eliakon wrote:Where does it say that you can cut the item up into smaller pieces with OUT destroying it? Where does it say that you CAN eat/burn/whatever an item?
Could Good questions, what qualifies as 'destruction' does tend to be a vague concept.
If one takes the interpretation that the original conjuration separating into parts 'destroys' it, this brings about certain ramifications for some items we know can be conjured:
*bag with marbles, if you remove a marble from the bag, the whole thing vanishes, since you separated them
*fishing pole and string: if your line gets snagged and in trying to tug it free some of the string breaks, the entire pole vanishes
*ballpoint pen: the minute you begin writing with it, the entire pen vanishes because the ink has separated from the pen and gone onto the paper
*a pair of socks or shoes are summoned touching one another and if in the course of wearing them they break contact (like through walking) they vanish
*rope vanishes if cut into smaller pieces of rope
*a plank or sheet of wood vanishes if sawed in half
ShadowLogan wrote:Technically doesn't say you can produce chemicals like gasoline or C4 either. Specificly cited examples in the text are solids, not fluids like gasoline is for the conjurer's class (via spell invocation is another matter).
This is not really the 'chemical' nature so much as the temperature nature. Whether or not a gas liquid "qualifies" as an object (having no discrete form) is definitely a good question, but bypassable if summoned in solid form (such as summoning an ice cube).
Considering that ball-point pens are twice-mentioned as being objects conjurers can make, this presumably means they can create ink, which is a liquid, or else the pens would not work, something you'd think would be mentioned were it the case.
Since they can also summon working bullets, this presumably also means you can summon powders (which lack a discrete form, functioning like liquid in many ways) inside containers, much as they can summon liquids in them.
This should mean that a conjurer can make a watering can full of water much as they might make a pen full of ink or a bullet full of gunpowder. Or perhaps, a bottle full of wine, or a gas can full of diesel.
If anyone is worrying about competition with the 'create water' spell they don't start with, if
this can be trusted, a gallon of raw water at 20 deg c weighs 8.33lbs per gallon. If we round that down to 8, the spell can make 4 pounds of water per level per 15, so one can attempt an approach that still encourages Conjurers to select the spell as they gain levels.
non-animal conjuring is limited to 60lbs max and if one takes the approach that such a summon is 'large', you start with a base cost of 50. Since water could be argued as having an endless amount of 'moving parts' you could theoretically boost the cost as high as you like. I say add 10 more (for a mere 3-4 moving parts) just to make it a multiple of 15.
With quadruple the cost of create water, this means 4 casting of CW would give 16lbs of water at level 1, 32lbs of it at level 2 (when conjurers can first select it) and 64lbs at level 4, when it finally surpasses the 60lb limit in efficiency.
The 'moving parts' limit is of course bypassable if a conjurer opts to summon a container full of a block of ice... but then, that's not immediately usable for drinking or hurting vampires, so it's a different niche. Keep in mind that if you wanted a tray full of ice cubes, each cube could arguably qualify as a 'moving part', although one might opt to give it an interpretation similar to marbles and let you summon them for a similar cost, so long as the cubes are marble-like in size (and marbles tend to be smaller than ice cubes so I'd probably say 6 cubes per casting, not 12)
ShadowLogan wrote:The thing is that the temporary (level) artificats/creatures the Conjurer creates may not be "real" beyond surface impressions.
Gotta disagree here, we are explicitly told that conjured animals are "living" creatures with "lives" good Conjurers would avoid putting on the line, in spite of their temporariness. Surely if they can create real lives then the non-living things they create (which should be simpler) would also be real.
What is meant by surface impressions? It's clearly more than illusions since items all function. The only differences we know of are vanish-upon-vague-destruction, time limit for existence, and the ability to enhance into MDC.
ShadowLogan wrote:A stick can be considered a device or tool.
Good point, guess the restriction is solely moving-parts-based and fuel-needed-to-construct based.
ShadowLogan wrote:Gasoline and C4 may also qualify as complex items to create (creature conjuring may follow a different set of rules that item) due to their chemical formula. Gasoline is also not a single chemical compound, nor is C4, turning it from a simple item into a complex item.
Gasoline is probably not as complex as a housefly or rhinoceros.
eliakon wrote:liquids are not one of the canon examples of what you CAN make
Cept for ink in pens... and of course living Earth animals, which are composed of liquids.
eliakon wrote:If I make a Gallon of gas, that's one item right? I when I pour it into 4 jars, is that still one item, or 4?
If I conjure a ball-point pen and open it and empty half of the ink into a non-conjured ball-point pen to refill it, does it count as 1 item or 2?
Actually this has got me thinking... if you CAN conjure ink... surely anything you wrote using the ink would vanish from the paper in a matter of hours...
Which is actually a pretty decent feature. A lot safer than the 'this message will self destruct' approaches, or requiring people to eat/burn/shred messages to hide their contents. You could include a permanent message from a real pen+ink as a distraction, and then add on a temporary message from a conjured pen+ink on the borders which the person can read within a required time limit and then easily deny once it goes away... now wondering if this could be combined with magic pigeon.
Unless of course you conjured empty pens and filled them using real ink...
if I conjured an octopus or squid... and made it permanent... would the ink it made be permanent too? Or any other kind of animal and using their blood to write with...
if a conjured animal is injured but not destroyed, does it bleed? does the blood vanish upon separating from the animal, or only at the end of the animal's duration?