Orcrist
| ) Orcrist (No tile) | |
|---|---|
| Base item | elven broadsword |
| Damage vs. small | 1d6+1d4 ×2 |
| Damage vs. large | 1d6+1 ×2 |
| To-hit bonus | +1d5 |
| Bonus versus | orcs |
| Weapon skill | broadsword |
| Size | one-handed |
| Affiliation | |
| When carried |
(none) |
| When wielded |
|
| When invoked |
(none) |
| Base price | 2000 zm |
| Weight | 70 |
| Material | wood |
Orcrist is an artifact that appears in NetHack. Its default alignment is chaotic, and its base item is an elven broadsword.
Contents
Generation
An elven broadsword randomly generated on the ground, in a shop or as a death drop has a base 1⁄20 chance of being made into an artifact, which will always be Orcrist assuming the artifact has not yet been generated. Chaotic heroes that are not orcish may receive Orcrist as a potential sacrifice gift.[1]
Orcrist is one of two artifacts that can be created by the hero naming an individual weapon of the same base item after that artifact, with the other being Sting—creating Orcrist this way will break illiterate conduct.
The following information pertains to an upcoming version (NetHack 3.7.0). If this version is now released, please verify that the information below is still accurate, then update the page to incorporate it.
Per commit d87cadaf and commit c2c797fa, artifact balance is substantially reworked: artifacts have 2 additional internal stats—the minimum sacrifice value required to obtain them by sacrificing (which is usually just the difficulty rating of the monster sacrificed + 1), and a flat number added to the weapon's enchantment when it is either randomly generated or gifted.
Orcrist requires a sacrifice of at least 4 value, and will always have +3 added to its enchantment when randomly generated or given as a sacrifice gift.Description
Orcrist has a +d5 to-hit bonus and deals doubled damage to all orcs (including orc mummies, orc zombies and orcish heroes), and while wielded it warns of orcs by glowing blue. Neither Orcrist or Sting resist the effects of reading a cursed scroll of enchant weapon.[2]
Like its counterpart Sting, and unlike other artifacts, Orcrist will not cause an artifact blast when wielded by a hero that is of a different alignment or else has a poor alignment record, instead unconditionally blasting any hero that is either orcish or currently polymorphed into an orc and tries to wield the artifact.
Strategy
Orcrist is generally not of much use for most roles, unless they lack a solid weapon and are able to advance their skill in broadsword. Orcs are usually plentiful and also not particularly hard to hit for more combat-proficient roles, even before the +5 to-hit bonus of Orcrist is applied. Those who lack experience dealing with groups of orcs may find it a useful supplement, provided they can find an altar or an elven broadsword to name early enough. A role with the broadsword skill and no reliable weapon, such as a Tourist, may consider naming Orcrist to get an early medium-damage weapon.
Naming Orcrist is often used by chaotic, non-orcish heroes to force an early Stormbringer via sacrifice: heroes without a guaranteed first sacrifice gift will always receive a co-aligned artifact, and naming Sting and Orcrist removes them from the pool, leaving Stormbringer and Grimtooth as possible gifts. This is most easily done with elven Priests and Rangers, since elven heroes never receive Grimtooth as a sacrifice gift, and elven Rangers start with an elven dagger that can be made into Sting at any time. Orcish heroes will never receive Sting or Orcrist in the first place, and thus orcish Rogues and Rangers have a 1⁄2 chance of obtaining Stormbringer as their first gift.
The following information pertains to an upcoming version (NetHack 3.7.0). If this version is now released, please verify that the information below is still accurate, then update the page to incorporate it.
The changes to sacrifice gifts mean that forcing Stormbringer via this exact method is no longer possible for elven Priests, since Demonbane is made into their first sacrifice gift per commit b1a5a9c3—elven Rangers can still reliably force Stormbringer with the above method, and orcish Rogues and Rangers still have a 1⁄2 chance of their first gift being Stormbringer.History
Orcrist first appears in Hack 1.0, where it is the sole artifact available until the addition of Excalibur in NetHack 1.3d. In Hack 1.0, any weapon can be named Orcrist, which does not transform the weapon but grants it extra damage against orcs, and this can be done with multiple weapons—Hack 1.0.2 restricts the 'creation' of Orcrist this way to two-handed swords, though multiple copies are still possible until NetHack 3.0.0.
