Potion of sickness
! | |
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Name | sickness |
Appearance | random |
Base price | 50 zm |
Weight | 20 |
Monster use | Will not be used by monsters. |
A potion of sickness is a type of potion that appears in NetHack. As indicated by the messages associated with it, the potion is biologically contaminated fruit juice.
Contents
Generation
Rogues start the game with an uncursed potion of sickness.[1]
Pestilence will always generate with a stack of several potions of sickness.[2]
Alchemy
When performing alchemy by mixing two random types of potion that have no recipe, the result is a potion(s) of sickness 22.5% of the time.[3] Dipping a stack of fruit juice potions into a potion of sickness will 'contaminate' the stack, turning them into potions of sickness.
Description
Quaffing a potion of sickness will cause you to lose HP, lower one of your attributes and possibly abuse constitution, depending on beatitude and whether or not you have poison resistance[4] - it does not cause terminal sickness (e.g. as with food poisoning). Quaffing the potion will also shock you out of hallucination and back to your senses.[5]
The effects of beatitude on the potion are displayed below:
Case | You have no poison resistance | You have poison resistance |
---|---|---|
blessed | You lose 1 hit point. | You lose 1 hit point. |
uncursed | You lose 1-10 hit points, one of your attributes is reduced by 3-6, abuse constitution. | You lose 1 hit point, one of your attributes is reduced by 1, abuse constitution. |
cursed | You lose 1-15 hit points, one of your attributes is reduced by 3-6, abuse constitution. | You lose 1 hit point, one of your attributes is reduced by 1, abuse constitution. |
If you are a Healer, you are completely protected from these effects;[6][7] if you have the sustain ability property, your attributes are not reduced.[8]
While monsters do not quaff or otherwise use potions of sickness, Pestilence will quaff potions of sickness to heal himself like other monsters would with a potion of healing; hitting Pestilence with the potion will have the same effect.[9]
Dipping
If you #dip a unicorn horn into the potion, it will become a potion of fruit juice - this also happens if you cancel the potion.
If you dip darts, arrows, shuriken, or crossbow bolts into a potion of sickness, it will coat the stack of projectiles in poison, using up the potion and prompting you to type-name it. Poisoned weapons do d6 extra damage and have a 10% chance of instant kill for non-resistant monsters; the poison has a 10% chance of wearing off on each successful attack.[10]
Throwing and wielding
Hitting a monster with a wielded or thrown potion will reduce their hit points if successful: monsters with a sickness attack or poison resistance are immune, while other monsters have their current HP and maximum HP halved, each subject to separate rolls versus monster MR. if the monster's maximum HP is brought below the current HP, the current HP is reduced to the new maximum HP.
Strategy
Potions of sickness are typically best used for poisoning projectiles, though lawful characters will take a -1 hit to their alignment record for each use of a poisoned weapon; alchemy makes it somewhat easy to procure more potions for poisoning projectiles with. There are many late-game monsters, up to and including some otherwise-powerful quest nemeses, that lack poison resistance and can be easily felled by something as simple as a stack of poisoned projectiles; Tourists in particular that hold on to their starting stack of +2 darts can poison them to use as an effective weapon against the Master of Thieves.
While a potion of sickness can be used as a hallucination cure if you can mitigate the HP and attribute loss (e.g. with poison resistance, a potion of restore ability, or a ring of sustain ability), they are only worth using for this purpose if you lack any other cure, such as potions of extra healing, full healing or a unicorn horn.
For players that have no interest in poisoned weapons, this potion is a good candidate for dilution or else converting to fruit juice for other purposes.
Identification
Potions of sickness can be easily identified by dipping a unicorn horn into them, as discussed above; while cancelling the potions does the same, cancelling the potion of see invisible has the same effect. Dipping a non-poisoned missile weapon into a potion of sickness will form a coating on it, which is reliable for informal identification.
Messages
- Yecch! This stuff tastes like poison.
- You quaffed a potion of sickness.
- (But in fact it was mildly stale <slime mold> juice.)
- This line is added if the potion was blessed.
- (But in fact it was biologically contaminated <slime mold> juice.)
- This line is added if you quaffed a non-blessed potion and have poison resistance; you only lose one attribute point.
- Fortunately, you have been immunized.
- You are a Healer, so you suffer no ill effects.
- You are shocked back to your senses!
- You were hallucinating, and were cured by quaffing the potion.
- You feel weaker.
- Your strength was lowered.
- Your muscles won't obey you.
- Your dexterity was lowered.
- You feel very sick.
- Your constitution was lowered.
- Your brain is on fire.
- Your intelligence was lowered.
- Your judgement is impaired.
- Your wisdom was lowered.
- You break out in hives.
- Your charisma was lowered.
- <monster> looks rather ill.
- A monster without immunity was hit by a potion of sickness, or Pestilence was hit by a potion of healing.
- <monster> looks unharmed.
- A monster with a sickness attack or poison resistance was hit by a potion of sickness.
- <potion> forms a coating on <item>.
- You dipped a poisonable item into a potion of sickness.
Variants
SLASH'EM
In SLASH'EM, bladed weapons can be poisoned as well; poisoned weapons are also subject to a weight-based chance of losing their poisonous coating (1 in [10 - (weight/10)] chance).
References
- ↑ src/u_init.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 127
- ↑ src/makemon.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 1312
- ↑ src/potion.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 2058
- ↑ src/potion.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 855
- ↑ src/potion.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 897
- ↑ src/potion.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 859
- ↑ src/potion.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 867
- ↑ src/potion.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 877
- ↑ src/potion.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 1444
- ↑ uhitm.c in NetHack 3.4.3, line 1349
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