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Post by scalydemon on Apr 19, 2018 22:42:14 GMT -6
What are some ideas for dungeon rooms with these? I know this has been done in some dungeons. I like the premise.
I am picturing an underground room in a dungeon with a vaulted invisible ceiling. When the party looks up they see further up than is reality and see roots and dirt. This is an invisible ceiling with 12 stirges who will attack on site once the party enters and pauses to look up.
Illusionary floor section in corridor conceals 10'spiked pit trap with a hooded cobra at the bottom.
Illusionary wall section as a secret door.
Invisible armor.
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Deleted
Deleted Member
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Post by Deleted on Apr 19, 2018 23:14:04 GMT -6
A 500 foot deep pit with an illusion of a set of stairs.
heh heh heh...
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Post by bigjackbrass on Apr 20, 2018 1:20:08 GMT -6
Grimtooth's Traps has a number of these. I like the simple examples of misdirection, where players actually choose to step into the trap, thinking they're playing safe: there's a spike-filled pit in the corridor, with only a narrow ledge down each side... but the illusion is the pit which is really solid floor, and the trap is the spring-loaded ledges ready to slam them into the ceiling. Likewise, two pits in a row, where the first is perfectly visible (or perhaps sloppily camouflaged) but the second is under the illusion of a solid floor, tempting characters to jump over the first one to "safe" ground...
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Post by talysman on Apr 20, 2018 16:08:16 GMT -6
- Invisible floor covering 60-foot pit with lava in bottom. Pit "blocks" further progress along a corridor. Dungeon inhabitants know the trick and just walk across.
- Invisible spiked barrier blocking a corridor. As party enters corridor, enemy patrol enters from behind and chases party towards barrier. Barrier can be bypassed using a secret side passage.
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Post by scalydemon on Apr 20, 2018 21:53:18 GMT -6
Bumping into what turns out to be Wonder Woman's jet would be pretty funny. As soon as they finish feeling around and sort of figure out what it is it takes off.>>>
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Post by DungeonDevil on Apr 22, 2018 14:52:59 GMT -6
A house that appears to have a nicely-appointed second-storey bedroom. However, the floor in the middle of the room is an illusion and anyone walking in that area falls down to the first floor (taking damage, as appropriate). www.imdb.com/title/tt0597040/
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Post by hamurai on Apr 22, 2018 23:52:03 GMT -6
You may as well turn the idea around - the walls or floors can be there, but invisible (similar to talysman's idea). The characters will have to feel their way around. Doors may become visible once opened (think of it like... a HeroQuest board with some door markers standing around, but no walls arise anywhere).
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