in our hands?
    Then let's release them and send them home! Jesus, can you imagine all the paranoia and the civilian crackdowns as they try to track down and execute every single one of them?
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)23:51 No.9974006
    Shit, one very obvious thing: we need indelible markers, or some magical equivalent.

    Before we release the prisoners, we mark them on the forehead, or hand, or somewhere equally visible. If we catch a marked soldier fighting us in the future, they get executed.

    We're sending them home, but they're sitting the war out if they want to live through it.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)23:52 No.9974009
    >>9973975
    I like this idea. Turning your opponents against themselves, treating your captured prisoners well so that they work for you. An excellent application of the Art of War.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)23:52 No.9974020
    >>9973909
    Well, with morality concern, its forcing them to make the hard decision to kill their own men, rather than having us make a less difficult decision and kill them. We are at least giving them a chance to live.

    Side note though, is this truly the conclave's decision on what to do with the prisoners? If they two commanders see the value in this tactic, couldn't they forward the idea to their superiors? If I remember correctly, the military and conclave are separate enough structures that this really be more of a matter for the Perin military, and not the conclave.
    >> Arty 05/21/10(Fri)23:52 No.9974021
    omfg, I forgot about Frost Giant quest.

    ...and I am dismayed at the situation I see us now in. Still, it is much better than having the roles reversed.
    Would it be possible to give them the choice of suicide over starvation/execution? Also would it be possible to have scribes if some of them wanted any last words sent to their family after the war?
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)23:56 No.9974086
    >>9974021

    Good lord you're depressing.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)23:56 No.9974088
    But isn't the main problem that we're a captain, and in the military, so the decision is really out of our hands?
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)23:57 No.9974120
         File1274500665.png-(19 KB, 710x315, morals.png)
    19 KB
    rolled 3, 1, 5 = 9

    >>9974020
    The Conclave is in contact with the higher-ups in the military, but since they are the ones with the distance link, the orders are relayed through their mages.

    >>9974021
    Non-mages may choose suicide over execution. Mages are not. Last words are not granted to common prisoners.
    >> Anonymous 05/21/10(Fri)23:58 No.9974125
    >>9973984
    SPIES AND INFILTRATORS
    THOUSANDS OF THEM
    >> Researcher Sam 05/21/10(Fri)23:58 No.9974134
    >>9973983
    Oh cut the drama. Just go with the old hoods over their heads followed by decapitation.
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/21/10(Fri)23:58 No.9974138
    rolled 3, 1, 4 = 8

    >>9974120
    >are

    May.

    >>9974088
    Yes. All you can provide is an opinion, though you can be quite convincing.
    >> Anonymous 05/22/10(Sat)00:00 No.9974162
    >>9974120
    Chug potion. Freeze as many of them as we can.

    They'll probably die, but some of them might not. And even if they die, we can at least try to send them home for burial after the war or something.
    >> Anonymous 05/22/10(Sat)00:01 No.9974177
    >>9974120

    Imma vote for sitting out on execution duty. Work on securing supplies via Bro network.
    >> Anonymous 05/22/10(Sat)00:01 No.9974182
    >>9974088
    Yes, but we have the two commanders who support the idea, I am pretty sure they can send the idea up to their superiors who do have the authority to make the decision.

    I would really rather not have to execute a bunch of people who surrendered to us. If they have to die, let their own countrymen pass judgment on them and execute them.

    If there is an easy solution to feeding them, that would be fine, because I think they would be useful to us later when we start an industrial revolution. But if its not possible to do without putting our military efforts at a serious disadvantage, well, we need to do the best we can with the situation.
    >> Arty 05/22/10(Sat)00:02 No.9974196
    >>9974086
    I know. ;_;
    >> Anonymous 05/22/10(Sat)00:04 No.9974232
    >>9974120
    I go with the "tag and release" option. Use indelible marker on the foreheads, tell them they're free to go, warn them that if we catch them in battle again we'll kill them out of hand.
    >> Anonymous 05/22/10(Sat)00:06 No.9974274
    >>9974134
    Drama? This isn't about drama, this is about logistics. We have thousands of people we need to execute. How are we going to do it in a timely and efficient manner? Considerations for the executions tools need to be made; after all, that's a lot of necks to go through. How are we going to dispose of all the bodies? A giant pyre? And now that they are faced with certain death, how do we prevent a prisoner riot? These are real considerations that need to be made with cold calculation, not some drama to be hand-waved away.
    >> Anonymous 05/22/10(Sat)00:08 No.9974310
    Order's been given, so let's start finding some info on the next fog beast while the army handles that whole unpleasantness.
    >> Anonymous 05/22/10(Sat)00:08 No.9974311
    >>9974120
    I suppose we sit this one out then. War is indeed a dirty business. If we are bothered by this, then I suggest that we remember this, and work to getting into a position of power where we would not have to follow such an order.
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/22/10(Sat)00:08 No.9974314
    rolled 1, 2, 3 = 6

    >>9974162
    If you amp up your aura enough, and those marked for execution are in a small enough space, you can flash-freeze them almost instantly.

