As long as we're talking about the dangers of playing with fire . . .
I've been working on a rewrite of the 4th level druid spell, produce fire. I've renamed it, since I've upped the area of effect to a 30 foot circle, greater than the 12 foot circle described in the AD&D Player's Handbook. I'm calling it create wildfire.
It is a real horror of a spell - not because it does a lot of damage to individuals, but because of the terrifying speed with which the fire moves. I am basing that on this Toronto firelab guidebook, which is based on grasslands. I'm sure I must be reading some of the information wrong; of course, I'm grossly simplifying the numbers contained inside for game use. Nevertheless, if it is dry, there's no rain, there's plenty of fuel and the fire gets started in a high wind . . . well, holy hell, a lot of stuff is going to burn.
I'm going to let the wiki handle the details of the spell - I suggest following the link above if the reader wants details on fire movement. I'm also basing a lot of the spell's principles on my recent weather tables, which I am hoping helps keep many fires from skipping more than 20 hexes a round. After all, any sort of weather that produces more than a light breeze will probably also produce precipitation, particularly in cooler, wetter climes. Thankfully, hotter, dryer climes also tend to have fuel ratings that are very low.
Still, in perfect conditions, right at the cusp of there being plenty of fuel and in a month with low rainfall, I can see a disaster looming.
Will a player character pause and consider the implications of letting a wildfire break out just to kill a few enemies, if that fire also means a large burned out area covering hundreds of square miles.
At least we could be sure that a high level cleric or druid attached to the kingdom would probably get involved before vast territories were destroyed, potentially causing thousands to die from famine. Too, there's always the reality that a fire started in a big city will have a higher percentage of 1st level mages, druids and clerics with precipitation spells who, by virtue of population density, will be a block or two away when the fire starts. The player arsonist might find it hard to burn down a town when some do-gooder keeps wet blanketing the area.
For the time being, I'm going to leave these numbers and see. They fit with the research I've done, though they are scary. I doubt that an RPGer pulling numbers out of their ass would have arrived at numbers this high. I wouldn't have.
Ooh, very cool. And much more in line with the theme of the druid.
ReplyDeleteGod, wouldn't it feel shitty to burn up a bunch of countryside? Not to mention non-party people getting mad at you, maybe even the own party asking you to be careful with "that spell," and so on.
Nicely done.
It also makes for an interesting use of terrorism amongst high level druids.
ReplyDeleteThey can literally create the ideal conditions to burn down a countryside...
Could probably be a good reason why druids can command large amounts of respect.
Oh, good one. If there are druid spells which dry a big area (unlikely, I think) or one that stops normal precipitation for a time ... and even those are unnecesssary of course, if the environment is dry and fuel-heavy. Cool.
ReplyDeleteOf course, somebody's gonna get pissed - other druids, possibly!
A high level druid, using control weather, could stop rain in a pretty large area daily, long enough to make even the most pleasant part of the world bone dry.
ReplyDeleteI once handled a case involving a very large tire fire. Fire with unfettered access to a large, robust fuel source is a real gorilla.
ReplyDelete