Sacrifice

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In NetHack, sacrifice is an action performed at an altar that can reduce your prayer timeout and make prayer safe, increase your luck, and confer other effects that depend on the sacrifice. As an offering to the gods, this naturally breaks the atheist conduct.[1]

Description

A sacrifice generally requires a corpse that is fresh to be 'prepared' via the #offer extended command while standing on the altar - this involves touching the corpse regardless of it being in your inventory or already on the altar, i.e. a cockatrice or chickatrice corpse will result in immediate stoning unless your character is wearing gloves.[2] The corpse in question must be aged no more than 50 turns since its creation or removal from an ice box (if it was created in there) to be accepted as a sacrifice and consumed, with the exception of acid blob corpses.[3] The only non-corpse item that can be sacrificed is the Amulet of Yendor (or imitations thereof), and offering your character's god the real Amulet is required to win the game.

Whether or not the sacrifice is received well (if at all) depends on the value of the sacrifice, as well as the god whose altar it is offered on versus the one your character serves. As in many other instances, hallucination will change the resulting messages.

Ordinary sacrifice

Assuming a sacrifice to your character's own deity, a corpse with positive value will please them or reduce their anger, and a corpse may have a negative value if sacrificing it would anger them - the value of the sacrifice is determined in part by the difficulty of the former monster, and is usually equal to their difficulty + 1. If your character attempts to sacrifice a corpse with no value, i.e. usually a corpse that is too old as described above, nothing happens regardless of deity.[4] Partly eaten corpses have their value decreased by an amount roughly corresponding to the portion of the corpse that was eaten.[5][6] Undead corpses sacrificed by a non-chaotic character have +1 additional value.[7]

Sacrificing to your god

The effects of your god accepting a sacrifice of positive value their altar are detailed in the table below, with the effects depending on their anger level, your character's alignment record and prayer timeout. Sacrificing the corpse of a unicorn, a former pet that died while tame or a monster belonging to your character's race has differing and often drastic adjustments to its value, including whether or not the sacrifice is to your god or another god - these are covered in the sections below this one. Sacrifices at cross-aligned altars are also covered in later sections.

The table also details if it is potentially safe to pray after a particular sacrifice - you can verify your prayer timeout and safety to pray by offering another valid sacrifice, or else through another method such as enlightenment. Remember that these actions only affect base luck, and that your luck can still be negative due to modifiers from cursed luck items.

Alignment Anger Prayer timeout Effect Message Safe to pray?
Any Greater than zero[8] Any If you are lawful or neutral and sacrifice a corpse from a monster of 7 difficulty or higher, or otherwise (as a chaotic) sacrifice a corpse from a monster of 11 difficulty or higher, your god's anger is decreased by a portion of the sacrifice's value, with a cap of 24 value:[9] 18 rounded down if you are lawful or neutral, and 112 rounded down if you are chaotic.[10]
  • If your god is pacified, your base luck is set to zero if negative.[11]
  • If your god's anger is reduced but they are not pacified, your base luck is increased by 1 if it is negative.[12]
  • Otherwise, if your sacrifice does not have enough value, a message is printed and nothing else happens.[13]
If your god is pacified and you are hallucinating: <Deity> seems cosmic (not a new fact).
And otherwise: <Deity> seems mollified.
If your god is less angry and you are hallucinating: <Deity> seems groovy.
And otherwise: <Deity> seems slightly mollified.
If their anger has not lowered and you are hallucinating: The gods seem tall.
And otherwise: You have a feeling of inadequacy.
  • Maybe
  • No
  • No
Negative None Variable Your alignment is increased by the lowest of the following values:[14]
  • 24 points.
  • The value required to bring your alignment record to zero.
  • The value of the sacrifice.
You feel partially absolved.[15]
  • Yes (if overall luck is positive)
0 or greater None Greater than 0[16] Your prayer timeout is decreased depending on the value of your sacrifice (represented by x), with the minimum for possible timeout being zero:[17]
  • If you are lawful or neutral, prayer timeout is decreased by 25x2, or 12.5 times the sacrifice's value.
  • Otherwise (if you are chaotic), your prayer timeout is decreased by 125x6, or ~20.8 times the sacrifice's value.
A message is printed, and you gain luck depending on whether or not your prayer timeout is now zero:
  1. If your prayer timeout is set to 0 after this, your base luck is set to 0 if it is negative.[18]
  2. If your prayer timeout is not set to 0 after this, your base luck is increased by 1 if it is negative.[19]
If your prayer timeout is zero and you are hallucinating:[20]
Overall, there is a smell of fried onions.
Otherwise: You have a feeling of reconciliation.

