Necrotelicomnicon: Difference between revisions
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imported>Kitsunegami m →References: Logical punctuation. Corrected hyphens to dashes. Fixed quote after checking original. Clarified. Removed redundant period. |
imported>Philmasterplus Cannot tune Sauceror spells anymore |
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==Notes== | ==Notes== | ||
*Atempting to use Wa'tz'ynn as a demon name at the [[Summoning Chamber]] does not summon any special demon. | *Atempting to use Wa'tz'ynn as a demon name at the [[Summoning Chamber]] does not summon any special demon. | ||
==History== | |||
*Prior to the November 2013 [[Class revamps#Sauceror|Sauceror revamp]], this item also elementally tuned Sauceror spells. | |||
==References== | ==References== |
Latest revision as of 05:57, 26 November 2020
The Necrotelicomnicon (also known in Latin as the Liber Paginum Fulvarum) is a book dedicated to contacting all manner of horrifying demons and other otherworldly denizens of darkness. Legend has it that the mad Arab Al Aksandir Garambel wrote it after he was driven insane by his very first summoning, a terrifying entity known only as Wa'tz'ynn.
Type: off-hand item
Selling Price: 2000 Meat.Spell Damage +10
All Spells Cast Are Spooky
NOTE: This item's elemental tuning only applies to Pastamancer Spells.
(In-game plural: copies of the Necrotelicomnicon)
Obtained From
Notes
- Atempting to use Wa'tz'ynn as a demon name at the Summoning Chamber does not summon any special demon.
History
- Prior to the November 2013 Sauceror revamp, this item also elementally tuned Sauceror spells.
References
- The Necrotelecomnicon is a shared joke appearing in the works of Terry Pratchett (Discworld) and Neil Gaiman. It is meant to literally translate as "The Phonebook of the Dead". Similarly, Liber Paginarum Fulvarum is "The Book of Yellow Pages". Those are in turn references to the fictional author Abdul Alhazred's ("the mad Arab") Necronomicon from H.P. Lovecraft's writings.
- Al Aksandir Garambel and Wa'tz'ynn are referencing Alexander Graham Bell and Thomas A. Watson, the inventors of the telephone. Bell spoke the first intelligible sentence ever to be transmitted by telephone, which was, incidentally, "Mr Watson – Come here – I want to see you" (i.e., a summons).
See Also
Collection
- 🥇: DosBoot (#115656) - 3,800
- 🥈: Wyrd (#27622) - 3,001
- 🥉: Pastahead (#486552) - 569
- #4: DuRhone (#370680) - 543
- #5: uberturtle (#1144833) - 438
- #6: kangaroo5 (#1083872) - 377
- #7: Tiny Plastic Grimmy (#1071066) - 323
- #8: Mistress of the Obvious (#845708) - 277
- #9: Farflier (#2070646) - 270
- #10: dalryaug (#761195) - 240
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