. . . Well, there's a plot hook.ScS of the Fraternity wrote:Nikolas of the Mists wrote:In fact, gievn malleable time, your couriers could just as easily arrive a decade before you gave them the letter.

. . . Well, there's a plot hook.ScS of the Fraternity wrote:Nikolas of the Mists wrote:In fact, gievn malleable time, your couriers could just as easily arrive a decade before you gave them the letter.
I can see that for ship-to-shore communication, but I'd think civilized domains would have much better resources for overland.Paladyn wrote:In more civilised regions informations could be transferred via line of semaphores. It would be most important "state" news, but still it counts.
These all seem reasonable. Wonder what the fatality rate is among couriers? Writers try to get the best of both worlds by saying certain areas swallow visitors by the handful, then saying that (for example) the Twins have written several books almost completely through correspondence. It's a train wreck of contradictions waiting to happen.Strahdsbuddy wrote:I think the idea of a mail line is great, but i have to disagree with the use of the Old Svalich Road. Barovia has that sense of a dead zone, plus the ring of fog over a little portion of the Road could be prohibitive. I could see the two lines as running from Borca to Lamordia or Martira Bay, then a second across Darkon to Arbora. Or possibly Toyalis.
I agree about Tepest and Verbrek, but Valachan has an elaborate system for shipping food to other domains. Presumably messages could be passed through state couriers associated with this system, at least internally. Not much harder to link it up with other lines.Backwater lands, like Tepest or Verbrek or Valachan would have little use for the service, and individual couriers would probably be in more common use between the rare citizen taht would need them.
Or an enlarging spell. Cast it on a tiny slip of paper, write what you want, let the duration wear off so that it slips back into tiny form and shrinks the writing with it. Only someone with similar magic could read it.impworks wrote:Using microfilm significantly longer messages can be sent but this requires technology developed in the real world around 1840.
For that matter, a spell like Item could be used to let a pigeon carry an object that, in its unaltered state, would be bigger than itself. It's not just a question of communication, that way: if you have to get a small parcel (e.g. a flask of poison-antidote for a dying noble) to its destination super-fast, that might be a workable option.DeepShadow of FoS wrote:Or an enlarging spell. Cast it on a tiny slip of paper, write what you want, let the duration wear off so that it slips back into tiny form and shrinks the writing with it. Only someone with similar magic could read it.
I also recall a magical scroll that could copy documents it touched, and maybe even transfer them to other blank documents. That would be a good companion item for these writs, because that would allow a person to retain a hard copy, if desired.Nathan of the FoS wrote:Someone posted a pretty cool idea for a postal service secret society a while back, and there's always the writ of communication from VRS:Doppelgangers.