this post was submitted on 22 Jan 2025
220 points (98.7% liked)
Dungeons and Dragons - Memes and Comics
3302 readers
469 users here now
A community for Dungeons and Dragons Memes and Comics
/c/DnD Network Communities
- Dungeons and Dragons
- Dungeons and Dragons - Art
- DM Academy
- Dungeons and Dragons - Homebrew
- Dungeons and Dragons - AI
- Dungeons and Dragons - Looking for Group
Rules (Subject to Change)
- Be a Decent Human Being
- Credit OC content (self or otherwise)
- When posting OC comics please tailor your title to adhere to the following format*:
"Title" - [Comic Name]
e.g. "Krak of Dawn" - [Swords Comic]
*Does not apply to memes
- Posts must have something to do with Dungeons and Dragons and be in a meme format or a comic
- Zero tolerance for Racism/Sexism/Ableism/etc.
- No NSFW content
- Abide by the rules of lemmy.world
founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
A particularly healthy set of lungs contains 4litres (5 grams) of air, assuming a conservation of mass, that's less than one ml of silver, being a noble metal, the silver harmlessly disapates into the theifs bloodstream over the next couple years, at worst turning them blue. The awakened mushroom sorcerer hidden in the theifs pocket casts an actually good spell, such as fireball.
Turn the fireball into silver.
I'm thinking that an equal mass of silver would take up less space in the lungs, creating a vacuum with a 4 liter volume, and the sudden inrush of air to fill the remaining space would destroy all their soft tissue.
I am picturing a non-instanteous transmutation, as seen in Harry Potter etc... (DnD would also count spells like "true polymorph" having a casting time of 1 action (~6second).) Not a barotrauma specialist, so can't comment on instantaneous case.