Well, green is probably the most challenging color to design artifacts for, if for no other reason than green's general "anti-artifact" attitude. Also, one of the things green does best, creature pumping, is something that non-color aligned artifacts have pretty much always been able to do on their own anyway.
But Oakenwrath definitely "feels" green to me in every way I think it should.
Yeah, I thought tying it to the forests was a good option that built that resonance between the two pretty strongly.
Found on: CamdynThere are moments in our lives where we must step back and objectively consider how we managed to reach that point. Sitting in a boat, waiting for a damned dragon, of all things, to attack me, I can't help but come to the conclusion that something in my life went amiss. Badly.
I'd come to the plane of Camdyn to deliver a crate of weapons I'd been commissioned for, but while there, I heard the rumors of the legendary swords of Gamor. They were said to burn with a preternatural fire that could be extinguished by no worldly means, and admittedly, I had little in the way of plans, so I sought out the supposedly legendary smiths of the town. In the shadows of the volcano known as Mount Ghuilbin, I found them, but what I found was... less impressive than rumors suggest. Asking after the legend, I was deferred to the elder who was nearly half as tall as I was, which is actually an outstanding height for humans. He invited me to the docks and explained the legend.
The Twilight Wings wrote:
In days long gone, Mt. Ghuilbin was a tall and proud peak, wreathed in griffins, and from the foothills, the workers pulled a special ore from the depths of stone. As they dug deeper though, they discovered that the blood of the stone flowed hot beneath Ghuilbin. Magma bubbled up from those deep chambers and put an end to that time, however they still had more ore than they could ever hope to use and they were paid well for the weapons they made.
And then the peak collapsed. The caldera blazed fiercely day and night, though no eruption came, but regardless, the light shone and smoke breathed into the skies. It seemed as if life would adjust, that they would manage to return to a semblance of normal. The ore would run out one day, but until then, they would continue to make their brilliant weapons and gain riches enough to be remembered for all time.
Then the sun was blotted from the sky. It was not the smoke that did it, but the shadows of wings. Dragons came to dwell on Ghuilbin, and one great mystery of Camdyn was solved on that day. A dragon's fire was born of ore consumed by the great beasts. The same ore that Gamor had become famous for. It had been years since last a dragon was seen in the lands of man, and all at once, an entire nest was drawn to roost on the volcano. However, the thing none had considered was the stockpile they had sitting in their homes and shops.
With the terrible rush of wings, they fell upon Gamor and the time of dragons began.
They'd spent most of their riches repairing the village, hoping the dragons would leave them alone now that they'd taken the ore, and for the most part they were right. They made the occasional foray into the mountains to hunt one of the beasts when they ranged too close to their land, trying to teach them to keep to their volcano. They found the ore in the stomachs of the dead dragons, but it was too dangerous to carry with them, much less store in the village.
There was only one problem, and it explained the shabby conditions which I found the town in. There was one dragon unwilling to let matters lie. She attacked any boat that tried to fish out on Loch Leer, and what cattle they tried to raise would suffer the same fate. They had been shipping food in from neighboring villages, but it was merely a stop gap if they could not eventually finish off the beast.
Before I knew it, I was on their largest boat wondering how I managed to get there. They claimed I could solve their problems and gain my swords all in one swoop if I would just deal with the dragon. I'll be honest, I don't even remember how they convinced me to get on the boat, but I am not what one would call a strong swimmer, and yet, I was in a position to help them, though at least part of it was to help myself. All the same, I was distinctly unhappy and couldn't shake the feeling that I was being used. Sailing out past the far ruins of the aqueducts, I heard the first soft susurrus of wings.
The dragon was not much larger than I am, but as she came winging down, it took all of my concentration and a great deal of my annoyance at the circumstance to actually stand in the boat and prepare to meet her. Seeing something as large as she was spooked her fairly badly, and rather than attack immediately, she landed on the far side of the boat, and nearly capsized the damn thing and drowned us both. If I never fight on a boat again, never mind fighting another DRAGON on a damned boat, I will STILL say that it's been once too often for my entire life. Suffice to say, even though I managed to win and paddle back to town, it was not one of my finest moments.
The village, for their part was overjoyed and offered to forge me a weapon right then. I told them to pull the metal out of the stupid lizard's belly and I'd quit the village as soon as possible. They still insisted on throwing a feast to celebrate the dragon's death, and after all is said and done, I'm glad that they can fish again, but I still felt abused and taken advantage of.
Back in the vault, I managed to create a pair of scimitars from the metal harvested out of the dragon's gullet. The metal resonated with red mana, and that is the source of the metal's fire, which true to legend, once ignited could not be put out. It chewed through stone and metal alike...
and then into my damned floor. It kept burning even under water, and even my
quickest wards barely kept the flames contained. It wasn't until I tried
using the counter of red mana that I managed to quell the fire. Overall, I still consider the weapons a success, even minus the worktable they bloody well
ate...
They aren't my finest work, the metal is a mottled dark and red that is ugly no matter how much I polish it. The finish is always ruined every time the blades ignite anyways, but for sheer destructive power, there are few pieces I've forged that could surpass them. Luckily I had the foresight to forge the tang from an alloy that's heat resistant, otherwise they'd probably fall apart, though I could never get a cross-guard that worked as well. Still, the hilt wraps are enough to keep fire off the hand, so it's a moot point.