If your prayer timeout is not yet zero and you are hallucinating:[21]
You realize the gods are not like you and I.
Otherwise: You have a hopeful feeling.

  1. Yes (if overall luck is positive)
  2. No
Greater than 0 None Variable The following occurs:
  • If your base luck is 0 or greater and you are at least at experience level 3, you have a chance of receiving an artifact as a gift.[22]
  • Otherwise, your base luck is increased by 524 of the sacrifice value (rounded down), and if it is still negative, it will be set to 0.[23]
If you receive a sacrifice gift:
An object appears at your feet!
The voice of <deity> <thunders/booms/rings out>: "Use my gift wisely!"
If your luck is increased and you are blind:
You think something brushed your <feet>.
If this occurs while you are hallucinating and not blind:
You see crabgrass at your <feet>. A funny thing in a dungeon.
Otherwise:
You glimpse a four-leaf clover at your <feet>.
  • No
  • Yes (if overall luck is positive)

Sacrifice gifts

As mentioned above, if your prayer timeout is 0, you have positive alignment, you are at experience level 3, your base Luck is 0 or greater, and your god is not angry, you have a 110 + 2xy chance of an artifact gift being placed on the altar, where x is the total amount of existing aritfacts and y is the number of gifts granted previously.[24] Receiving a gift unrestricts the corresponding weapon skill if applicable, exercises wisdom, and also increases prayer timeout by rnz(300 + 50x) where x is the total amount of existing aritfacts.[25][26][22][24] Artifacts generated this way are erosion-proofed, non-cursed and set to at least +0 enchantment.[27]

A sacrifice gift consists of an artifact appropriate to your alignment: your first gift will always be a co-aligned artifact that does not hate your current form, if any are available.[28][29] If your role has a guaranteed first gift, its alignment is adjusted to your starting alignment at the beginning of that game[30][31] - your role's coaligned gifts are favored over your role's cross-aligned gifts, and both are favored over a normal coaligned gift, which in practice serves to ensure that you obtain your role's first gift. Unaligned artifacts become eligible for sacrifice gifts once a co-aligned artifact has already been gifted, or else if no eligible artifact can be given this way.[32]

Sacrifices of negative value

There are also sacrifices that displease your god, which have a negative value and similarly negative effects depending on the offense you committed in offering the corpse:[33][34]

  • Sacrifice of unicorns is somewhat complicated, and is covered in full in the appropriate section - in general, however, sacrifice of a unicorn matching your character's current alignment is always undesirable: sacrificing one to your god specifically has a value of -5, and your character loses one point of wisdom.[35]
  • If you offer a monster of the same race as your character on a co-aligned altar, and you are not chaotic or in the form of a major demon:
    • If this is done on a high altar, your character's god reaches maximum anger immediately, with the appropriate effects.[36][37]
    • Otherwise, wisdom is abused, the altar is converted to chaotic, any attendant priest is angered, and a hostile demon lord is summoned[38][39][40] - the summoning paralyzes your character for three turns, ignoring free action.[41] Your god's anger is incremented by 3 and they immediately smite your character (unless in Gehennom), and the character also loses 1 point of wisdom and -5 luck and alignment record.

Sacrificing pets

Sacrificing a monster to a co-aligned god at their altar after it died while tame has a value of -1, which will anger them[42] - the corpse will not be consumed in this case, and your character is given the aggravate monster intrinsic along with a -3 penalty to alignment record.[43] If the monster went feral (i.e. became untame) before dying, it no longer counts as a pet and may be killed and sacrificed as usual.

Cross-aligned altars

(Level + 2) / (Level + 8)

If making a sacrifice of positive value at an altar that does not belong to your character's god, and it is not a high altar or an altar in Gehennom, this is treated as an attempt to convert it.[44][45] Trying to convert a compatible altar has a chance of success that rises with your experience level, with a probability of XL + 2XL + 8.[46] Failing will incur a -1 luck penalty and abuse wisdom, while succeeding will increase luck by 1, exercise wisdom and change the altar's alignment to that of your character.[47][48] Hostile minions may be sent by the god whose altar you tried to convert regardless of whether you succeed, with the chance dependent on your alignment record and experience level.[49][50] Any aligned priest tending to an altar that is converted will become hostile.[51]

If making a sacrifice of negative value at an altar not of your alignment, a conversion attempt will not occur and the altar's god will be angered, while your character's god will have their anger decreased by one.[33][34] The corpse is not consumed, so you can reduce as much anger as you like this way - the effects of angering any god still occur, i.e. loss of protection and smiting.

