My favorite aspect of that white-board is the implication that at some point he explained wizard staff's and the knobs on the end, my second favorite is that he clearly erased something before he just wrote "stuff" on that cloud.
The second one isn't as accurate and likely to produce inaccurate answers since most wizards drink a lot anyways, but it's also more likely to give you a good chance to drink. So they do balance out.
The second one isn't as accurate and likely to produce inaccurate answers since most wizards drink a
I can imagine the comments and rudeness from the audience and the exasperation of the artist as "knobs" And "Staffs" were getting drawn/explained. Now my question is could another mage change the storm to rain something else since all the power went into making it rain. Or would it be locked in say passworded but no one got the password?
I can imagine the comments and rudeness from the audience and the exasperation of the artist as "kno
Somewhat, with a normal spell the wizard leaves a magical structure in the spell so changing it is sort of like working with someone else's math calculations and changing only certain numbers to make a new result without ever invalidating the math. So less of a password system than a complex route. For RMORD's the structure is randomly assembled, so it's like doing the same thing but without being able to see any of the actual operations.
And so that I end on a funny note. Oh yes there were comments about the knob and the pun phallus-y (fallacy) was made at least three times. You can't see the dry erase markers in the comic because all of them have been thrown at his audience.
Somewhat, with a normal spell the wizard leaves a magical structure in the spell so changing it is