- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
5½ years later the giant spider I was using as the legs for a glass coffee table twitched…
Explains the ‘mannequins’ that liked to come to life when I wasn’t looking. They’re just people that have been hit with this bow.
So with one arrow, you basically break their neck then load them into a trebuchet.
And it only costs 3000 gold. Sounds like a good deal to me.
I may have mathed wrong, but that’s like 300 years.
174868880 seconds/60 = 2914481.33333333 minutes/60 = 48574.6888888889 hours/24 = 2023.94537037037 days/365 = 5.54505580923389 years
Using this as the basis
1y = 31,536,000 seconds
1m = 2,629,746 seconds
1w = 604,800 seconds
1d = 86,400 seconds
1h = 3,600 seconds
So 5 years, 6 months, 2 weeks, 2 days, 7 hours, 46 minutes, and 44 seconds.
Thanks. I was half awake/asleep and unsure of my brain.
Handy back-of-the-envelope is that a year is about pi*10^7 seconds.
Also…hate to be the guy to mention leap years but…
Thst doesn’t seem handy at all!
What in the double chin ballsack is going on here?
In vanilla Skyrim there’s a sort of feedback loop you can perform with the game’s alchemy and enchantment systems, allowing you to get enchantments like this.
Well, it’s a shitpost so: Hacks and exploits. But since it’s Skyrim, probably just exploits.
Is it really an exploit to make potion that increases enchanting, then use it to make gear that increases alchemy, and repeat?
Maybe? I think that’s open to interpretation. IMO, only the devs at Bethesda can make that call.
Me? I’m not going to hold onto the opinion that it’s game-breaking so strongly. After all, if you’re having fun, what’s the problem?
To be fair, you can exploit Skyrim by looking at it funny.
I accidentally discovered the “phase through a wall by holding a plate” thing all by myself just dicking around.
Perfectly balanced