« on: March 28, 2013, 11:05:50 pm »
| |
NAME: | Dragon Seal of Ire
| ELEMENT: | Fire
| COST: | 8
| TYPE: | Spell
| ATK|HP: |
| TEXT: | Target dragon gains: " : Move to target slot. Spread next attack over its row and opposing row."
|
| NAME: | Dragon Seal of Wrath
| ELEMENT: | Fire
| COST: | 7
| TYPE: | Spell
| ATK|HP: |
| TEXT: | Target dragon gains: "1 : Move to target slot. Spread next attack over its row and opposing row."
|
|
ART: | Original Art Link: http://www.sxc.hu/photo/409522
Modified by OdinVanguard using GIMP
| IDEA: | OdinVanguard
| NOTES: | "Today will be highly energetic"
"Today, you will display your boundless potential in an unbridled show of destruction by laying waste to your enemies. But be careful. Your friends may get burned in the process."
The wording could use some work, but its the best I can come up with given the limited space.
The idea is fairly simple.
Essentially, it turns your dragon into a double edged single row version of firestorm.
The dragon itself is immune to its own attack, but every creature in its row and the opposing row will take damage.
This works by looping over all creatures in each row from left to right.
The enemy in the left most damage will be given 1 point of damage, followed by the corresponding creature on the dragon's side.
This will continue, alternating from enemy to ally, left to right until all of the dragon's attack damage has been assigned. If it gets to the end on the right side of the field, it just loops back to the left side again and continues.
Empty slots and slots with untargettable creatures simply get ignored, so the more creatures a player has in the row, the more damage they will end up taking. (I.e. this can backfire on you)
| SERIES: | http://elementscommunity.org/forum/index.php/topic,48038.0.html
|
|
Whether the glass is half full or half empty is a moot point. It is always filled to the brim. It is only a matter of by what. The real question is: What fills you?
If your zombie plan is
kill -9 `ps l | awk '{print $2" "$3" "$9}' | grep "Z" | awk '{printf("%s ",$2)}'`
You might be a unix junky