2009-09-13, 03:23 PM
Alex123123 Wrote:Wth did I just read?
all of this:
MasPan Wrote:[color="#cc8899"]D&D rolled a...
+17
to humor![/COLOR]
eos367 Wrote:Strangely the Tarrasque is more vulnerable from inside than out... If only you're immune to stomach acid and can get past the vorpal teeth alive. Also makes the multiverse's most secure hiding place.
MasPan Wrote:For kicks, try emptying a bag of holding full of goblin corpses infused with explosive energy inside a Tararsque. Strangely, it survived this happening, but had severe internal damage.
eos367 Wrote:Some DM's are cruel enough to insist the interior is permeated with anti-magic. That makes that ever so much more awkward too.
MasPan Wrote:[color="#cc8899"]Anti-magic would still cancel the effects of a bag of holding, causing its contents to rupture outward. Even without explosive energy, the masses of Goblin parts would force it to expand outward as far as its hide would allow. Somewhat hindered by extremely powerful stomach acid, but still instantaneous.
However, the anti-magic would also cancel any magical defense against the acid. So the best way is to lob the bag into it's mouth. Unfortunate in that it requires you to lose your bag of holding[/COLOR]
eos367 Wrote:Not necessarily - It could be ruled that the anti magic field simply severs the bags connection to the pocket dimension actually holding the materials, turning it into an ordinary bag for the duration of it's proximity to the field, without altering the contents or the bag itself. Except of course the bag would be vaporized by the acid, while the gate was nullified, leaving no way to re-establish access to the pocket-dimension.
The only time a bag ruptures like that is when one bag is placed into another.
The scenario you described would only be applicable to a lesser bag of holding, which rather than using a pocket dimension has merely augmented the natural storage capacity of a standard sack. Those frankly suck because they can't handle nearly the capacity and still retain a vast majority of the weight so you'd never be able to load them quite that well as the pocket-dimension variety, which physically are just an empty sack that serves as the locus for the prime material side of the conduit.
MasPan Wrote:Hmm, guess my DM just favored creative solutions to problems and allowed the above to occur. He had ruled that the dimension was contained within the sack, not that the bag was a conduit to said dimension. When the bag's magical properties were gone, the dimension ceased to exist inside the bag, and the items spilled into the player dimension. Your scenario works too though. Incidentally, playing a Gnome Barbarian is hella fun, wielding a Butcher Knife like a Buster Sword
the vast expanse known as nerd. it expands into D&D, as well as maple...
and my god, my mind, its been assaulted by new knowledge... that i DO NOT WANT.



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