A primary stat of 0 is suggested. If your main stat isn't high enough, you'll see the following message:
(It is recommended that you have at least 0 <mainstat> to adventure here.)
Combat Adventures
Non-combat Adventures
Notes
- All vikings are accompanied by a random piece of furniture with its own item drops.
- If on the fill Walford's bucket with balls quest, one of the following messages will appear after defeating a monster in this zone:
- You find a bin of colorful plastic balls, labelled "BALLAR $.99". You look around to make sure no one's looking, and drop a couple in your bucket. (Walford's bucket filled by 1%)
- There's a bin of large brightly-colored balls here, labelled "GYCKLAREÄGG $11.99" -- a bit steep, but you're stealing them anyway. Into the bucket they go! (Walford's bucket filled by 1%)
- If additional balls are triggered:
- (Walford's bucket filled by an additional 1%)
- If on the fill Walford's bucket with moon beams quest, one of the following messages will appear after defeating a monster in this zone:
- A bin here holds a bunch of little gray boxes labelled "MÅNEBRAKSKIT". When you open one, moonlight comes out! So you empty a few more into your bucket. (Walford's bucket filled by 1%)
- Moonlight is streaming down through a skylight in the roof, and into a bin labelled "MÅNSKEN $7.99". You... hold your bucket up to catch some? (Walford's bucket filled by 1%)
References
- One big reference to IKEA, Sweden's gift to the world. Wares at IKEA all have names that for a non-Scandinavian might sound somewhat eldritch.
- All the names for wares in the quest messages are Swedish, but not always exactly proper or logical Swedish:
- BALLAR does actually mean "balls", but is a slang term and only ever means balls in the testicle sense of "having balls". (The more proper word to use would be BOLLAR.)
- GYCKLAREÄGG means "jester egg".
- MÅNE means "moon", and BRAKSKIT is a slang term for an extraordinarily loud fart. Make of that what you will. (For it to be grammatically correct, it would be MÅNBRAKSKIT, not that that would make a lot more sense.)
- MÅNSKEN simply means "moonlight".