Seeing farther

Started by Teleri, August 02, 2004, 11:05:46 AM

Give rangers and desert-elves this ability?

Yes, give both of them the ability.
16 (26.2%)
Give rangers the ability.
5 (8.2%)
Give desert-elves the ability.
4 (6.6%)
Give neither the ability.
36 (59%)

Total Members Voted: 59

Voting closed: August 02, 2004, 11:05:46 AM

Quotejhunter wrote:
Quote:
The spy glass idea is coolness, but on clear days only. Shouldn't enhance your ability to see in low vis.



Oh yeah, totally I never meant it as otherwise. Just this thread reminded me of it...I wonder if it will ever happen or if it can be done...

I voted neither by the way. I see no reason why any one type of pc should be able to see better through blowing sands than another.


According to Nessalin, the 'spy glass' idea doesn't fit into the game. But spectacles do.

That's stupid. I could see a primitive form of spyglass made with leather and a couple of pieces of glass. I don't see how that doesn't fit into the game....WEAK.
Quote from: Fnord on November 27, 2010, 01:55:19 PM
May the fap be with you, always. ;D

A single pair of glasses made for someone *ridiculously* rich might be possible, but they will still be crude and only useful if your eyesight is seriously messed up.


A spyglass involves using two or more lenses in a single tube.  If these lenses are not made of clear glass or do not exactly fit each other, it will probably have some spots.  And two tiny spots on a spyglass are more than enough to make it useless for long distances, I'll say.


Zalanthan glass is simply not clear enough unless you have some magickal means or if you found some extremely talented glassmaker in Cenyr...and even then, it's pretty doubtful.
Quote from: Vesperas...You have to ask yourself... do you love your PC more than you love its contribution to the game?

I -could- see it happening, but don't necessarily think it should happen.  Just because of lack of necessity.

Rangers, not all d-elves, just rangers....may have the knowledge to know where to gain the best vantage point.  The top of -that- dune, but not that one, will let us see through the valleys of those dunes over there and over top of that one.  Blah blah blah, etc.

And if there are spectacles, spyglasses are completely legit.  However, some engineer will have to invent them in game, because they can't just spring up out of nowhere.

Me, personally...I hate how zalanthan technology seems to follow the technology tree of Real Life.  Let's see some different ideas to get around the same problems we had in early civilization.
She wasn't doing a thing that I could see, except standing there leaning on the balcony railing, holding the universe together. --J.D. Salinger

QuoteAnd if there are spectacles, spyglasses are completely legit.

Exactly.


Lack of necessity? How about guiding people safely through the deserts...spotting dangers and landmarks from farther off...I can think of several reasons why if spectacles exist a primitive spyglass would too...in fact -more- necessary than spectacles IMHO.
Quote from: Fnord on November 27, 2010, 01:55:19 PM
May the fap be with you, always. ;D

I wasn't referring to the lack of necessity for spyglasses.  I was speaking of lack of necessity for desert elves and rangers being able to see further.

And I don't support spyglasses.  If you want an invention to be able to see further, in game....then goddammit, have your character invent something that wasn't invented in RL.  Stop bringing up -our- historical progressions in game, and come up with a -new solution to the problem-.
She wasn't doing a thing that I could see, except standing there leaning on the balcony railing, holding the universe together. --J.D. Salinger

Quote from: "Armaddict"

And I don't support spyglasses.  If you want an invention to be able to see further, in game....then goddammit, have your character invent something that wasn't invented in RL.  Stop bringing up -our- historical progressions in game, and come up with a -new solution to the problem-.

Or, you could write up a spyglass and how to craft it, and the materials needed, and send it in.

If there are lenses, there must be spyglasses. It isn't that much of a leap. So write it up!

That's exactly what I'm saying.

-Why- would the spyglass be invented, just because there are lenses?  Come up with a completely new, innovated -invention-.  Don't follow our -own- history, make Zalanthan history it's own, and unique.

No more of this uncreative shit where you just take something we invented in the past on earth, and bringing it into Zalanthas.

Make something -new- to see further.  Use your brain and some independent thought about what you have at your disposal, what would be a more logical line of thinking for a zalanthan, etc.
She wasn't doing a thing that I could see, except standing there leaning on the balcony railing, holding the universe together. --J.D. Salinger

No matter good your vision is..if you have the eyes of a bald eagle and can spot a field mouse from 2 miles away...

You cannot see dick if there is a whirling sandstorm blocking your view.  Sand is an OBSTRUCTION to vision. It prevents even the best eyes from seeing not much further than their arms can stretch in front of them. They still have awesome vision - but it is blocked by sand. So - they can't see. Not because they have bad vision, but, because, it's, y'know, blocked.

Get it?

I don't think we're talking about seeing through storms.  This is all under the assumption of clear weather.
She wasn't doing a thing that I could see, except standing there leaning on the balcony railing, holding the universe together. --J.D. Salinger

yea. bestatte, we derailed this shit quite a few posts back.