If a conversion is attempted on an aligned altar, and you have either negative alignment record, an angry co-aligned god, or a sacrifice of a unicorn that is of your character's alignment (which is elaborated on below), there is a chance of your character having their alignment converted to that of the altar[52][53] - if this occurs, you also lose 3 luck, have your alignment record reset to zero and have your prayer timeout increased by 300, and and this will always occur if done via co-aligned unicorn sacrifice (which has a value of -1).[54] Attempting this while standing on an unaligned altar, or while already permanently converted by any means, will cause the sacrifice to be rejected and incur several penalties: the anger of your character's current god increases by 3, said god smites you unless you are in Gehennom, -5 penalties are applied to luck and alignment record, and your character loses 2 points of wisdom.[55] If your alignment is converted before you have been admitted to your quest, the game becomes unwinnable.

Sacrificing on a high altar not belonging to your character's god will bring the full wrath of that altar's god upon them:[56][37][36] a bolt of lightning, followed by a wide-angle disintegration beam if the character survives the lightning.[57][58] If this occurs on the Astral Plane or in Moloch's Sanctum (where the high altars are ordinarily encountered), the angered deity will then send in three sets of hostile minions.[59]

Sacrificing the Amulet of Yendor

The goal of the game is to offer the Amulet of Yendor on the co-aligned high altar on the Astral Plane. When you do, you ascend to demigod-hood ('Mortal, thou hast done well!'). This does not take into account whether, or by what means, you have converted your alignment, so a helm of opposite alignment can be used to quickly ascend at a cross-aligned altar. However, you get a score multiplier of 2× if you never converted and are still of your starting alignment, or 1.5× if you converted and used a helm to change back.

If you offer the Amulet on a cross-aligned high altar, that altar's god gains dominion over yours and allows you to escape in celestial disgrace. If you offer the Amulet on the high altar to Moloch in the Sanctum, Moloch 'mercilessly snuffs out your life', or if you have life saving, disintegrates you into a pile of dust, ignoring disintegration resistance. (If you somehow survive that, you again escape.)

Offering a cheap plastic imitation of the Amulet of Yendor on a high altar gives a penalty of -1 luck and no other effect. However, if the amulet was identified as a fake, the penalty is instead -3 luck, -1 alignment and your god getting angry by 3.

Offering a real or fake Amulet on a non-high altar does not end the game. If the altar is an unaligned altar in Gehennom, your god gets angry and Moloch smites you. Otherwise, if hallucinating, 'You feel homesick'; or if the altar is co-aligned, 'You feel an urge to return to the surface'; otherwise, 'You feel ashamed'.

Sacrificing creatures of your own race

If the creature you sacrifice is of your own race, you get good effects if you are chaotic and bad effects otherwise. The age of the corpse does not matter, so corpses left by zombies and mummies will work.

If you are chaotic:
You gain five points of alignment.[60]
If the altar is chaotic, you gain two points of Luck, and if the altar is unaligned, you lose two points of Luck.[61] Your Luck is unaffected if the altar is cross-aligned (but the altar will be converted as noted in the cross-aligned altars section below).
If you are non-chaotic:
Your wisdom is abused unless you are polymorphed into a demon.[62] ("You'll regret this infamous offense!")
You lose five points of alignment.[63]
Your god's anger increases by three.[64]
Your Luck decreases by 5.[65]
You lose one point of wisdom.[66]
Outside of Gehennom, your god will punish you as for praying too much (depending on the level of anger).[67]
If the altar is chaotic, you'll destroy it and anger any attendant priest.[68]
Whether or not you are chaotic:
If the altar is chaotic or unaligned, a demon may be summoned. This will be a demon lord (Yeenoghu or Jubilex) if one of them hasn't been generated yet, or else a major demon (which will always be a foocubus outside Gehennom). The demon will be peaceful if you are chaotic and hostile otherwise. If a demon is summoned, you are paralyzed with fear for three turns; free action does not protect against this.[69]
If you are polymorphed into a demon, "You find the idea very satisfying."; your wisdom is exercised.[70]
If the altar is lawful or neutral, it will immediately be converted to chaotic (except on the Astral Plane),[71] independent of your alignment; if there is a priest tending the altar, they will be angered.[72]

The check for same race is done before the check for a former pet and ignores the check for age, so same-race corpses are always fit for sacrifice until they rot away completely. This is just about the only time an undead creature is a valid sacrifice.