    >>9974232
    You have no indelible ink, and even a 'permanent' mark, such as a scar or tattoo, can easily be removed if you have access to magic.
    >> Anonymous 05/22/10(Sat)00:09 No.9974328
    >>9974274
    The unit we are with is called the "TERROR SAINTS."
    I'm guessing this isn't their first barbecue.
    They can handle it.
    >> Anonymous 05/22/10(Sat)00:11 No.9974357
    >>9974314

    I'd rather sit this one out, but if flash-freezing is the most humane way to execute all those prisoners, we might as well pitch in. Then take the rest of the day to rest & prepare for the next fog critter.
    >> Anonymous 05/22/10(Sat)00:12 No.9974383
    >>9974328
    Well, obviously they're hardened against the kind of mass execution that this is going to become. But still, 13,000 corpses is a lot to get rid of, and that's not counting the already battle dead.
    >> Anonymous 05/22/10(Sat)00:13 No.9974393
    >>9974314
    What, we have no magical methods that would screw with that? Or that would cause the horrible death of the person we applied it to if someone tried to remove it?
    >> Anonymous 05/22/10(Sat)00:15 No.9974419
    >>9974314
    To be honest I would rather not waste a potion on them. I would actually rather not have a hand directly in the killing, so we can have the morale high ground.

    It will be useful later on to say that we honorably in the war, and did not kill unarmed prisoners who surrendered to us.
    >> Researcher Sam 05/22/10(Sat)00:15 No.9974430
    >>9974274
    My mistake. You choice of gruesome tasks led me to believe that you were simply trying to show the horror of it to highlight just how terrible this will be and to discourage us from supporting it.
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/22/10(Sat)00:16 No.9974440
    rolled 5, 1, 5 = 11

    >>9974393
    Neither you nor any of the mages present knows that type of magic. Since there is no one from Intelligence here, that is not surprising, as that would be their forte.

    Lark is the only person you know who had the ability to place cursed marks. He never taught you how.

    Looks like the majority is voting to stay out of it. You will not involve yourself in the execution.
    >> Anonymous 05/22/10(Sat)00:16 No.9974445
    >>9974419
    *fought honorably in the war.*
    >> Anonymous 05/22/10(Sat)00:17 No.9974450
    We've already gotten used to the idea of killing thousands of the enemy in battle. I don't think we want to cross the line and get used to killing them when they are tied up and unable to fight back, especially since we have a choice.
    >> Anonymous 05/22/10(Sat)00:19 No.9974481
    >>9974440

    Well we could do it without pain and a minimum amount of clean-up. If they have to die, let's help them along their way.
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/22/10(Sat)00:22 No.9974536
    rolled 2, 2, 6 = 10

    >>9974450
    >>9974481
    It's already been decided, at least for this instance. If you intend to fight on the front line until the war is over, you will probably have many more chances like this one.

    Is there anything that absolutely needs to be taken care of before this session ends?
    >> Anonymous 05/22/10(Sat)00:24 No.9974568
    Commander Corias has already given us a choice to stay out of the executions. But if I may, I'd like to correct him a little, if others don't mind.
    "Yes, sir, war is a dirty business. More so than you can realize. It's simple pragmatism on my part that makes me regret this course of action, that we could not use all of the captured fully."
    >> Anonymous 05/22/10(Sat)00:26 No.9974588
    >>9974536

    Eh, can't think of anything.
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/22/10(Sat)00:31 No.9974657
         File1274502673.png-(5 KB, 691x76, captain.png)
    5 KB
    rolled 5, 2, 4 = 11

    >>9974568
    >> Anonymous 05/22/10(Sat)00:31 No.9974660
    >>9974536
    Confer with the commander of the Perinese detachment that was stationed here and get some intel on whatever is lurking inside the fog.
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/22/10(Sat)00:32 No.9974672
    rolled 6, 1, 5 = 12

    >>9974588
    Then we'll break for now and continue tomorrow. Thanks for playing.
    >> Anonymous 05/22/10(Sat)00:34 No.9974700
    >>9974672

    Looking forward to it; g'night folks!
    >> ★ Subprocessor DM 05/22/10(Sat)00:34 No.9974701
    rolled 4, 3, 2 = 9

    >>9974660
    Spiders. Thousands and thousands of spiders. At least according to the sound. The scouts have always withdrawn before making contact with the creatures within.
    >> Anonymous 05/22/10(Sat)00:42 No.9974862
    Maybe we could get in contact with vasian back home and get plans for his flame-thrower device?
    >> Anonymous 05/22/10(Sat)00:55 No.9975104
    welp I for one am glad we won't have to deal with the baggage of this/the next threads two weeks hence, convenient archive amnesia is convenient



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