Aligned priest

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This article is about the monster. For the role, see Priest.


Aligned priests and aligned priestesses, @, tend the temples of NetHack. They always appear as "priest[ess] of (deity)".

The following information pertains to an upcoming version (NetHack 3.7.0). If this version is now released, please verify that it is still accurate, then update the page to incorporate this information.

Aligned priests are now referred to as "aligned clerics".

Generation

Priests tending to temples are always generated peaceful. Several hostile priests may appear in the locate level of the Priest's quest, and several assorted hostile priests are also generated on the Astral Plane; co-aligned hostile priests generated this way are described as "renegade".

Aligned priests cannot be fully revived in any way: zapping turn undead at an aligned priest corpse merely produces a human zombie, while casting stone to flesh on a statue of one produces a generic "aligned priest" who only gets angry when #chatted to.[1]

Interestingly, aligned priests can grow up into high priests.[2]

Occurrence of temples with priests

Main article: Temple

Every Minetown variant (with the exception of Orc Town) has a temple of a random alignment, and the Valley of the Dead has a temple of Moloch; both levels are eligible for bones, so it is possible for either priest to be dead or else wandering about the level if their temple was desecrated. Beware in these instances, since #chatting to a wandering priest will make them hostile, as discussed below.

There are also guaranteed temples with accompanying priests on locate level of the Knight quest (neutral), the locate level of the Priest quest (unaligned), and the home level of the Caveman quest (co-aligned). The high priest of Moloch is always found guarding the Amulet of Yendor in Moloch's Sanctum, and is also generated peaceful, though they will become hostile once you enter their room.

Inventory

Aligned priests are generated with a mace, small shield, 20–29 zorkmids, 2–4 spellbooks, and one of the following cloaks: a robe (6/7 chance), cloak of protection (2/21 chance), or cloak of magic resistance (1/21 chance).[3]

Chatting to a priest

If you #chat to a temple's priest, a variety of effects can result. If you have no gold in open inventory and are co-aligned, the priest will "give you two bits for an ale" (two zorkmids) if they have any gold (or one bit if they only have that); they will "preach the virtues of poverty" if they have no gold. If you are cross-aligned, they will ignore you.

If you are carrying gold in open inventory, the priest will prompt you for a contribution to the temple; depending on the amount of gold you offer, one of several events will happen:[4]

Offer Effect
0 or lesser If the priest is co-aligned, you lose one alignment point.

"Thou shalt regret thine action!"

Positive but less than 200 times current experience level If this is less than one third of your visible gold (before donation), nothing happens.

"Cheapskate."

Otherwise, exercises wisdom.

"I thank thee for thy contribution."

At least 200 but less than 400 times current experience level "Thou art indeed a pious individual."

If this is more than one third of your visible gold, you are granted 500–999 (more) turns of clairvoyance. If additionally the priest is coaligned and you have sinned or worse, you gain one point of alignment.

"I bestow upon thee a blessing."

At least 400 but less than 600 times current experience level

If you have never bought intrinsic protection, earn 2–4 points of protection. Otherwise if you have less than 9 protection, or less than 20 with a 1-in-current-protection chance, earn an additional point of protection; if not, fall through to next case. Note that these limits make no distinction between protection bought and protection granted as a favor. (This is the preferred way to obtain protection.) For clarity: you can buy protection at any temple with a peaceful priest, be it to your god, a rival god, or to Moloch, but not at a desecrated temple. (See Protection racket)

"Thy devotion has been rewarded."

At least 600 times current experience level "Thy selfless generosity is deeply appreciated."

If this is more than one third of your visible gold and the temple is co-aligned:

  • If you have not performed this action in the last 5000 turns, and your alignment is lesser than 0, it is reset to 0
  • Otherwise, you gain 2 alignment points.

However, in the following cases the effects described above will not happen:

  • If a priest is hostile, it is useless to chat to them.
  • If a priest is not in their temple or the temple has been desecrated, #chatting to the priest makes them hostile. This usually applies only to priests in bones files and the peaceful co-aligned priests on the Astral Plane, as the priest will already be hostile if you have desecrated the temple yourself; the message you get when entering the temple indicates the state of affairs. Even if you reconvert the temple's altar to the priest's religion and pacify them, they still get angry on chatting.
  • If the priest is sleeping or cannot move, #chatting to the priest wakes them up from sleep or paralysis and again makes them hostile.
  • Chatting to a scared priest (e.g. you are standing on scroll of scare monster) also make them hostile. Note that a scroll of scare monster cannot save you from their attack.

Strategy

Despite being relatively lacking in armor, priests are deceptively powerful, with a weapon attack that can deal upwards of 40 base damage and an arsenal of highly dangerous clerical spells - this includes the ability to confuse, blind or even paralyze an unfortunate player, as well as swarming them with insects. Accidentally angering a peaceful priest may potentially be a game-ending mistake. Furthermore, since aligned priests cannot be "properly" revived, be sure to keep any strong pets away and not activate conflict anywhere near the priest if you want to obtain their services.

As the earliest a hostile priest can possibly generate is the locate level of the Priest quest, the player should ideally have at least one means to address some of the status spells (e.g. a unicorn horn) by then, as well as poison resistance to avoid dying at the hands of Team Ant and the other a they create. A ring of free action is one of the best options to have, as even an otherwise-capable player character can be decimated if the priest paralyzes them at a bad time.