Keep in mind that werecreatures are considered human, so sacrificing them if your character is human will have the consequences described above.

Sacrificing unicorns

Sacrificing unicorns is complicated because the altar's alignment, your alignment, and the unicorn's alignment all factor into the outcome.[73] A unicorn's alignment is represented by its color. The white is lawful, grey neutral, and black chaotic. The points to remember are:

  • Never sacrifice a unicorn on an altar of its own alignment. You lose one point of wisdom[74] and the altar's god becomes angry, with the same effect as angering that god through prayer.[75][33] If the altar is not of your alignment, your god's anger is reduced by one.[34]
  • Never sacrifice a unicorn on a high altar. On an altar of your own alignment, this is unnecessary. On an altar of another alignment, this will not convert you or the altar, but only angers the altar's god.[76]

Each time you sacrifice a unicorn of a different alignment on your own altar, you get a +5 boost to your alignment[77] and the message "You feel appropriately {lawful | neutral | chaotic}",[78] or "You feel you are thoroughly on the right path" if alignment is at maximum.[79]

The rest of the effects are summarized in the following table:

Your Alignment Unicorn Alignment Altar Alignment Effect
X Y X Good
X Y Z Attempt to convert altar
X X Y You become Y
X X X Bad
X Y Y Bad


If the above table is confusing, here is a complete list:

You Unicorn Altar Effect
Lawful.pngLawful Lawful.pngWhite Lawful.pngLawful Bad
Lawful.pngLawful Lawful.pngWhite Neutral.pngNeutral You become neutral
Lawful.pngLawful Lawful.pngWhite Chaotic.pngChaotic You become chaotic
Lawful.pngLawful Neutral.pngGrey Lawful.pngLawful Good
Lawful.pngLawful Neutral.pngGrey Neutral.pngNeutral Bad
Lawful.pngLawful Neutral.pngGrey Chaotic.pngChaotic Attempt to convert altar
Lawful.pngLawful Chaotic.pngBlack Lawful.pngLawful Good
Lawful.pngLawful Chaotic.pngBlack Neutral.pngNeutral Attempt to convert altar
Lawful.pngLawful Chaotic.pngBlack Chaotic.pngChaotic Bad
Neutral.pngNeutral Lawful.pngWhite Lawful.pngLawful Bad
Neutral.pngNeutral Lawful.pngWhite Neutral.pngNeutral Good
Neutral.pngNeutral Lawful.pngWhite Chaotic.pngChaotic Attempt to convert altar
Neutral.pngNeutral Neutral.pngGrey Lawful.pngLawful You become lawful
Neutral.pngNeutral Neutral.pngGrey Neutral.pngNeutral Bad
Neutral.pngNeutral Neutral.pngGrey Chaotic.pngChaotic You become chaotic
Neutral.pngNeutral Chaotic.pngBlack Lawful.pngLawful Attempt to convert altar
Neutral.pngNeutral Chaotic.pngBlack Neutral.pngNeutral Good
Neutral.pngNeutral Chaotic.pngBlack Chaotic.pngChaotic Bad
Chaotic.pngChaotic Lawful.pngWhite Lawful.pngLawful Bad
Chaotic.pngChaotic Lawful.pngWhite Neutral.pngNeutral Attempt to convert altar
Chaotic.pngChaotic Lawful.pngWhite Chaotic.pngChaotic Good
Chaotic.pngChaotic Neutral.pngGrey Lawful.pngLawful Attempt to convert altar
Chaotic.pngChaotic Neutral.pngGrey Neutral.pngNeutral Bad
Chaotic.pngChaotic Neutral.pngGrey Chaotic.pngChaotic Good
Chaotic.pngChaotic Chaotic.pngBlack Lawful.pngLawful You become lawful
Chaotic.pngChaotic Chaotic.pngBlack Neutral.pngNeutral You become neutral
Chaotic.pngChaotic Chaotic.pngBlack Chaotic.pngChaotic Bad

Note: You will lose any intrinsic protection whenever your alignment changes.