I know what you're saying, armaddict, and it's all well and good.

But it's also pretty difficult, and it doesn't have to be the ONLY way to do things.

By all means, if your character wants a problem solved in game, let him solve it in game, with in game thinking.

But if you have an omg-i-never-leave-the-city whore char, and you as a player think it'd be neat to have spyglasses in game, go ahead and write some up using IC materials, and send it to the mud.

I don't think it's -wrong- to steal from earth history, especially if it's used only as a starting point.

For instance:

Ok, I want to see some spyglasses in game.
Metal and perfect lenses are out, but i'll definately need some sort of lenses lined up.

Let's see, i could hollow out bone, cut some slices, insert some lenses. It'd be long, and you couldn't compress it, but it'd likely work. It'd be very zalanthian, but it's based off a concept from earth. That cool?

Yea, i'm just talking. Don't mind me. :mrgreen:

p.s. If you like this idea, steal it and send it to the mud. Cause i'm too lazy to do it, and i don't care about credit.

QuoteAnd I don't support spyglasses. If you want an invention to be able to see further, in game....then goddammit, have your character invent something that wasn't invented in RL. Stop bringing up -our- historical progressions in game, and come up with a -new solution to the problem-.


Yeah...because I want to waste a slot for a pc just to create a spyglass item which logically could've been created already...Yeah...we're going to create something that could realistically work as a primitive spyglass...but isn't one...and NOONE is going to bitch about how it might not realistically work...

Sorry, but if you expect people to actually go through the work and study to INVENT something plausible with FACTUAL evidence to back it up so noone bitches for a GAME...then IMHO...why don't we take weapons, armors and clothes out of the game because they were all based on RL things first????

Make everyone start over and invent those IC before they exist??? :roll:

Sorry, but I think this is a total jackass way of thinking...if you want to take offense to it then it's up to you. :?

You actually want people to invent something...that realistically works...but hasn't already been done in real life...for a game???

Hey man, if I could do that...I wouldn't be wasting my time inventing them for a GAME.

Hey...would you be cool with it if we called it the seeinglotsafarther tube?

You know...because then...it wouldn't be called a spyglass... :twisted:
Quote from: Fnord on November 27, 2010, 01:55:19 PM
May the fap be with you, always. ;D

I call dibs on MacGyveresque ginka-based hydrogen bombs!


I'm going to repeat this once:
Spectacles exist because some *nobles* need them.  Nobles are also able to pay the obcene amount these specialized, *CRUDE* lenses would cost them.
[Note the slight emphasis.]

Lenses that are actually useful as, you know, lenses, will probably be too expensive for any non-noble (and they don't really need spyglasses, they have underlings), and even if they are not, they are simply not of high enough quality that would allow the 'bonus stacking' spyglasses are based on.


As for the technology, well...look, nobody is expecting nobody to reinvent the wheel, but Zalanthas is a low-tech desert environment, and this is what things will focus on.  People can see very far in the flat deserts, and even further if they have a high ventage point.

Think about it like this...what is a spyglass going to show you that the naked eye won't?  You aren't going to spot people in camouflage that creep around the dunes with a spyglass from three miles away.

The only thing it could possibly show you is a mekillot from five leagues away, and I feel that even -that- is something of a stretch.  Five leagues is a LONG distance, and let's not forget that hot air gets that hazy effect going on and that desert sand is usually cleaner than beach sand and thus brighter and more reflective, etc. etc..

Armor and weapons are not extremely complicated concepts, and neither are clothes in a society where you usually get a sandstorm every week (not to mention the nomadic days).  This does not mean the next Vivaduan we get should explore chemistry and medicine and develop antibiotics.


This is all I have to say.
Quote from: Vesperas...You have to ask yourself... do you love your PC more than you love its contribution to the game?

QuoteI'm going to repeat this once:
Spectacles exist because some *nobles* need them. Nobles are also able to pay the obcene amount these specialized, *CRUDE* lenses would cost them.
[Note the slight emphasis.]

Merchant Houses...trade caravans and shit...sorry I guess we'll have to just agree to completely disagree on this....I just do not see it your way...if you can make a *CRUDE* lense that's even passable for use in spectacles...they would be passable to make a *CRUDE* seeinglotsafarther tube (spyglass *gasp*) as well.

QuoteThe only thing it could possibly show you is a mekillot from five leagues away, and I feel that even -that- is something of a stretch. Five leagues is a LONG distance, and let's not forget that hot air gets that hazy effect going on and that desert sand is usually cleaner than beach sand and thus brighter and more reflective, etc. etc..

By that line of thinking...we shouldn't be able to see as far as we can IG on a clear day...which isn't true because we can. I don't see how this has any relevance at all...we're already stretching it by being able to see that far unaided anyway...so if your going to be -nitpicky- about it...then our sight should be reduced as is.

