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Wandering Adventure Party

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  3. All of 'em defeated with one line

All of 'em defeated with one line

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved RPGMemes
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  • G groet@feddit.org

    That’s what I love about solar energy. Its like the only energy source that doesn’t boil water to turn a steam turbine, use water to turn a water turbine or use wind to turn a air turbine.

    Except for those liquid salt solar plants that boil water …

    S This user is from outside of this forum
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    scratchee@feddit.uk
    wrote last edited by
    #78

    Yeah, skipping straight to the turbines we truly care about, the electron turbines we create in loops of wire. It’s turbines all the way down.

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    • S stamets@lemmy.dbzer0.com
      This post did not contain any content.
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      feathercrown@lemmy.world
      wrote last edited by
      #79

      Live by the jank, die by the jank. Make an improvised ranged weapon attack with 20/60 range lol

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      • S squaresinger@lemmy.world

        I think it’s totally valid to run a realistic game where realism takes precedence over game rules, but then the “passing of the object” part fails.

        It’s also totally valid to run RAW game, but then it fails like you said.

        So no matter what game you run, the railgun makes no sense.

        What would make sense with a RAW game is to use the railgun for fast travel/fast transport, but then again for it to give a decent advantage, you need thousands or millions of peasants who willingly cooperate, which also won’t really work in most games.

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        feathercrown@lemmy.world
        wrote last edited by
        #80

        I use my reaction to activate the IRL-physics-inator when the object reaches the last peasant!

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        • A AwesomeLowlander

          I get the feeling the 4 million grain Revolving Peasant Gun with the velocity of 1% the speed of light will have the desired effect on any target.

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          feathercrown@lemmy.world
          wrote last edited by
          #81

          Link Preview Image
          Relativistic Baseball

          favicon

          (what-if.xkcd.com)

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          • F feathercrown@lemmy.world

            Link Preview Image
            Relativistic Baseball

            favicon

            (what-if.xkcd.com)

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            AwesomeLowlander
            wrote last edited by
            #82

            I actually had that in mind, hence why I kept it limited to 1% 😂

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            • C Cethin

              Well, the “top” of the elevator could be anywhere. That’s why I said it needs to be as low as possible, because it’s already physically impossible for Earth. The lower and lighter the station is, the less impossible it is, though it’s impossible even with no station and just a cable.

              Above geostationary orbit isn’t suddenly in solar orbit though. It’s still got quite a ways to go. It could be at escape velocity, but that’s not necessary.

              This is all impossible on Earth anyway though, so if you’re making a story where this is taking place it could be any of these outcomes you want. Whatever works best for the story.

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              turdas@suppo.fi
              wrote last edited by
              #83

              It’s not “physically impossible” on Earth. The forces involved are great, sure, which means you can’t build it out of any present-day material like steel, but they’re not so great that constructing a space elevator would be physically impossible using non-exotic matter like it would be on, say, the Sun, or possibly even just Jupiter. We already know of materials that could be used to make a space elevator cable on Earth if they were available in sufficient quantities – namely carbon nanotubes.

              The “top” can’t be anywhere, because not everywhere along the length of the elevator will put released objects in orbit. Turns out on Earth, an object released off of the elevator would reach a stable (but very eccentric) orbit 2/3rds of the way to geostationary orbit – below that, it would fall back to Earth. Conversely escape velocity would be reached at about 53000 km, which is past geostationary orbit but much closer than where the counterweight would be (in most designs?). Objects above escape velocity will by definition escape Earth’s orbit, which most of the time means ending up in a solar orbit.

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              • S squaresinger@lemmy.world

                The peasant railgun is kinda weird tbh.

                It first uses game rules ignoring physics (using the ready action to pass the object super fast along the line of peasants), to then flip and ignore game rules while using physics (not applying the rules for throwing an object but instead claiming that physics “realism” demands that the object keeps its speed and does damage according to the speed, not according to game rules).

                Fun meme, but really doesn’t make sense in game.

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                japjer@mtgzone.com
                wrote last edited by
                #84

                It’s just one of those times where you have to accept that D&D is a boardgame, and the small details fall apart when you try to make “real” stuff fit the rules.

                A round is six seconds. If you want to apply logic to it, the DM would just say that the ball/rail/tungsten rod only moved up a few people in six seconds.

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                • Y yermaw@sh.itjust.works

                  Pure theory, likely never ever going to be real, but could a bullet move so fast that it goes through someone without even damaging them?

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                  alcoholicorn@mander.xyz
                  wrote last edited by
                  #85

                  Only in anime.

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                  • T turdas@suppo.fi

                    It’s not “physically impossible” on Earth. The forces involved are great, sure, which means you can’t build it out of any present-day material like steel, but they’re not so great that constructing a space elevator would be physically impossible using non-exotic matter like it would be on, say, the Sun, or possibly even just Jupiter. We already know of materials that could be used to make a space elevator cable on Earth if they were available in sufficient quantities – namely carbon nanotubes.

                    The “top” can’t be anywhere, because not everywhere along the length of the elevator will put released objects in orbit. Turns out on Earth, an object released off of the elevator would reach a stable (but very eccentric) orbit 2/3rds of the way to geostationary orbit – below that, it would fall back to Earth. Conversely escape velocity would be reached at about 53000 km, which is past geostationary orbit but much closer than where the counterweight would be (in most designs?). Objects above escape velocity will by definition escape Earth’s orbit, which most of the time means ending up in a solar orbit.

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                    Cethin
                    wrote last edited by
                    #86

                    No, it’s physically impossible. Even the most advanced material possible couldn’t hold the strain that would be required for Earth. Technically it’s right on the limit, but that’s ignoring that we have an atmosphere that’s going to exert forces on it too. On Luna it might make sense.

                    The top can be anywhere. It would just require adding force to it at/after release. That’s trivial. We already know how to make rockets, or it could be something that pushes or throws it. Compared to building a space elevator, speeding something up is easy.

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                    • C Cethin

                      No, it’s physically impossible. Even the most advanced material possible couldn’t hold the strain that would be required for Earth. Technically it’s right on the limit, but that’s ignoring that we have an atmosphere that’s going to exert forces on it too. On Luna it might make sense.

                      The top can be anywhere. It would just require adding force to it at/after release. That’s trivial. We already know how to make rockets, or it could be something that pushes or throws it. Compared to building a space elevator, speeding something up is easy.

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                      turdas@suppo.fi
                      wrote last edited by
                      #87

                      No, it’s not physically impossible. For an explanation see my previous comment.

                      I find it funny that you started this conversation by telling me that I’ve “got space elevators wrong” and then proceeded to spout strange and verifiably false nonsense like this on multiple different points.

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