Messages

Nothing happens.
The corpse was too old to be sacrificed.
Your sacrifice is consumed in a <flash of light/burst of flame>!
The standard message indicating a successful sacrifice. Lawful characters see a flash of light, others see a burst of flame. If it is not followed by any other message, it is safe to pray; otherwise, see below.

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.

Neutral characters see a "cloud of smoke".
Your sacrifice disappears!
As above, if lawful and blind.
Your sacrifice sprouts wings and a propeller and roars away!
Your sacrifice puffs up, swelling bigger and bigger, and pops!
Your sacrifice collapses into a cloud of dancing particles and fades away!
As above, if hallucinating. Which message you receive is randomly selected.
You feel appropriately <alignment>.
You feel you are thoroughly on the right path.
You sacrificed a cross-aligned unicorn on a coaligned altar, gaining 5 alignment record. The second message indicates you were already at maximum alignment record.
You sense a conflict between <your god> and <altar's god>.

then

You feel the power of <your god> increase. if not blind: The altar glows <color>.
You successfully converted an altar, and base Luck was increased by 1.
Unluckily, you feel the power of <your god> decrease.
You failed to convert an altar, and base Luck was reduced by 1.
The voice of <altar's god> booms: "Thou shalt pay for thine indiscretion!" if not blind: A <monster> of <god> appears before you.
The altar's (former) god sent a minion to punish your (attempted) conversion.
The altar is stained with <race> blood.
The altar has been converted to chaotic via same-race sacrifice.
You have a hopeful feeling.
Your prayer timeout has been reduced, but is still nonzero. Base luck, if negative, was increased by one. You may not pray.
You have a feeling of reconciliation.
Your prayer timeout has been reduced to zero. Base luck, if negative, was reset to zero. Unless you have a cursed luckstone, you may safely pray.
An object appears at your feet!
You have received a gift, and your prayer timeout has been increased. You may not safely pray.
You feel partially absolved.
Your alignment was negative and has been increased by the level of the corpse, to a maximum of zero. Sacrifice again to see if it is safe to pray.
You glimpse a four-leaf clover at your feet.
Your base Luck has been increased and is nonnegative. Unless you have a cursed luckstone, you may safely pray.
You think something brushed your foot.
As above, while blind.
You see crabgrass at your feet. A funny thing in a dungeon.
As above, while hallucinating.
So this is how you repay loyalty?
You attempted to sacrifice a former pet, your alignment record was reduced by 3, and you gained aggravate monster. The corpse was not consumed.
You have a sudden sense of a new direction.
You have been permanently converted to a new alignment.

Variants

SLASH'EM

In SLASH'EM, in addition to the usual benefits of sacrifice, you may have wielded and worn items blessed by your god, or minions granted as pets. The blessing effect extends to any wielded or alternate-wielded item, not just weapons. Additionally, due to the many new artifacts in SLASH'EM, there is much more variation in the types of artifacts you may receive.

Sacrifice gifts in SLASH'EM

Lawful gifts: Demonbane, Firewall (Flame mage 1st gift), Grayswandir, Holy Spear of Light, Orcrist, Quick Blade, Reaper (Yeoman 2nd gift), Skullcrusher (Caveman 1st gift), Snickersnee (Samurai 1st gift), Sting, Sunsword, Sword of Justice (Yeoman 1st gift)

Neutral gifts: Cleaver (Barbarian 1st gift), Deluder (Wizard 2nd gift), Disrupter (Priest 1st gift), Gauntlets of Defense (Monk 1st gift), Giantkiller, Luckblade, Magicbane (Wizard 1st gift), Mirrorbright (Healer 1st gift), Mjollnir (Valkyrie 1st gift), Sword of Balance, Vorpal Blade, Whisperfeet (Tourist 1st gift)

Chaotic gifts: Bat from Hell (Rogue 1st gift), Deathsword (Barbarian 2nd gift), Deep Freeze (Ice Mage 1st gift), Doomblade, Elfrist, Grimtooth, Hellfire, Houchou, Plague, Serpent's Tongue (Necromancer 1st gift), Stormbringer

Unaligned gifts: Dragonbane, Fire Brand, Frost Brand, Ogresmasher, Trollsbane, Wallet of Perseus, Werebane

FIQHack

FIQHack uses a different mechanism called piety to determine when you receive gifts or crowning from altar sacrifice. In addition, only gifted artifacts affect the rate of future artifact gifts. Artifacts obtained via wishing are not included in the calculation.

