Not sure if this has been posted already. Anyway...
You gesture.
[Spell Hindrance for some thickly quilted double leathers dyed cerulean is 4% with current Armor Use skill, d100= 3]
Your armor prevents the spell from working correctly.
Cast Roundtime 1 Second.
>incant 950 502 505 908 908 908 908
You put a green garnet in your viridian ritual robe.
>
You trace a series of glowing runes while chanting the phrase for Core Tap...
Your spell is ready.
You gesture.
You are too exhausted to cast Core Tap right now.
Cast Roundtime 1 Second.
First cast still took 50 mana, second cast doesn't.
Is this intended to take the mana from hindrance when the spell is still on cooldown, even though it doesn't take any mana when hindrance doesn't get in the way on cooldown?
~ Methais
950 + hindrance + cooldown on 11/21/2016 02:51 PM CST
Re: 950 + hindrance + cooldown on 11/21/2016 04:22 PM CST
Re: 950 + hindrance + cooldown on 11/21/2016 05:15 PM CST
Re: 950 + hindrance + cooldown on 11/22/2016 10:22 AM CST
Re: 950 + hindrance + cooldown on 11/22/2016 12:00 PM CST
Re: 950 + hindrance + cooldown on 11/22/2016 12:06 PM CST
Re: 950 + hindrance + cooldown on 11/22/2016 12:09 PM CST
Re: 950 + hindrance + cooldown on 11/22/2016 12:24 PM CST
Re: 950 + hindrance + cooldown on 11/22/2016 01:27 PM CST
Re: 950 + hindrance + cooldown on 11/22/2016 01:37 PM CST
>Why not? Don't you member? I member.
I do, it's just that Krakii has already told us about the 90s. A lot!
I'm not unwilling to compromise on the 90s though. Let's talk about the Attitude Era.
The Attitude Era is a period in the World Wrestling Federation (WWF, known now as WWE) and professional wrestling history that arose in the latter half of the 1990s. The era was marked by a shift to more adult-oriented programming content, which was accomplished in a number of different ways; including an increase in the level of depicted violence and the incorporation of horrific, or otherwise politically incorrect characters and storylines created for shock value. Similar to the 1980s professional wrestling boom, the Attitude Era was a surge in the popularity of professional wrestling in the United States as television ratings and pay-per-view buy-rates saw record highs.
The era saw several wrestlers rise to stardom, including Stone Cold Steve Austin, The Rock, Mankind, Triple H, Kurt Angle, and Kane; established star The Undertaker continued his main event prominence, as did fellow veterans Shawn Michaels, Bret Hart, Vader, Sycho Sid and Ron Simmons in the early stages of the era. Wrestlers such as Eddie Guerrero, Chris Jericho, Big Show and Chris Benoit – who were unhappy with their employment in rival promotion World Championship Wrestling (WCW) – jumped ship to WWF to ultimately become headliners for the company (Big Show and Benoit having previously been world champions in WCW). Other prominent Attitude Era performers who later became world champions in WWE were Edge, Jeff Hardy, Matt Hardy, Bradshaw, Christian and Mark Henry.
Distinguished stables were established in this era, such as D-Generation X, The Nation of Domination, The Corporation, and The Corporate Ministry who all developed major rivalries among each other during the time period. The era saw a resurgence and boom period in tag team wrestling with prominent teams like The New Age Outlaws, The Hardy Boyz, The Dudley Boyz, Edge and Christian, Too Cool and The APA achieving superstardom and being featured in prominent storylines and matches during this time period. In particular, The Dudleys, The Hardys and Edge and Christian featured in several Tables, Ladders and Chairs matches which were also introduced during this era. Top female stars such as Sable and Chyna achieved mainstream notoriety and even competed against male performers. While other prominent female stars saw their beginning during the era such as Trish Stratus, Lita, Molly Holly, etc. The era also saw an increase in the McMahon family's on-screen presence, starting with Chairman Vince McMahon's 'Mr. McMahon' character, a heel persona of himself following the Montreal Screwjob, with his son and daughter too eventually being introduced into WWF storylines as fictionalized villainous versions of themselves.
The company ceased usage of the official "WWF Attitude" logo – first used on November 9, 1997 – on May 6, 2002. Since the end of the Attitude Era and mainly since 2008 (after the "Ruthless Agression Era"), WWE has done away with much of the adult-oriented content introduced and has since returned to more family friendly programming. Though since then and particularly since 2014, WWE has seen edgier content with wrestlers such as Dean Ambrose and Brock Lesnar as well as the return of Attitude Era stalwart Shane McMahon, who participated in a violent Hell in a Cell match against The Undertaker at Wrestlemania 32. During which Shane threw himself off the top of the cell onto The Undertaker, reminiscent of the bumps performed by Mankind during the infamous 1998 Hell in a Cell match.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Attitude_Era
~ Methais
I do, it's just that Krakii has already told us about the 90s. A lot!
