SamtheDagger wrote:You're way off the mark on this one, Jaymz. And to argue with Nekira is usually a futile process as she is almost always right. I can honestly say I've never seen her proven wrong.
Read this again once more, very carefully, and note the emphasis.\
"A single silver rune ONLY makes the ACTUAL PARCHMENT indestructible, NOT the WRITING itself."
Still not clear? Let me divide the sentence up into easy pieces.
"A single silver rune..."
This means ONE rune. We're not talking about every word written.
"...only makes the actual parchment indestructible..."
The keyword here is PARCHMENT, not parchment + writing, JUST parchment.
"...not the writing itself."
This phrase ought to be self-explanatory, but apparently we are having a failure to communicate so I'll explain it. This phrase means the writing is NOT indestructible. NOT is the keyword here. Parchment = indestructible. Writing = NOT indestructible.
You can put this sentence at the beginning of the section, in the middle, or at the end. It makes no difference. It still means the same thing. To argue otherwise is simply refusal to acknowledge the facts.
Now if you want to change the rules for your game that's fine. But the canon answer is quite clear and unambiguous.
*snipped from above* To quote PFRPG 2e page 118: "Some silly notes about indestructible paper: Although runes are ideal for preserving or protecting books only other Diabolists can read rune writings. Of course, a single silver rune letter will make the parchment page indestructible (there must be at least one letter on every page of a book). The indestructible page can be written on with ordinary ink, paint, and graphite. However, these ordinary materials will age, fade and crumble with the ravages of time and can be physically marred, burnt off, scraped or scrubbed away, etc."
I can read Sam thanks. But it does not say the ACTUAL PARCHMENT. It just says THE PARCHMENT PAGE. It also says the runes are for preserving and protecting books. Why bother if the writings won't actually be proteced. It would be a waste of time and energy to protect the parchment and not whats on it. That to me would make it a vague enough to argue the point either way. It also says the indestructable page can be written on but over time those writing will fade etc. The qoute goes out of its way to say anything written on the indestructable page (The indestructible page can be written on with ordinary ink - pointing to after it was made indesctructable) not anything written on it period.
The placement of the when the writing is done is very relevant and makes perfect sense to allow what I am arguing.
I am not sure why this is so hard to allow. It makes sense to allow what I am saying in fact otherwise any magic spell book would just fade away which is not what happens typically in fantasy they seem to last for millenia at times. To do that it would have to be written in silver runes by the sounds of it in which case its useless to anyone but Diabolists which seems....well not right to be frank.