Orcrist

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)   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 weapon that appears in NetHack. It is chaotic, and its base item is an elven broadsword.

Generation

Any randomly generated elven broadsword has a base 120 chance of being made into Orcrist, depending on how many artifacts are generated. Orcrist may be given as a sacrifice gift to chaotic, non-orcish players.[1]

Orcrist is one of two artifacts in the game that can be named, which is a property shared with Sting: naming any elven broadsword Orcrist will transform it into the artifact, breaking illiterate conduct.

Description

Orcrist grants a +d5 to-hit bonus and deals double damage against all orcish monsters, and like Sting it warns of orcs while wielded, glowing blue when any orcs are present on the level.

Also like Sting, Orcrist will not artifact blast you unless you are an orc (including via polyself), and will not do so otherwise regardless of alignment or alignment record. Unlike most artifact weapons, Orcrist does not resist the effects of a cursed scroll of enchant weapon.

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 without a reliable weapon such as a Tourist may consider naming Orcrist to get an early medium-damage weapon.

If Stormbringer has not been generated in a game, Elven Priests or Rangers can force it as a first gift by naming both Orcrist and Sting before sacrificing: the first sacrifice gift you are given is always co-aligned. Orcish players cannot receive Orcrist this way, meaning that they will instead receive either Stormbringer or Grimtooth for their first gift.

History

Orcrist first appears in Hack 1.0, where it was the sole artifact available until the addition of Excalibur in NetHack 1.3d. In Hack 1.0, any weapon could be named Orcrist - this did not transform the weapon, but gave it extra damage against orcs, and could be done with multiple weapons; Hack 1.0.2 restricted the 'creation' of Orcrist this way to two-handed swords, though multiple copies were still possible until NetHack 3.0.0.

Orcrist would remain a two-handed sword until NetHack 3.1.0, where it was made 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 - 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, since all elves were changed from chaotic to lawful. Additionally, its to-hit bonus is flat like all artifact weapons in SLASH'EM, granting +5 against orcs along with its double damage and a 15% chance of cancelling 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, Orcrist has +1d5 to-hit and double damage against orcs and demons, and warns of them while wielded.

FIQHack

In FIQHack, your god will never give you a nameable artifact such as Orcrist as a sacrifice gift.[2] 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, which deals an additional +1d8 damage to orcish monsters, including orcish players; naming an elven braodsword Orcrist will convert it to mithril if it is not already made of that material. Additionally, Orcrist has a small chance of instantly killing any orc it hits, making it very dangerous if a player orc encounters a hostile monster wielding it.

Orcrist can be combined with Sting at a forge to create Glamdring, a mithril elven long sword that shares 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.

[ The Hobbit, by J.R.R. Tolkien ]

References