I'm not unwilling to compromise on the 90s though. Let's talk about the Attitude Era.
The Attitude Era is a period in the World Wrestling Federation (WWF, known now as WWE) and professional wrestling history that arose in the latter half of the 1990s. The era was marked by a shift to more adult-oriented programming content, which was accomplished in a number of different ways; including an increase in the level of depicted violence and the incorporation of horrific, or otherwise politically incorrect characters and storylines created for shock value. Similar to the 1980s professional wrestling boom, the Attitude Era was a surge in the popularity of professional wrestling in the United States as television ratings and pay-per-view buy-rates saw record highs.
The era saw several wrestlers rise to stardom, including Stone Cold Steve Austin, The Rock, Mankind, Triple H, Kurt Angle, and Kane; established star The Undertaker continued his main event prominence, as did fellow veterans Shawn Michaels, Bret Hart, Vader, Sycho Sid and Ron Simmons in the early stages of the era. Wrestlers such as Eddie Guerrero, Chris Jericho, Big Show and Chris Benoit – who were unhappy with their employment in rival promotion World Championship Wrestling (WCW) – jumped ship to WWF to ultimately become headliners for the company (Big Show and Benoit having previously been world champions in WCW). Other prominent Attitude Era performers who later became world champions in WWE were Edge, Jeff Hardy, Matt Hardy, Bradshaw, Christian and Mark Henry.
Distinguished stables were established in this era, such as D-Generation X, The Nation of Domination, The Corporation, and The Corporate Ministry who all developed major rivalries among each other during the time period. The era saw a resurgence and boom period in tag team wrestling with prominent teams like The New Age Outlaws, The Hardy Boyz, The Dudley Boyz, Edge and Christian, Too Cool and The APA achieving superstardom and being featured in prominent storylines and matches during this time period. In particular, The Dudleys, The Hardys and Edge and Christian featured in several Tables, Ladders and Chairs matches which were also introduced during this era. Top female stars such as Sable and Chyna achieved mainstream notoriety and even competed against male performers. While other prominent female stars saw their beginning during the era such as Trish Stratus, Lita, Molly Holly, etc. The era also saw an increase in the McMahon family's on-screen presence, starting with Chairman Vince McMahon's 'Mr. McMahon' character, a heel persona of himself following the Montreal Screwjob, with his son and daughter too eventually being introduced into WWF storylines as fictionalized villainous versions of themselves.
The company ceased usage of the official "WWF Attitude" logo – first used on November 9, 1997 – on May 6, 2002. Since the end of the Attitude Era and mainly since 2008 (after the "Ruthless Agression Era"), WWE has done away with much of the adult-oriented content introduced and has since returned to more family friendly programming. Though since then and particularly since 2014, WWE has seen edgier content with wrestlers such as Dean Ambrose and Brock Lesnar as well as the return of Attitude Era stalwart Shane McMahon, who participated in a violent Hell in a Cell match against The Undertaker at Wrestlemania 32. During which Shane threw himself off the top of the cell onto The Undertaker, reminiscent of the bumps performed by Mankind during the infamous 1998 Hell in a Cell match.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Attitude_Era
~ Methais
Re: 950 + hindrance + cooldown on 11/22/2016 02:06 PM CST
Re: 950 + hindrance + cooldown on 11/22/2016 02:25 PM CST
Re: 950 + hindrance + cooldown on 11/22/2016 02:40 PM CST
Re: 950 + hindrance + cooldown on 11/22/2016 02:56 PM CST
Re: 950 + hindrance + cooldown on 11/22/2016 03:01 PM CST
Konacon |
ME. TOO. That was a moment to see. I have never been surrounded by so many people and had it be SO quiet in my entire life. |
So, you're telling me, that there was a time when you met Methais in real life and when you locked eyes, time briefly stopped and all the background noise faded away?
GameMaster Estild
Re: 950 + hindrance + cooldown on 11/22/2016 03:10 PM CST
Re: 950 + hindrance + cooldown on 11/22/2016 03:35 PM CST
>So, you're telling me, that there was a time when you met Methais in real life and when you locked eyes, time briefly stopped and all the background noise faded away?
http://www.reactiongifs.com/r/2013/02/firefly.gif
~ Methais
http://www.reactiongifs.com/r/2013/02/firefly.gif
~ Methais
Re: 950 + hindrance + cooldown on 11/22/2016 10:56 PM CST
Re: 950 + hindrance + cooldown on 11/23/2016 08:07 AM CST
http://www.reactiongifs.com/r/2013/02/firefly.gif |
~ Methais |
I don't agree with the name of that gif. That is not from Firefly. That is Nathan Fillion from some episode of Castle.
-Drumpel
Re: 950 + hindrance + cooldown on 11/23/2016 08:45 AM CST