>A splinter, also known as a sliver in some parts of Canada, is a fragment of a larger object (especially wood), or a foreign body that penetrates or is purposely injected into a body.
sure, why not you could have a splinter from the wood of a cursed house or temple and a little bit of the curse goes with you until you get it out
freak your players out, be like "roll to remove the splinter" and if they fail it stays with them
Caleb Morris
>Then ent strikes you for 2d10 damage >You take 1d10 damage each round until you can manage a heal check to remove splinters.
Austin Hernandez
>in some parts of Canada Is it just us?
Gavin Allen
Evil Ent Wizard in heavy armor shapes himself into a splinter to infiltrate the party
Lucas Wright
>go to haunted house >get splinter >the ghost can now follow you out of the house because you've got a little bit of it in you
Mason Hughes
A small sliver of metal from a sword which embedded itself into the upper arm, and was left until the flesh had healed over it.
It causes intense pain in the victim whenever the sword which the sliver originated from is nearby.
Asher Baker
>There are people who don't call them slivers W-what
Wyatt Ward
>treefolk rape
Henry Anderson
This, my mind is blown right now.
Kayden Lopez
Could a druid force a splinter to grow into a full tree?
Colton Mitchell
If a sliver has a curse, they all have it.
Xavier Wood
>Evil Ent Wizard in heavy armor shapes himself into a splinter to infiltrate the party
Hudson Gray
Already a thing in Anima.
Blake Walker
Why not have monster made of splinters?
Daniel Morales
This. I literally thought this was what everyone called them. Splinter is a verb, sliver is a noun.
Blake Walker
Splinter is also a noun, bruh.
John Martin
Splinter vs sliver is the same as soda vs pop. Depends on local vernacular
Juan Myers
Heard you talkin shit
Lincoln Young
?
David Clark
>Fractal Splinter > The fractal splinter starts out as a linear sliver of wood. Once it pierces the skin, it will immediately sink itself in entirety, just slightly too deep to remove without causing significant damage to flesh around the area of insertion. Every hour while embedded, the fractal splinter will produce new spurs, two from the middle of each previous spur. Each new spur is perpendicular to and half the length of the preceding spur.
Colton Ramirez
Splinters are made of wood. Slivers are born from a hive mother or are any substance other than wood imbedded in skin.
Jason Powell
Minnesota here can confirm you are not alone we also call it a sliver.
Cooper Cooper
Get a healer and a pain killer spell and it's all good.
Ryan Thompson
in the southern US we call them splinters
Oliver Martin
>The trees of Heartseek Grove have long hated the mortal races. If you should ever suffer a splinter from their wood it is vital that you remove it immediately. Such a splinter will immediately begin to burrow towards your heart. It takes a little less than a week for you to die.
Easton King
see the movie "They", where strange creatures kidnap you and mark you by shoving a large mysterious sliver under your skin, which basically means you're totally fucked and are eventually going to be abducted and taken to their realm for unknown reasons.
why don't they just abduct you the very first time while they're shoving the splinter into you? fucked if i know, the plot of the movie doesn't make a fuck of a lot of sense unless the protagonist is just batshit crazy and hallucinating everything.
vocab: i'm from southern Idaho and we're more likely to say splinter than sliver, but i heard both growing up.
Isaac Watson
If it's the movie I'm thinking of, the splinters are shoved in as children to mark them as prey, and then the shadow beasties wait until they're all growed up to eat them or whatever they do.
The wood from wands and other magical relics inserted under the skin in mystically significant patterns across the body.
Ayden Rogers
>also known as a sliver in some parts of Canada,
Shit. Like some of the other posters above, I honestly thought everyone called them that.
This is a revelation of the sort that occurred when the NYTimes released that "where is your linguistic origin" quiz/map. Posting it for fun, in case anyone is bored. Some of these terms are ridiculous to a non-local...
>Cursed splinters? In some versions, it was in fact a splinter from the spindle keeping the sleeping beauty asleep.
Gavin Wilson
Just like that episode of Sarah Jane Adventures with the totem pole!
Nicholas Sullivan
In Scotland (and some parts of northern England) they're called spelks.
Adrian Green
The ninth bright shiner pulled off splinter based dickery pretty well
Jacob King
...
Carter Jackson
Is that from Scots or English? Or both?
Jack Rogers
Fuck I loved those books as a kid.
I loved the castles one where they had gory as fuck drawings of battles and medieval torture. Educational!
Owen Hernandez
The gong farmer! Also, trying to find the spy in each of the pages, and seeing how he sneaks into the castle during the siege.
Sebastian Williams
>also known as a sliver in some parts of Canada
Grew up in California and I've never heard them referred to as splinters when stuck in somebody, always slivers.
Ayden Hernandez
>A splinter from a cursed metal disk containing an evil god embeds itself in a young man, allowing the god control over the man. The splinter must break free from the circulatory system of the young man and rejoin the disk before the god can be reborn.
Gabriel Sullivan
>also known as a sliver in some parts of Canada Holy shit not everyone calls them slivers? This is a bloody revelation. How can I live my life knowing I've been using a Canadian-ism the whole time...
