Difference between revisions of "Rot"

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(Shadow form also provides rot resistance)
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'''Rot''' is a status affliction that works like [[poison]], but damages your maximum [[HP]]. The status itself is temporary, but the damage it inflicts is '''permanent''' until it can be corrected.
 
'''Rot''' is a status affliction that works like [[poison]], but damages your maximum [[HP]]. The status itself is temporary, but the damage it inflicts is '''permanent''' until it can be corrected.
  
All [[undead]], [[nonliving]], [[demonic]], [[holy]], and [[insubstantial]] species and monsters are immune to rotting attacks, as are [[Gargoyle]]s and [[Vine Stalker]]s. This also makes them immune to [[sickness]] and [[miasma]]. (Ghouls' periodic rotting and undead rotting-instead-of-mutation effects ignore rot resistance.) [[Zin]]'s Vitalisation, [[Statue Form]] and [[Necromutation]] also grant immunity to rotting attacks, and [[demonspawn]] with the [[Foul Stench]] mutation gain rot resistance.
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All [[undead]], [[nonliving]], [[demonic]], [[holy]], and [[insubstantial]] species and monsters are immune to rotting attacks, as are [[Gargoyle]]s and [[Vine Stalker]]s. This also makes them immune to [[sickness]] and [[miasma]]. (Ghouls' periodic rotting and undead rotting-instead-of-mutation effects ignore rot resistance.) [[Zin]]'s Vitalisation, [[Dithmenos]]' [[Shadow Form]], [[Statue Form]] and [[Necromutation]] also grant immunity to rotting attacks, and [[demonspawn]] with the [[Foul Stench]] mutation eventually gain rot resistance.
  
 
==Sources of Rot==
 
==Sources of Rot==

Revision as of 09:24, 4 June 2014

Version 0.14: This article may not be up to date for the latest stable release of Crawl.

Rot is a status affliction that works like poison, but damages your maximum HP. The status itself is temporary, but the damage it inflicts is permanent until it can be corrected.

All undead, nonliving, demonic, holy, and insubstantial species and monsters are immune to rotting attacks, as are Gargoyles and Vine Stalkers. This also makes them immune to sickness and miasma. (Ghouls' periodic rotting and undead rotting-instead-of-mutation effects ignore rot resistance.) Zin's Vitalisation, Dithmenos' Shadow Form, Statue Form and Necromutation also grant immunity to rotting attacks, and demonspawn with the Foul Stench mutation eventually gain rot resistance.

Sources of Rot

The rotting status can be inflicted by:

Certain other effects can cause max HP to be drained instantly, without inflicting the rotting status:

  • Quaffing a potion of decay.
  • Ghouls periodically lose max HP, with a greater chance if they are hungry. They can restore current and max HP by eating meat, preferably rotten.
  • Standing in miasma without rotting resistance has a 50% chance to drain 1 max HP every turn you do so. It also poisons and slows you. Poison resistance only protects against the poison effect.
  • Attempting to mutate the undead (mummies, ghouls, lower-satiation vampires and lichform characters) causes decomposition, which rots max HP, as well as possibly draining stats. It can be blocked by an amulet of resist mutation with a 90% chance.

Curing Rot Damage

The rotting status can be cured with a potion of curing, or Elyvilon's "Purification" invocation.

The damage, once done, can be fixed by quaffing potions of curing or heal wounds while at your (new) full HP, or by invoking Elyvilon's purification. A potion of curing restores exactly 1 rotted HP. A potion/wand of heal wounds restores 2-7 rotted HPs (though a non-satiated Vampire quaffing a potion will get only half the effect). Ghouls can restore rotted HPs by eating meat, preferably contaminated or rotten. Mummies, who cannot consume potions, must rely on wands of heal wounds and their Self-Restoration ability.

History

Crawl used to have a "rotting" spell, which caused the flesh of all those near the caster to rot. It affected the living and many of the corporeal undead.