Cut glass from the Dorflinger Estates Collection |
So, where is this taking us?
Sure, I've given my players bulky treasure, but how about giving them highly valuable treasure that is easily damaged and rendered worthless if they aren't careful? Drop a backpack even carefully stuffed with such glassware as you enter battle and you could lose a fortune.
Have a storeroom full of glassware and crystal, and watch the reaction as pieces fall of shelves as the party's fighter bashes the door open. Don't give your players anything to pack the glassware with - make suitable packing material part of the treasure somewhere else in the complex.
Make them earn their money or have them watch is break in front of their eyes ;)
I thought it was a vase. Apparently, it's a water bottle, to be used when drinking whiskey. What adventurer wouldn't want an item like that in their collection? |
edit: did I mention this shit is really heavy? ;)
That...is awesome. Paintings pierced, tapestries torched.
ReplyDeleteThis is why I put the cost and weight of crates of various types on my equipent list. You never know... It might be worth going back to town to get a nice crate to take away stuff like this.
ReplyDeletePretty upscale orcs to have that stuff lying around.
ReplyDeleteWouldn't you prefer some rat shit covered coppers?
I have fossilized/opalized/petrified fairys in my treasure tables, they are delicate and worth a few gp but also of questionable taste.
ReplyDeleteFlashing back; one dungeon I made had 200 opals in a horde. Big, beautiful opals. 500 g.p. each. They came in a lovely velvet pouch with built in belt loops and a drawstring that could be knotted. The fighter (encumbrance!) put the pouch on his belt and carefully knotted the string.
ReplyDeleteLater in the dungeon was a combo pit/crushing walls trap. In goes the fighter, out come the dice for saving throws vs. crushing blows (yes, plural).
Then the party had a bag full of powdered opal worth about 300 g.p....