Ian Cox
>Grew up in California and I've never heard them referred to as splinters when stuck in somebody, always slivers. Grew up in New York and same.
Going by the rest of this thread it seems as if "some parts of Canada" is in reality "most of North America."
Parker Johnson
>all these sliverfags itt I don't know who to trust anymore
Ethan Bell
I had never heard of this practice before, but essentially the same thing this article describes came to mind when I first saw this image, although it's not directly related
Jason Edwards
Those carpenters are pretty hardcore.
Jackson Cook
Washington (state) reporting in, we also call them slivers
Christian Butler
What the actual fuck is going on?
Who calls them Splinters? Where is this coming from?
Canadian here, everyone I know calls them slivers.
Mason Young
Gentlemen, it is clear to me that two alternative realities have just collapsed into one. Thankfully the only difference seemed to have been the name of splinters.
Angel Stewart
I live in New York (not far from the Canadian border ) and I've always called them splinters, though I have heard the word "sliver" used before.
Carter Cox
You're just Jealous that that's literally nothing in your fucking state besides fargo and bismarck.
Jace Nelson
I'm in Pennsylvania, and I've also never heard sliver. I think it's an east coast thing, both North and South.
Blake Reyes
If it's wood it's a splinter, if it's metal or some other material is a sliver.
Carson Clark
US south here
It's always been splinter here as far as I know
Jace Morales
Trips confirms it. Praise Kek.
Jacob Howard
french canadian here, the only english word I know for it is splinter, didn't know slivers was a real word (only thought it was MTG related)
Wyatt Long
Born and raised in Ohio, spent the last decade in California. They're called splinters.
William Allen
I don't know why anyone would call a splinter a sliver. Yeah, sure, it's a sliver of wood, but come the fuck on guys.
Jonathan Adams
Australian here, I've never even heard of the idea of calling a splinter a sliver till this thread.
Asher Ramirez
>Curse nailgun
Blake Perry
really? I'm southern britbong and while I wouldn't naturally use the term sliver for a splinter, I'd certainly know that someone meant splinter if they used sliver in that context, think it's an archaic english term, especially in the sense where it's specific to the metal working trades.
Josiah Cox
Also from PA, slivers is what they're called around here.
Jose Garcia
Texas here. For us it's splinter.
Matthew Hernandez
Ohio here, splinter. It seems to be a north/south thing. Where's the cutoff?
Michael Diaz
It happens in, I think, the first Gaunt's Ghosts novel. There's a little stone statue in the Chaos dude's trenches that hurts to look at, so they shoot it. a sliver of it hits a dude in the cheek, and a few hours later he explodes into a Daemon
Alexander Thomas
M8, this sort of thing is exactly what the spoiler tag is for.
Aiden Carter
it's the first book, like maybe three chapters in, to some random dude.
hey, you know what else happens? They fight Chaos dudes. sorry for not spoilering that
Jeremiah Kelly
...
Caleb Kelly
A sliver you say? And where are you from?
Leo Gomez
Houston, Texas, born and raised Just to be clear, I only called it a sliver because it was stone. I'd have called it a splinter if it was wood.
Carter Price
Do you think we're all on the same timeframe? We should syncronise writstbens
Hunter Young
what books are those?
Isaac Miller
Where are you? Around Erie? It might be something that's wrapped around the great lakes region. I'm in South Central.
Nicholas Hall
I was thinking more in terms of magic that has suffering as a necessary component requiring the caster to drive enchanted nails into their own flesh.
Parker Jenkins
Isn't there some kind of magic in Mystborn where you like, harness power or something by driving metal steaks into your body?
Dylan Perez
There's an issue of Hellboy where a sea hag drives a golden nail into one of his horns. IIRC it kept him bound to her and let him breath underwater.
Josiah Reyes
>whats the story of the snow-queen?
Colton Thompson
Fellow Canadian, l only know sliver. No one says splinter
Kevin Baker
This is a pretty pertinent question for the facilitation of shenanigans and no one has addressed it.
William Barnes
North Dakotan who lives in Minnesota here.
I don't think that other user is really from North Dakota. He's much too rude.
Parker Price
Fuck off, North Dakota fuck.
Your state is 100% too flat and every time I take the fucking Amtrak it's the worst part of the ride. It's like the entire place has been drenched in meth and poverty for decades.
Dominic Kelly
This was exactly the first thing I thought of, too. You can't fucking overlook even a splinter, man!
Joshua Reyes
I did some quick math and I think after a day or two that wouldn't be getting noticeably worse, because the new branches would be shorter than a strand of DNA is wide. By the end of the week, new spokes might at most disturb an electron or two.
You could probably get shitfaced drunk long enough to have the worst of it pass.
Aiden Sanders
first thing i thought of. From NYC, always used splinters for wood and slivers for metal.
Ayden Diaz
Nova Scotia here, the fuck is a sliver?
Aiden Davis
I'm from Michigan and I've heard both my whole life.