One of the quickest ways to deal with a hostile priest is to petrify them with a wielded cockatrice corpse. A decently powerful pet can also aid in killing the priest, but can just as easily be killed by a powerful swing from their mace unless the pet has solid AC.

Killing a temple priest safely

For those looking to convert a temple's altar, in addition to the above information, there are a few major obstacles:

  1. Directly attacking a peaceful priest is a Bad Idea, as their god will strike you with lightning (which can be deflected if you have reflection).
  2. Attempting to convert the temple's altar will anger the priest.
  3. Killing a peaceful priest carries the standard Luck and alignment penalty for murder. (You do not lose any protection you have gained unless the priest was coaligned, in which case the altar should be coaligned as well and you would have no reason to kill the priest anyways.)

A good way to convert a temple is to use a scroll of earth (which can be obtained from Sokoban); you will also need a form of reflection (which can also be found in Sokoban). Stand in the temple so that the priest is not adjacent to you, then read the scroll; optionally, push the boulders to confine the priest to one particular square. Then, drop a scroll of scare monster on your fighting spot to protect you from any summoned ants.

Now you can blind yourself and zap or fire things at the priest without the risk of being paralyzed or getting hit with the mace; be sure to have telepathy so you can aim properly, and remember to have reflection for the god's lightning strikes! If you lack reflection and/or shock resistance, but have a ray attack, you might want to bounce them off the temple's walls towards the priest from outside instead - keeping the walls between you and the altar will help avoid the lightning.[5] Once the priest is killed, you can start sacrificing. If you are playing a chaotic human, you should try to #offer the priest's corpse, since it will have a 100% chance of converting the altar.

If you wish to kill a temple's priest yourself and avoid the penalty for murder, polymorphing the priest into a non-human is an option, although it is quite risky - their god will still strike you with lightning, and their decent monster magic resistance may foul the attempt and simply leave you with an angry priest.

Still another way is to poison the priest with a scroll of stinking cloud - the rub is that you need to be able to see the center spot you are targeting the cloud on, but you will also want shelter from the god's lightning, which may originate from positions other than the altar.[6]

Trapping an aligned priest with boulders

You can also trap a temple priest using a scroll of earth so you can convert the altar safely without committing murder or dealing with lightning strikes;[7] make sure you remain visible to them (using mummy wrapping if invisible). Beware that a dwarf or other digging monster may free the priest, though the priest will usually stay inside the temple area including the diggable walls.

Once you have converted the altar, you can read a confused scroll of taming for a chance of pacifying the priest (still behind the boulder) after converting the altar, or you can cast sleep at them to make it safe to approach and charm them. Remember that you cannot buy protection from that priest afterward, as chatting with them will merely anger them.

To understand why the step-by-step instructions work, keep in mind a priest (still tending an altar) will

  1. pick a random spot on a 3×3 grid centered on the altar, and try to move there, and will
  2. not move into your line of fire unless they are already in it.

The last part is how you steer the priest around.

Step onto the altar.

-+----
|....|
|....|
|..@.|
|.@..|
------

Pick a spot where you want to priest to go two spaces from the altar, marked with an x below. Wait, by pressing '.', until the priest moves to one diagonal step from the x. Then step off the altar onto a spot a knight's move away from both the x and from the priest.

-+----
|....|
|..@.|
|x._.|
|.@..|
------

Move back onto the altar. If the priest stays put, then read an uncursed (or preferably blessed) scroll of earth. Otherwise, start over.

-+----
|....|
|.000|
|@0@0|
|.000|
------

Now you probably want to trap the priest in a corner. Move boulders here and here.

-+---- -+----
|..0.| |..0.|
|.0@0| |0@.0|
|@0_0| |@0_0|
|.000| |.000|
------ ------

Then, when the priest moves back, here and here. Priest is now trapped.

-+---- -+----
|@.0.| |..0.|
|0..0| |@..0|
|.0_0| |00_0|
|@000| |@000|
------ ------

Variants

SLASH'EM

In SLASH'EM, it is not possible to buy protection from a priest of Moloch.

The Lawful Quest contains a coaligned priest in a room with a coaligned altar, but it is not a temple; thus, chatting with the priest will make them hostile and is a Bad Idea.

SpliceHack

In SpliceHack, donating an amount greater than 900 times your experience level will teach you the blessing technique, if you do not already know it. Donating exactly 900 times your experience level will not work.

Encyclopaedia entry

[...] For the two priests were talking exactly like priests,
piously, with learning and leisure, about the most aerial
enigmas of theology. The little Essex priest spoke the more
simply, with his round face turned to the strengthening stars;
the other talked with his head bowed, as if he were not even
worthy to look at them. But no more innocently clerical
conversation could have been heard in any white Italian cloister
or black Spanish cathedral. The first he heard was the tail of
one of Father Brown's sentences, which ended: "... what they
really meant in the Middle Ages by the heavens being
incorruptible." The taller priest nodded his bowed head and
said: "Ah, yes, these modern infidels appeal to their reason;
but who can look at those millions of worlds and not feel that
there may well be wonderful universes above us where reason is
utterly unreasonable?"

[ The Innocence of Father Brown, by G.K. Chesterton ]

References