Don't Swallow the Specimen: Difference between revisions

From Baldur's Gate 3 Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Created page with "{{MiscItemPage | image = Book Tome B Image.png | icon = Book Tome B Item Icon.png | description = | quote = This paper is redolent with the enticing smell of paper and ink. | book spoiler = | book text = [In his third work ''Don't Swallow the Specimen Even If You Have Just Had An Overspiced Curry And It Looks Like It Might Help'', Professor Olimuncle Shrewsburry lays out in languid detail his experiences cataloguing the many plants and mushrooms he encountered across the...")
 
No edit summary
Line 2: Line 2:
| image = Book Tome B Image.png
| image = Book Tome B Image.png
| icon = Book Tome B Item Icon.png
| icon = Book Tome B Item Icon.png
| description =
| description = '''Don't Swallow the Specimen''' is the third book in a series written by Olimuncle Shrewsburry.
| quote = This paper is redolent with the enticing smell of paper and ink.
| quote = This paper is redolent with the enticing smell of paper and ink.
| book spoiler =
| book spoiler =
Line 21: Line 21:
| effect =
| effect =
| where to find =
| where to find =
| notes =
| notes = See also:
* [[Don't Sniff the Specimen]]
* [[Don't Prod the Specimen]]
}}
}}

Revision as of 11:47, 11 December 2023

Don't Swallow the Specimen image

Don't Swallow the Specimen is the third book in a series written by Olimuncle Shrewsburry.

Description Icon.png

This paper is redolent with the enticing smell of paper and ink.

Properties

  • Books
  • Rarity: Common
  •  Weight: 0.5 kg / 1 lb
  • Price: 14 gp


Text

[In his third work Don't Swallow the Specimen Even If You Have Just Had An Overspiced Curry And It Looks Like It Might Help, Professor Olimuncle Shrewsburry lays out in languid detail his experiences cataloguing the many plants and mushrooms he encountered across the mischievous twilit forests of the Feywild. He reports the fact that Weavemoss common to the Sword Coast has its origins in the Feywild, which explains its tendency to germinate near sources of magic on Toril; the properties of the Acorn Truffle when carefully inculcated into the Alchemy process (i.e. it can be used for a potion that allows the drinkers to speak to animals); and many more things besides over the stretch of... now that's simply ridiculous. Six-thousand pages?

Notes