Difference between revisions of "Potion of haste"
m (Add a note about drinking an unidentified potion of haste) |
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==History== | ==History== | ||
− | *Prior to [[0.20]], gaining, being under the effect of, and extending the haste effect gave you magical contamination. | + | *Prior to [[0.20]], gaining, being under the effect of, and extending the haste effect gave you magical contamination. Also, the effect increased the player's rate of [[hunger]]. |
*Prior to [[0.14]], potions of haste were known as potions of speed. | *Prior to [[0.14]], potions of haste were known as potions of speed. | ||
{{potions}} | {{potions}} |
Revision as of 12:57, 22 January 2020
Version 0.24: This article may not be up to date for the latest stable release of Crawl.
An enchanted beverage which speeds the actions of anyone who drinks it. |
Quaffing a potion of haste causes your action delay to be reduced by 1/3 for 1d40 + 39 (more) turns (max 79), making it excellent for both escaping dangerous opponents and dealing much more damage in combat.
Followers of Cheibriados are not allowed to use this potion (penance). However, drinking an unidentified potion of haste gives you the effect with no consequences.
Formicids' innate stasis makes them unable to become hasted, so this potion is useless for them.
Normal: "You feel yourself speed up."
Already Hastened: "You feel as though you will be hastened longer."
History
- Prior to 0.20, gaining, being under the effect of, and extending the haste effect gave you magical contamination. Also, the effect increased the player's rate of hunger.
- Prior to 0.14, potions of haste were known as potions of speed.
Potions |
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Ambrosia • Attraction • Berserk rage • Brilliance • Cancellation • Curing • Degeneration • Enlightenment • Experience • Haste • Heal wounds • Invisibility • Lignification • Magic • Might • Mutation • Resistance |