And I was wondering if there was a way to reduce the time it takes for the magic to come back. As in instead of waiting a century we'd wait 50 years or something like that.
Dylan Foster
Are you the DM?
Kevin Long
no. I'm a player and I was just wondering about the item.
Aiden Roberts
I wouldn't be surprised if there's some way to send it back in time or to another world where time moves faster or something, but anything like that is basically begging the DM to create complications (and rightly so)
Carson Ramirez
Make some Knowledge rolls. If you're set on the concept, find someone who can make better Knowledge rolls and pay them. A quest to understand this book could be pretty major.
Caleb Bell
Atm I have highest knowledge in the group. Also our entire group is fairly new to dnd including our DM. By fairly new I mean this is our first campaign.
Alexander Bailey
If you think it's appropriate, ask the DM out of game if it's something worth pursuing.
Or just hijack the campaign, I'm not your mother
Kevin Collins
In older editions of D&D the book either became nonmagical or just fucked off to another time and place. The point is it gives one person the super awesome bonus and no one else.
However, rule 0 of D&D is that the DM can change any rules to make the campaign more fun, so if you bring it up with him he might have something to say.
Jackson Fisher
I understand. I don't believe he has anything planned story wise for the book ,but i may be able to trick him into wanting too.
Owen Allen
I mean, it's all collaborative story telling. If he's really got a plan and it's been good so far, carry on, but a meta-plot discussion once in a while can help the group focus on a mutually enjoyable experience.
Had you been the DM, I'd have said to make the recharge time what you need (within reason) to make the plot work, and just be prepared for the consequences, as and are getting at
William Collins
Why?
Blake Diaz
Wana try and get more out of it.
true may be able to build a good quest out of it.
Robert Morgan
You're not meant to. Again, why? It's served it's purpose.
Wyatt Harris
I just told you why. it's d&d we can attempt to do anything we want why try and limit ourselves?
Jacob Robinson
I'm gonna guess you're playing a wizard?
Andrew Wilson
>it's d&d we can attempt to do anything we want why try and limit ourselves? You have a mistaken impression of D&D
Hunter Harris
tiefling ranger.
Daniel Cruz
Really?
Asher King
Not necessarily, but maybe. If you wanna get more out of it and the recharge is definitely a century, sell it to the highest bidder. Squeezing out more inherent, "permanently alter yourself "bonuses from a pretty powerful item is sorta greedy? I guess it depends on your character.
Isaac Martin
Find a spell like this. I mean it's not the same world or edition or even game, but something like this might exist.
Mason Butler
well it's the first stat altering item that we've come across that can be used to continuously increase stats. One of the first things our DM said when we got it is If your character can live long enough to farm the item they could have a 30 in INT. Being a tiefling I'd want the time limit to be lowered so I could possibly do this as well.
Tyler Myers
I don't know if we'll be able to find time traveling items, but if we do we'll certainly use them.
Ian Martinez
It's not really meant to be a multiple use item. The century wait is fluff-speak for "you can only use this once"
Robert Young
In previous editions, both the mental and physical versions of this item were one-use, right?
Jason Robinson
Yea i looked them up. The other literally stated that they were no longer magical after they were used while this one has a time limit. and because of the time limit we'd want to try and exploit it per say.
Ayden Gomez
>same belt for decades That's a damn nice belt if it lasts that long.
Brody Cooper
I mean, if the whole party is on board, sure. Just don't expect it to come easily. Knowledge rolls are definitely your first step.
Carson Garcia
Maybe he just really likes the style?
Jayden Powell
Well at least we have a starting point now. Thank you.
Adam Allen
Careful though.
Did some ancient wizard write it? Those guys fuck around on a level you cannot even comprehend. If they actually agree to help you with the book (instead of claiming it or reclaiming it), the task they ask in exchange is gonna be something even they have trouble with.
Is it some complex dogma of a god? At a certain point, leaving other mortals in your intellectual dust might bring divine attention. Rarely does the focus of a god turn out well for the entire party.
The book might just be a welcome brochure for a tour of the twisted knowledge beyond the stars, making you smarter at the cost of your humanity- or even just your Wisdom, as a more tangible consequence.
Alexander Hughes
Well we already now that for one of our backstories will have us going to basically kill a god (if we live that long) so seeking to be stronger than them would probably be a good thing.
Adam Martin
Reminds me of this.
Luis King
>use stasis spell or item to pass over the intervening centuries >read book over and over >get 30 INT >suddenly genius intelligence causes you to realize that the world has passed you by irrevocably and your 1500 years of waiting was a foolish waste of the highest order, leaving you stranded in an effectively alien world
Oliver Young
Sounds like something a power/knowledge hungry NPC would do (and would probably make for a good story) but a player wouldn't/ couldn't do that because ,well at least in my sessions, can't do anything without the group.
Adam Barnes
Don't know why that message sent to the wrong person.