Orcrist remains a two-handed sword from Hack 1.0.2 to NetHack 3.0.10, including some variants based on those versions. NetHack 3.1.0 changes its base item to an elven broadsword.
Origin
In J.R.R. Tolkien's The Hobbit, Orcrist (known in Sindarin as "Goblin-cleaver") was an elven sword originally forged several millennia ago by high-elven smiths in Gondolin alongside Glamdring, the sword of King Turgon—like most elven blades, both swords radiated a blue glow whenever orcs were near. Orcrist has a jeweled hilt and high-quality scabbard, with runes on the sword bearing its name: it is described as killing "hundreds of goblins in its time, when the fair Elves of Gondolin hunted them in the hills or did battle before their walls", and was most likely lost during the Fall of Gondolin; it nonetheless became known as the "Biter" among goblins and orcs alike.
Both swords were discovered in a troll-hoard by Thorin's group, with Elrond identifying Orcrist and Thorin promising to honor the sword by killing goblins with it. He would have his chance to do so when he and his company were captured by orcs in the Misty Mountains, who brought them to their kingdom underneath and dragged the group before their ruler, the Great Goblin. As he accused Thorin's group of spying, one of their captors held out Orcrist to the Great Goblin, and he and his soldiers were enraged at the sight of the "Biter" that had once felled many of their number. As he then approached Thorin, the great fire that lit the large cavern went out, and the Great Goblin was quickly slain by the Glamdring-wielding Gandalf, allowing Bilbo and the dwarves to escape.
Variants
SLASH'EM
SLASH'EM changes Orcrist's alignment from chaotic to lawful, as all elves are changed to lawful alignment, and its to-hit bonus is made flat like all artifact weapons in SLASH'EM. Orcrist grants +5 to-hit and doubled damage against orcs, with a 3⁄20 chance (15%) of canceling any orc it hits.
Orcs as a monster class are more varied and can be much more powerful than in vanilla NetHack, making Orcrist slightly more useful for a longer stretch of the game.
SporkHack
In SporkHack, Orcrist deals an additional +d4 damage to all monsters.
dNetHack
In dNetHack, notdNetHack and notnotdNetHack, Orcrist has +1d5 to-hit and double damage against orcs and demons, and warns of them while wielded.
FIQHack
In FIQHack, the hero's deity will never gift them a nameable artifact such as Orcrist.[3] This makes forcing Stormbringer much easier for chaotic characters.
xNetHack
In xNetHack, Orcrist is made of copper like all other elven weapons, and naming an elven broadsword Orcrist will convert it to copper if it is not already made of that material.
EvilHack
In EvilHack, Orcrist is made of mithril, and naming an elven broadsword Orcrist will convert it to mithril if it is not already made of that material.
Orcrist has +1d5 to-hit and double damage against orcs along with +1d8 damage from its material, and has a small chance of instantly killing any orc it hits, making it very dangerous if an orcish hero encounters a hostile monster wielding it. Orcs that see a hero wielding Orcrist will become hostile, and orcish shopkeepers will bar that hero from their shop.
Orcrist can be combined with Sting at a forge to create Glamdring, an artifact mithril elven long sword with the orc-warning and orc-slaying abilities of its component artifacts.
Encyclopedia entry
The Great Goblin gave a truly awful howl of rage when he looked at it, and all his soldiers gnashed their teeth, clashed their shields, and stamped. They knew the sword at once. It had killed hundreds of goblins in its time, when the fair elves of Gondolin hunted them in the hills or did battle before their walls. They had called it Orcrist, Goblin-cleaver, but the goblins called it simply Biter. They hated it and hated worse any one that carried it.
References
- ↑ src/artifact.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 156
- ↑ src/wield.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 800: only non-nameable artifacts resist the cursed scroll
- ↑ https://github.com/FredrIQ/fiqhack/blob/33e95f977761f66186a1f9aea1ca5e5d262912a2/libnethack/src/artifact.c#L160