this post was submitted on 26 Jul 2025
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Dungeons and Dragons - Memes and Comics

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Found on imgur, not my OC. But I just had to share.

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[–] TootSweet@lemmy.world 16 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (6 children)

There was an arc in the webcomic Girl Genius (highly recommended, by the way) where a couple of the characters were in a tight spot in a dungeon somewhere. Surrounded by bad guys and running thin on options. So one of them pulled out a wine-bottle-sized glass bottle labeled "bottled ocean". (I might be getting one or two small details wrong, but stay with me here.) He threw it on the ground and a big-ass tidal wave worth of water emerged and swept the characters, along with a bunch of the bad guys, all the way out of the dungeon. It was quite perilous, of course. (There was a chance they could bang into a lot of shit on the way, for instance.) Definitely a reckless move. But it worked, carrying the characters to safety. Risky, but an ace-in-the-hole if you really need it.

I was DM'ing a Pathfinder game at the time, and of course I had to make sure my PC's got a "bottled ocean" in their inventory.

(My version, rather than stoppered, was fully sealed. Like, an ampule rather than a wine bottle. Still wine-bottle-sized, though. And my version had a label on it that said "bottled ocean.")

Upon receiving it, they reasoned that if it was a "bottled ocean", it must be under tremendous pressure. They decided they'd try to construct a "gun" out of it. Mount the ampule in the gun, somehow (very carefully?) drill a small hole in the bottle, and rig a trigger to where they could open the "hole" on command. They figured with the amount of pressure it was under, it would create a stream strong enough to cut through enemies. Like an industrial CNC water cutting machine. Or like that one puppet-master Akatsuki guy from near the beginning of Naruto Shippuden who used high-pressure water jets as a weapon.

They never made good on their threat to try to engineer such a thing. Never used the "bottled ocean" for any other purpose either. But I had to admire their creativity.

Had they succeeded in making such a gun (and it would definitely have involved a pretty high roll), I might have ruled that even if it worked, the shooter would have to roll a... maybe athletics check or be pushed back, say, 5 feet in the direction opposite the direction they fired. (Unless maybe there was a sufficiently strong wall or whatever behind them, or unless they were prone. Maybe make that 10 or even 15 feet if fired by a small creature.)

Edit: Found the specific Girl Genius comic where the "bottled ocean" (or as the source called it, "ocean in a bottle" -- I misremembered) was mentioned: https://www.girlgeniusonline.com/comic.php?date=20030827 . That one and the next three or four show how it's used.

[–] Verdorrterpunkt@feddit.org 6 points 1 week ago (1 children)

Imma be real, such a plan with drilling into it would probably just cause it to explode, wouldn't it? I'd imagine that the energy of that thing would be on city destroying levels.

[–] TootSweet@lemmy.world 2 points 1 week ago (1 children)

First, my plan was definitely to make my version of the item not literally produce an ocean's worth of water. Just enough to make a tidal wave big enough to wash everyone out of roughly the biggest dungeon I was likely to put in that campaign. (Hell, it would also be reasonable that part of the force propelling the "tidal wave" would be magic, not actually just the force of a huge quantity of rushing water.) And, yes, there would be dex saves involved to avoid taking damage from bashing into doorjams and such.

Second, it is magic, right? If it was under an ocean's worth of pressure, it wouldn't remain intact even if undisturbed. It'd easily burst. Who knows how it actually works. One fairly obvious choice would be that it contains a pocket dimension full of water that empties into the user's current plane when broken. (Or maybe it draws water from the elemental plane of water.) Maybe the water visible in the container is strictly cosmetic. Maybe drilling a hole would make a tiny puncture in the boundary between the driller's plane and the pocket(/elemental) dimension. Maybe that planar puncture would be present on the outer surface of the bottle rather than inside where it would put a lot of mechanical force on the structure of the bottle.

Third, it would be totally valid for the process of constructing a gun out of it to require quite the skill challenge. Just be like "ok, who wants to contribute to the process of making this gun?" And everyone who wants to pitch in, great. If when they've all talked about their plans, if thr process they've come up with doesn't seem like it could reasonably succeed, make it catastrophically fail. Otherwise, make 'em all roll something. Setting the DC high would be totally reasonable. And if they fail, it blows up while they're attempting to build the gun. If it's close, maybe they get a gun that works, except that they have to roll a D20 every time they use it and on the third 1, it explodes. (Could be even more wiley. Secretly roll the D20 every long rest after they've used it during the "day". If they happen to examine the gun give an account of how much damage is present based on how many 1s have come up. If one, maybe say "there's a little bit of chipping near the drill hole." If two, "a crack runs a good couple of inches from the drill hole down the side of the ampule." If they don't actually examine the gun, they might have no idea what's coming until... On the third 1, it explodes while in the PC's inventory during the long rest, interrupting the rest and washing them far from where they were. Maybe even separating the party and losing some of their items in the process. There are so many possibilities. What if it was in a Bag of Holding at the time?)

Hell. If an enemy looks at the gun and recognizes the bottled ocean integrated into it, the enemy could use it against them. Maybe target it specifically with crossbow bolts. On a hit, it triggers the by-the-book effect.

I guess basically what I'm getting at is: rule of cool. I obviously didn't anticipate what the PC's had in mind for that item until they brought it up. But I would think a good GM would try to find a way to make it work.

[–] Verdorrterpunkt@feddit.org 2 points 6 days ago* (last edited 6 days ago)

See, i know your intention and i think dnd is neat, but my head just wouldn't be there for it i think

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