Mummy
This page covers the player species. For the monster, see Mummy (monster). For a list of all monstrous mummies, see List of mummies.
These are undead creatures who travel into the depths in search of revenge, redemption, or just because they want to.
Mummies progress slowly in levels, half again as slowly as Humans in all skills except fighting, spellcasting and necromancy. As they increase in levels, they become increasingly in touch with the powers of death, but cannot use some types of necromancy which only affect living creatures. The side effects of necromantic magic tend to be relatively harmless to Mummies. However, their desiccated bodies are highly flammable. They also do not need to eat or drink and, in any case, are incapable of doing so. |
Contents
Innate Abilities
- Mummies are undead, and have the assorted resistances and weaknesses:
- Undead Benefits: Cold Resistance 1, Life Protection 3, Poison Resistance, Rot Resistance, Torment Immunity.
- Undead Penalties: Vulnerable to Dispel Undead and holy wrath-branded weapons (which they cannot wield); will rot instead of mutate; cannot go berserk.
- Mummies have one level of fire vulnerability.
- Mummies cannot memorize any self-transformation spells, nor can they memorize spells that only affect the living: Dragon Form, Ice Form, Spider Form, Statue Form, Stoneskin, Beastly Appendage, Blade Hands, Necromutation, Regeneration, Death's Door, Borgnjor's Revivification, Alistair's Intoxication, Cure Poison.
- Mummies cannot and do not need to eat: they have no food clock at all. As such, they have no spell hunger nor concern over sustenance costs associated with vampiric weapons, regenerating armor, using rods, Sif Muna's Channel Energy ability, and the like.
- Mummies are incapable of drinking potions of any kind. They can cure rot only with a wand of healing (when at full health) or by sacrificing 1 permanent MP using Self-Restoration (see below).
- Mummies do not breathe, and thus cannot asphyxiate (deep water remains fatal, causing unraveling rather than drowning).
- Being undead, mummies may not worship The Shining One, Zin, Elyvilon, or Fedhas Madash.
Preferred Backgrounds
- Mages: Wizard, Conjurer, Necromancer, Ice Elementalist
Due to their undead nature, mummies are prohibited from becoming Healers. Like Ghouls, they are also prohibited from becoming Transmuters.
Level Bonuses
- No additional stat gain.
- Average HP.
- Average MP.
- +3 magic resistance per level.
- Gain boosts to Necromancy spell power at levels 13 and 26.
- Mummies receive a Self-Restoration ability at level 13: at the cost of a permanent MP, all strength, dexterity, intelligence, and some rotted HP are restored.
At the permanent loss of one magic point restore your Strength, Dexterity, and Intelligence, and heal a large amount of rotted hit points. |
Starting Skills and Equipment
Mummies receive the skills and equipment listed for their background, with the following exceptions:
Difficulty of Play
Simple • Intermediate • Advanced |
Mummies are a very difficult species to play. First and foremost, they cannot quaff potions. This knocks out several survival tools, some of which are especially critical in the early going. Among other things, lack of potion use also means that confusion is in effect as bad as paralysis for Mummies. Beyond this major liability, Mummies also level up very slowly, their intrinsic rF- can cause unexpected (and lethal) spikes in damage until it is offset, and their aptitudes are bad in almost everything. They cannot use many useful spells, nor helpful tools such as berserk or the various forms.
Mummies gain intrinsic spellpower enhancements to Necromancy spells at level 13, and another stacking enhancement at level 26. In addition, Mummies never hunger and can ignore all nutrition costs (and gain). Unfortunately, these advantages usually provide little or no benefit in the early parts of the game, when characters are not yet well established, and thus most vulnerable.
Skill aptitudes
The higher the value, the better the aptitude.
Skill | Aptitude | Skill | Aptitude | Skill | Aptitude |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Attack | Miscellaneous | Magic | |||
Fighting | 0 | Armour | -2 | Spellcasting | 2 |
Dodging | -2 | ||||
Maces & Flails | -2 | Shields | -2 | Conjurations | -2 |
Axes | -2 | Stealth | -1 | Hexes | -1 |
Polearms | -2 | Summonings | -2 | ||
Staves | -2 | Invocations | -1 | Necromancy | 0 |
Unarmed Combat | -2 | Evocations | -2 | Translocations | -2 |
Throwing | -2 | Shapeshifting | N/A | Alchemy | -2 |
Fire Magic | -2 | ||||
Short Blades | -2 | Ice Magic | -2 | ||
Long Blades | -2 | Air Magic | -2 | ||
Ranged Weapons | -2 | Experience | -1 | Earth Magic | -2 |
Strategy
Mummies should be considered a challenge species. However, if one wants to play to their advantages (such as they are), one way to do so is by starting as one of the "mage" backgrounds and worshiping Sif Muna, as this guarantees the opportunity to make good on a Mummy's lack of hunger by exploiting Sif's channeling as quickly as possible. This can work with summoning spells in particular, as a Mummy can constantly keep a large number of summons surrounding him while still having max, or near max, MP. This type of strategy is easiest to set up with Mummies that start as Wizards, Summoners, or Ice elementalists. So long as one constantly keeps summons around—a task that Mummies reduce simply to an exercise in the player's patience—then once this strategy gets going, it can be extremely strong (though also extremely wearisome).
Mummy Necromancers are not a bad start, either, if one doesn't enjoy continually replenishing one's summons.
Assuming you have managed to offset their rF-, high level Mummies can fare well in the optional, late game or "extended" content of Crawl. However, one has to survive all the non-optional parts first, during which time torment immunity does not help, and yet all the disadvantages of Mummies are as salient as ever, if not more so.