Difference between revisions of "Hunting horror"

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|item1=Nathian sphere shard|image1=narthian-sphere-shard.gif
 
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==References==
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* The first hit message refers to the idiom, originating from the name of William Shakespeare's play, {{wikipedia|All's Well That Ends Well}}.

Revision as of 10:57, 20 February 2010

Hunting-horror.gif
hunting horror

You are fighting a hunting horror.

Lurching out of the shadows floats what looks like a massively huge snake with leathery wings on its back. It gleefully tries to eat your face. And the rest of you, too.
Your opponent attacks ...

Hit messages:

  • It wraps its tail around you and tosses you into a wall. All's wall that ends wall, they say. Oh, wait, they don't.
  • It swoops down, putting its face-eating plan into effect with dramatic and messy results. LifeTime offers to make a movie about you, called "The Hero with No Face."
  • It flaps its wings quickly, buffeting you with a blast of air. It's nowhere near as pleasant as the breakfast buffet at Denny's. (sonic) damage



it hits you for X damage.

Critical hit message:

Your opponent has a critical hit! it hits you for X damage.



Miss messages:

  • It wraps its tail around you, but you slip out and foil its coils.
  • It tries to swoop down, but the crypt's low ceiling makes that impossible. Swooping down puts it into the floor.
  • It flaps its wings quickly, but only succeeds it making itself fly quickly.



Fumble messages:

Your foe fumbles! it takes X damage.


Victory! You beat up your foe and win the combat!


You gain 735 experience.

You got an item: Nathian sphere shard Narthian-sphere-shard.gif (Unspecified Drop rate)
You got an item: summoning cone Summoning-cone.gif (Unspecified Drop rate)






Known resistances/weaknesses

Unspecified
Former resistances were Verified to have no resistances or weaknesses., remember to remove this information from the page when resistances are spaded.

Locations

References

  • The first hit message refers to the idiom, originating from the name of William Shakespeare's play, All's Well That Ends Well.