« on: December 02, 2016, 05:38:52 pm »
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NAME: | Minor Celestial Glyph
| ELEMENT: | Air
| COST: | 2
| TYPE: | Permanent
| ATK|HP: |
| TEXT: | : Give a target creature: "Evanesant: Evades 1 hostile targetted effect by turning immaterial for 1 turn."
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| NAME: | Major Celestial Glyph
| ELEMENT: | Air
| COST: | 6
| TYPE: | Creature
| ATK|HP: |
| TEXT: | : Give all creatures you own: "Evanesant: Evades 1 hostile targetted effect by turning immaterial for 1 turn."
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ART: | OdinVanguard, created using Inkscape and GIMP
| IDEA: | OdinVanguard
| NOTES: | "Inspiration will find you today, but don't hold your breathe"
"Your efforts this day shall be blessed with protection from on high. Don't waste it!"
A twist on the evasion and divine protection mechanics to yield a reactive protection buff.
Note that just like the evasion mechanic provided by SoFr this effect will only react to effects that directly target the protected creature, but it will not prevent mass targetting effects such as Rain of Fire.
Like the divine protection effect of Seraph / Caliph, the immaterial effect will wear off at the end of its owner's next turn. This has the important ramification that the owner cannot retarget it with a glyph while it is immaterial and so there will be a gap in the protection.
The effect can be stacked multiple times onto a single target. In that case it will allow the effect to trigger additional times without needing to be refreshed. This is important because it allows multiple glyphs to synergy on the same target(s). I.e. if a target has N stacks of this it can be protected for N consecutive turns.
Examples: You have a pegasus and target it with this. The opponent casts rage potion on it, and it evades the effect and becomes immaterial. It rematerializes at the end of your following turn. The opponent can then target it again to kill it on their next turn.
Example 2: You use 2 sigils on the pegasus. The opponent must now expend a targeted effect on 2 consecutive turns before they may kill the pegasus on the third turn.
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« Last Edit: December 02, 2016, 07:19:57 pm by OdinVanguard »
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