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Spellcasting

From Curious Pastimes Wiki

Spells are simple, reliable incantations – taking only a few seconds to perform – that can be used at any time and place and with no preparation, requiring only magic points to fuel them.

The various Corporeal, Elemental and Spiritual Spellcasting, Demonology, Necromancy and Thaumaturgy skills all provide knowledge of many spells. Many spellcasting skills also include knowledge of several Rites.

The Spheres

The three spellcasting skills are based on the three spheres of influence.

  • Corporeal: Corporeal spells and rites affect the bodies of living and unliving creatures, healing their injuries, boosting or undermining their health or affecting the functions of the limbs, senses and organs.
  • Elemental: Elemental spells and rites alter the properties of matter and the forces of the natural world, burning, breaking, mending or transforming objects, or inciting or hindering movement.
  • Spiritual: Spiritual spells and rites wield the esoteric powers of the mind and soul, influencing thoughts, feelings and actions, interacting with the world of the unseen, or appealing to the fickle powers of destiny.

A handful of fundamental spells either transcend these boundaries or relate to magic itself. They are independent of these spheres – any spellcaster can learn or cast them.

Basic Spellcasting Rules

  • The caster must be conscious to cast any spell.
  • A spellcaster may not cast exalted spells in any armour, greater spells in medium armour, or any spells in heavy armour, without a special ability to do so (like Armoured Caster).
  • The caster must be able to see or perceive their target (either mundanely or via spells such as Detect Spirits), who must be within range.
  • They must express their intent via the spell’s vocal component – and if casting a combat spell, they must conclude the vocals with the appropriate call given in the spell description.
  • The caster must complete the vocals to cast the spell; if the caster stops or falters, or is incapacitated, the spell does not occur.
  • The caster must clearly indicate their target, by pointing and if necessary by spoken description (e.g. “The person in the red tabard!”) or name if known.
  • The effects of the spell occur immediately after the vocals are completed, unless specified otherwise in the spell description. One common exception is offensive touch spells (below).
  • Every spell has a cost in magic points. The caster must track the expenditure as soon as practical after casting the spell, ideally within sight of the attending referee.

Touch Spells

Offensive touch spells (i.e. combat spells with a range of touch) such as Wounding and Paralysis are a general exception to the rule that spells occur at the end of the vocals.

On completing the vocals of such a spell, the caster may “hold” the spell in their hand for up to fifteen seconds, to get into position to deliver the attack. They complete the spell by touching their target, accompanied with the spell’s call. If the caster does not deliver the effect within those fifteen seconds, the spell is wasted (along with the magic points).

Touch spells may be countered at any point in the window between the vocals and the call, as well as immediately after the call.

Default Limitations

Every spell has specific limitations: maximum effective range and duration, maximum size of target, etc. These limitations are listed with each spell description, but with specified exceptions, most spells conform to the following.

Spell Level Lesser Greater Exalted
Range 30ft/10m 30ft/10m 60ft/20m
Duration 30 seconds 30 seconds 1 minute
Size One handed weapon, shield (except for kite or tower shields) or the armour on a single location other than the torso One handed weapon, shield (except for kite or tower shields) or the armour on a single location other than the torso Person sized object, two-handed weapon or polearm, kite or tower shield, or full suit of armour

Note: Objects made up of smaller parts, but generally treated as a single whole (e.g. as a chain shirt is made of links, or an axe is made of a striking head and a shaft) are treated as one object for the purpose of size limitations; in objects consisting of multiple separate or easily removable parts (e.g. as an alchemy laboratory consists of mortar and pestle, flasks and alembics, etc.), the parts are treated as separate objects. Please apply common sense, or ask for a referee ruling in cases where you are uncertain.

By default, any enchanted item (including an item temporarily enchanted by e.g. the spell Elemental Weapon) is immune to lesser and greater spells that directly affect them, i.e. by damaging, transforming or enhancing them. Cold iron items are immune even to exalted spells.

Armour is a special case of the default size rule: a full suit of armour may be treated as either one person-sized object or six location-sized objects for various spells, regardless of how many parts it’s actually made of.

Creature vs. Object

Some spells target creatures, some target objects, some both; and some have different effects depending on whether the target is a creature or an object. So what’s the difference?

A creature is any living or unliving being (including supernatural beings such as demons, undead and constructs), while an object is any inanimate thing. For simplicity’s sake, assume anything represented in the game by a person (whether a player or a member of crew) and moving around is a creature.

Once a creature has been killed or destroyed, its remains become an object.

Vocal Component

A spell’s vocal component (or vocals) must be clearly spoken out loud. Ideally the target should hear it, with the exception of delayed spells or covert spellcasting.

Every spell description includes a recommended vocal component, but individual casters may alter these words, or replace them with other wording altogether, provided they meet these requirements.

  • Power: More powerful spells must begin with an indicator of the spell’s power, i.e. greater spells open with the words “By my power” and exalted spells with the words “By my exalted might.”
  • Sphere: Spells must begin with an indicator of their sphere, i.e. corporeal spells should call on “Life,” elemental spells should address “the Elements” and spiritual spells should appeal to “the Spirits.” Conjunctional magic spells should mention both relevant spheres.
  • Length: A spell’s vocal component should take about 3 seconds to recite.
  • Effect: Spells should conclude with the name of the spell; combat spells specifically must end with the spell’s call.
Example
Hilda Stormcrow, a worshipper of Odin, casts the spell Elemental Bolt with the vocals “By my power and the power of the Elements, I call on Odin Glad-of-War to burn thee – Elemental Bolt.”

Covert Spellcasting

It is possible to cast a spell covertly, speaking the vocal component of the spell too quietly for the target to hear. All limitations (i.e. range, size etc.) still apply, and the caster must still speak audibly, if softly. The caster will need to alert a referee of their intention to cast covertly, and cast the spell within the referee’s hearing. The referee will then inform the target of the spell’s casting and effects.

The target is aware that a spell has been cast on them, and may resist or counter it if they are able to do so, but they do not know where the spell came from.

Sorcery

At higher levels of skill, spellcasters start to become attuned to the spheres of magic they wield, moving beyond simply casting spells and rites to channeling power directly through their bodies. Known as sorcery, these gifts include special defences and extraordinary feats.

Sorcery abilities are bought as skills, through experience or training; all sorcery skills have the corresponding Greater Spellcasting skill as a prerequisite. All spells are listed in the Spell List. Research can unlock new and different abilities.