An unusual mismatched pair of daggers made by Olidammara for use by his champions, these blades bear pommels with the Laughing Rogue's trademark humour and tragedy masks. Ghost Dancer is a long-handled dagger with a sickle-like forward-curving blade, its blade inlaid with ghostly-glowing runes that fluoresce under the light of the moon. Shadow Bringer is a single-edged backward-curving blade, its flattened cheek melded with tiny ingots of obdurium, mined from the depths of the elemental plane of Earth. and possessed of incredible density and darkness.
Currently used in the battle against Tiamat's champion, the blades have incredible magical powers alone, but when used in conjunction, their powers truly shine. [Statistics for D&D 3.5 format, as requested] GHOST DANCER +3 keen, ghost touch dagger Known colloquially as 'ghost dancer', the truer translation of this blade's name means something more akin to thief of essence. Its runes enable it to cut into the Ethereal plane as easily as the Material, allowing it to strike incorporeal creatures with no miss chance, as well as being able to deal critical hits and other types of precision damage to them, even if they are usually immune to critical hits and sneak attack damage. SHADOW BRINGER +3 defending, shadow burst dagger Upon command, Shadow Bringer trails a faint blur of shadow behind it as it moves, which hangs in the air temporarily. The shadowy energy does not harm the wielder, and remains until the command is given to deactivate it, or it is sheathed. While in effect, Shadow Bringer deal an additional 1d6 points of negative energy damage on a successful hit. In addition to the negative energy damage from this ability, Shadow Bringer deals an additional 1d10 points of negative energy damage on a successful critical hit. When wielded at the same time, the enhancement bonus to attack and damage rolls increases to +4 for both weapons, and in addition, both weapons counts as having epic enhancement for the purposes of striking creatures with damage reduction and immunity. Comments are closed.
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AuthorI'm Luke. He/him pronouns. Archives
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