Blade wrote:Recharging scrolls don't always fill wands to the maximum value (nor to any consistent value), so you won't know exactly how many charges are left after reading a scroll of recharging. Wands can be generated with any number of charges within their range, and recharged to any number of values within a set. There is no problem here.
Okay, so I am missing something. Please help me understand the logic in this. I have a two wands of Lighting that say they can hold 12 charges. I identify both of them and they both max out at 12 charges. Only one had originally had 10 charges, the other I had emptied, then had to identify it, before it would show me that its max was 12 charges (which I already knew).
If I had a dozen of these wands they would all only hold 12 charges, so how does identifying one that has been emptied change this?
I understand the randomness in the recharging process, but logic would dictate that a small puff of energy would produce less charges, than that of a greater discharge of energy (using surrealism to illustrate that if I was a wizard in a lab, I would be able to deduce).
I can understand the need to Identify a wand to know how many initial charges it has, but after that a wand is a wand, and just as I would conclude that when I came across the same wand again, say in this instance, it was a wand of lighting, then would I not also be able to conclude what takes place while it gets recharged?
One out of fouw people suffews fwom Ewmuh Fudd Syndwome. Guess whaaat?