History

Until NetHack 3.6.0, if the first sacrifice gift did not find any eligible artifacts, then no artifact gift would be given at all. This would most commonly happen with elven Priests or Rangers who named Sting and Orcrist in the hope of guaranteeing Stormbringer as their first gift, only to fail because Stormbringer had been generated in bones already. This would make it impossible to get any sacrifice gifts for the entire game unless they were to change their alignment.

Changing your alignment would give an alignment bonus if you were lawful or a penalty if you were chaotic, instead of resetting your alignment record to zero.

References

  1. src/pray.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 1362
  2. src/pray.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 1366
  3. src/pray.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 1370
  4. src/pray.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 1591
  5. src/pray.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 1373: calls eaten_stat function
  6. src/eat.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 3220
  7. src/pray.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 1459: In practice, this only applies to wraith corpses. Other undead that leave corpses at all will leave corpses of their living counterparts, and these corpses are created as too old for normal sacrifice.
  8. src/pray.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 1688
  9. src/pray.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 1355
  10. src/pray.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 1690: Chaotic gods are harder to appease
  11. src/pray.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 1705
  12. src/pray.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 1698
  13. src/pray.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 1708
  14. src/pray.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 1714: ugod_is_angry tests for negative alignment record
  15. src/pray.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 1720
  16. src/pray.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 1721
  17. src/pray.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 1724
  18. src/pray.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 1739
  19. src/pray.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 1732
  20. src/pray.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 1734
  21. src/pray.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 1727
  22. 22.0 22.1 src/pray.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 1749
  23. src/pray.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 1774
  24. 24.0 24.1 src/pray.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 1750
  25. src/pray.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 1762
  26. src/pray.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 1765
  27. src/pray.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 1752
  28. src/artifact.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 156: gift alignment
  29. src/artifact.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 156: no gifts that blast you
  30. src/artifact.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 63
  31. src/artifact.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 160
  32. src/artifact.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 167
  33. 33.0 33.1 33.2 src/pray.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 1608: any negative-value sacrifice will anger the altar's god, calling gods_upset at line 1610
  34. 34.0 34.1 34.2 src/pray.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 1287: gods_upset function
  35. src/pray.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 1465
  36. 36.0 36.1 src/pray.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 1386: call desecrate_high_altar function
  37. 37.0 37.1 src/pray.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 1607: calls god_zaps_you immediately
  38. src/pray.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 1381
  39. src/pray.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 1389
  40. src/pray.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 1415
  41. src/pray.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 1209
  42. src/pray.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 1457
  43. src/pray.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 1450
  44. src/pray.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 1596
  45. src/pray.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 1617
  46. src/pray.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 1647
  47. src/pray.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 1650
  48. src/pray.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 1676
  49. src/pray.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 1666
  50. src/pray.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 1678
  51. src/pray.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 1670
  52. src/pray.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 1483
  53. src/pray.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 1620
  54. src/pray.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 582
  55. src/pray.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 1632
  56. src/pray.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 1597
  57. src/pray.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 582: god_zaps_you
  58. src/pray.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 614
  59. src/pray.c in NetHack 3.6.7, line 646
  60. pray.c in NetHack 3.4.3, line 1219
  61. pray.c in NetHack 3.4.3, line 1197
  62. pray.c in NetHack 3.4.3, line 1173
  63. pray.c in NetHack 3.4.3, line 1214
  64. pray.c in NetHack 3.4.3, line 1215
  65. pray.c in NetHack 3.4.3, line 1218
  66. pray.c in NetHack 3.4.3, line 1216
  67. pray.c in NetHack 3.4.3, line 1217
  68. pray.c in NetHack 3.4.3, line 1188
  69. pray.c in NetHack 3.4.3, line 1203
  70. pray.c in NetHack 3.4.3, line 1170
  71. pray.c in NetHack 3.4.3, line 1180
  72. pray.c in NetHack 3.4.3, line 1181
  73. pray.c in NetHack 3.4.3, line 1235
  74. pray.c in NetHack 3.4.3, line 1243
  75. pray.c in NetHack 3.4.3, line 1244
  76. pray.c in NetHack 3.6.0, line 1340: The "try to convert high altar" branch doesn't actually convert anything.
  77. pray.c in NetHack 3.4.3, line 1251
  78. pray.c in NetHack 3.4.3, line 1249
  79. pray.c in NetHack 3.4.3, line 1250

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