Manbearcat
Legend
Make sure to check in at the front desk to see if they have a Warlord to shout your spine back on!
I love this.Do not agree if you have any healing magic.
you have a spell cure wounds. if seals any cut.
If you apply it to shallow muscle cuts, they heal up no scar and no problems. Sometimes with deep cuts the patient dies. The symptoms can vary but people without magic used honey to some success in healing so you dap in some honey before casting the cure wounds and those issues went away. Now you have learned something.
Then you start running in to issues relating to ruptured and cut blood vessels. Further experimentation and some anatomical study later and you have a better success rate. Still with the same basic spell. Some anatomical knowledge and some simple herbalism.
More time and observation can reveal that some other stuff can substitute for honey and that wine or vinegar, tincture of iodine and so forth can clean wounds. That dirt and fingers can cause infections. You can get a long way with a trick that works and some time and observations.
Then some wizards discovers a spell to mend his broom handle, wonders if that would work with broken bones and realises he would nee to see the bones. Makes a note of it on the margins of something or other.
Later another magic user reads the spell and the note and thinks they can adapt something to see the bone, tries it out and lot its works at least for simple breaks.
Now we have a basic diagnostic and 2 healing tricks.
And the same to your father.I've been spending way too much time at hospitals the last few weeks with my Father. He is recovering slowly from a major surgery. I wish you good tests and speedy recovery friend!
Yeah my players tend to want to know, and I tend to include NPCs relating to those sorts of things, from physicians to engineers to professionals of all sorts.Hope things go well.
I do not think too much about medicine in a fantasy setting. The campaign circles around the PCs and they never get sick or need cares from common colds and such. They may get a plague or sickness from a magical disease, but rarely since cures and healing is so common to the PCs.
Other problems such as sanitation is not brought up much either. Large cities have a sewer system mostly for places to make a dungeon, but small towns that dump their filth into the river or onto the street is passed over.
Thanks youOur prayers are with you, Doc.
I'm always a bit torn between this, and the sort of thing described at the top of this post.I tend to enjoy high fantasy with low or difficult healing magic. Because organic bodies are complicated AF. Plus, it gives me more excuses to have fantasy prosthetics and badass scars, and makes practical mundane healing techniques a lot more valuable.
Good luck at the hospital!
Oh wow! Okay! I’m excited to dig through all that!Wishing you all the best doctorbadwolf.
I once took part in the 2019 Cure Light Wounds Jam on itch.io, and you can take a look at some of the entries to see what kinds of ideas the participants came up with! Although my entry wasn't fantasy, it was sci-fi: The Ech0 Consultation is a one-shot duet game inspired by the Sector General novels of James White!
![]()
The Ech0 Consultation by Role Over Play Dead
2 doctors in 1 body. Complicated collaborations. Risky medicine.roleoverplaydead.itch.io
And it's available in French, too (as part of a collection)!
![]()
ECH0 by Khelren
Une collection de deux jeux narratifs: "ECH0" et "La consultation ECH0"khelren.itch.io
Hang in there.So, I’m at the ER today, getting many tests and a neurologist consultation, possibly a lumbar puncture (spinal tap).
Hopefully the care here goes up to 11, as it were.
Mostly limited to having people like this running around when people call for a doctor.Anyway, anyone ever given extensive thought to medical care in fantasy worlds?
Yeah the worst part so far was the MRI, which at 4 distinct scans too over an hour, but we confirmed I have to get a lumbar puncture, so that won’t be fun.Hang in there.
Haha nice!Mostly limited to having people like this running around when people call for a doctor.
View attachment 280709
View attachment 280710
View attachment 280711