It's apparent that we're never going to see eye to eye on this (HAH!) so I'll be taking my *CRUDE* lenses and my piece of grooved leather...roll it up and fit the *CRUDE* lenses in each end of it and wandering off into the sands with my seeinglotsafarther tube.
Quote from: Fnord on November 27, 2010, 01:55:19 PM
May the fap be with you, always. ;D

Quote from: "jhunter"
QuoteI'm going to repeat this once:
Spectacles exist because some *nobles* need them. Nobles are also able to pay the obcene amount these specialized, *CRUDE* lenses would cost them.
[Note the slight emphasis.]

Merchant Houses...trade caravans and shit...sorry I guess we'll have to just agree to completely disagree on this....I just do not see it your way...if you can make a *CRUDE* lense that's even passable for use in spectacles...they would be passable to make a *CRUDE* seeinglotsafarther tube (spyglass *gasp*) as well.

QuoteThe only thing it could possibly show you is a mekillot from five leagues away, and I feel that even -that- is something of a stretch. Five leagues is a LONG distance, and let's not forget that hot air gets that hazy effect going on and that desert sand is usually cleaner than beach sand and thus brighter and more reflective, etc. etc..

By that line of thinking...we shouldn't be able to see as far as we can IG on a clear day...which isn't true because we can. I don't see how this has any relevance at all...we're already stretching it by being able to see that far unaided anyway...so if your going to be -nitpicky- about it...then our sight should be reduced as is.

It's apparent that we're never going to see eye to eye on this (HAH!) so I'll be taking my *CRUDE* lenses and my piece of grooved leather...roll it up and fit the *CRUDE* lenses in each end of it and wandering off into the sands with my seeinglotsafarther tube.


This statement _IS_ true. That is how they developed the first Telescope and binoculars.
Quote from: roughneck on October 13, 2018, 10:06:26 AM
Armageddon is best when it's actually harsh and brutal, not when we're only pretending that it is.

Necessity is the mother of invention.


Is there a necessity here?  What do people want to see?  How much are they willing to pay to see it?  For the wealthy and educated (ie the government) there may be magick available that is far more effective than any invention.  For the wealthy without access to magick, scouts and outriders are the cost effective solution.  You've already got the bums sitting around the barracks, make 'em get out there and do stuff.  A team of scouts and/or spies is better than a telescope, because they can see more, hear more, and have the remarkable ability to go see what is northeast of your position, a place that is completely invisible by any other means.  ;)  I can see a telescope being useful for spying on enemy troops without them seeing you (unless they also have telescopes) but the incidences where a telescope will be more useful than a scout are few and far between.

I may be totally wrong, but my impression is that spyglasses were mainly needed by mariners.  At sea you can't just send a scout to see what is over there.  Ok, you could send some poor bastard over in a row boat, but that is going to take forever.  Whether you are using sails or rowers an unpowered ship has limited manuverability, and the ocean is big, so a device that lets you see if that island is northwest or north by northwest is extreamly useful.  If supplies are low it could even save your life.  Sure, they were also used overland, but are not as useful because of natural visual obstructions.  
Needless to say, mariners are very rare in the known world. :lol:  The silt sea has perpetually low visibility because of the silt, so a spyglass might be even less usefull on a silt skimmer than on land.


I think a spyglass could be moderately useful for some people, but wouldn't be a necessity.  It wouldn't address a persistant or urgent need, so the drive to invent it would be low.


AC
Treat the other man's faith gently; it is all he has to believe with."     Henry S. Haskins

The use of a spyglass item would make scouts more effective...I don't understand why noone can see this direct relation.
The funny thing is, I think the first of such things invented were actually used on land...and later were used at sea.
Quote from: Fnord on November 27, 2010, 01:55:19 PM
May the fap be with you, always. ;D

binoculars sell pretty well in real life, last i checked.

Must be some use. I think this is more an argument of degrees, here.

Sure, most people are gonna wanna drop the sid for them. But a few people might. The question is would these "few" people be enough in number that the spyglass would actually be produced by a regular merchant, or is the number of people who want it so low that it'd only be created on a case by case basis?

She's talking about why it was -invented-.

There's no necessity for it, as of now.
She wasn't doing a thing that I could see, except standing there leaning on the balcony railing, holding the universe together. --J.D. Salinger

Quote from: "Larrath"Spectacles exist because some *nobles* need them.

Ceridwen Ironfell wore spectacles.

QuoteThere's no necessity for it, as of now.

That's a matter of opinion.
Quote from: Fnord on November 27, 2010, 01:55:19 PM
May the fap be with you, always. ;D

Ceridwen Ironfell was also a noble wannabe.  Who was given them by a noble.  Probably.  Heh.
She wasn't doing a thing that I could see, except standing there leaning on the balcony railing, holding the universe together. --J.D. Salinger

I think Karleon Kadius wore spectacles too, but he was a family merchant, so...