MerakSpielman
First Post
well, let's take Werewolves.
I always imagined that they weren't injured by mundane weapons, not because the weapons couldn't penetrate their hide, but becasue their were-nature made the wounds heal as quickly as they happened.
A magical sword is enchanted to be true when it strikes, to have a super-keen edge, to be more flexible and strong, to be light, etc... Its magical nature (in my mind) is nothing more than an unnatural enhancement of mundane features.
For some creatures, a little unnatural sharpness and accuracy is just what is needed to bypass the DR (Stone Golems, for instance)
I do not see the magical sword damaging my werewolf.
Silver, on the other hand, is like poison to lycanthropes. Like sunlight to vampires, they have a natural vulnerability to it. The wounds from silver don't close instantly - they stay open and cause real damage.
This is my interpretation for justification of silver-damages but magic doesn't. Take it or leave it.
I always imagined that they weren't injured by mundane weapons, not because the weapons couldn't penetrate their hide, but becasue their were-nature made the wounds heal as quickly as they happened.
A magical sword is enchanted to be true when it strikes, to have a super-keen edge, to be more flexible and strong, to be light, etc... Its magical nature (in my mind) is nothing more than an unnatural enhancement of mundane features.
For some creatures, a little unnatural sharpness and accuracy is just what is needed to bypass the DR (Stone Golems, for instance)
I do not see the magical sword damaging my werewolf.
Silver, on the other hand, is like poison to lycanthropes. Like sunlight to vampires, they have a natural vulnerability to it. The wounds from silver don't close instantly - they stay open and cause real damage.
This is my interpretation for justification of silver-damages but magic doesn't. Take it or leave it.