Faith Baghnakhs: Difference between revisions
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{{AH|Undeliverable Exclusive}} | {{AH|Undeliverable Exclusive}} | ||
===Dropped From=== | ===Dropped From=== | ||
{|class=" | {|class="horizon-table table-sm droppedby sortable" | ||
|- | |- | ||
!width="35%"| Name | !width="35%"| Name | ||
!width="15%"| Level | !width="15%"| Level | ||
!width="60%"| Zone | !width="60%"| Zone | ||
|- class="bg-nm | |- class="bg-nm" | ||
|'''[[Jailer of Faith]] ([[NM]])''' | |'''[[Jailer of Faith]] ([[NM]])''' | ||
| align="center" |85 | | align="center" |85 |
Latest revision as of 15:58, 18 November 2023
Statistics
it's damage formula works differently than most weapons.
See the Hand-to-Hand for further information.
Virtue stone equipped
- This item is enhanced by the use of appropriate Charged Ammunition.
- When a virtue stone is equipped in the Ammo slot, the additional effect has a chance to go off.
Occasionally attacks twice
- Unlike most 'occasionally attacks x times' weapons, this effect stacks with Double Attack and Triple Attack.
- Chance for second attack may activate on both swings, for a total of 4 hits per round. This can extinguish 2 Virtue Stones, however.
- If the "occasionally attacks twice" effect activates on both initial swings, Double Attack and/or Triple Attack may activate on all four of these hits, resulting in anywhere from 2-8 hits in an attack round.
- Eight swings per attack round is the cap of the number of hits that can be processed in any given attack round.
Other Uses
Resale Price: Cannot be sold to NPCs. |
How to Obtain
Cannot be auctioned, traded, bazaared, or delivered.
Dropped From
Name | Level | Zone |
---|---|---|
Jailer of Faith (NM) | 85 | The Garden of Ru'Hmet |
Historical Background
A bagh nakh (alt. Bag'hnak, Nahar-nuk, Waghnakh, Wagnuk, Wahar-nuk Hindi for "tiger claw") is an Indian hand-to-hand weapon designed to fit over the knuckles or concealed under and against the palm. It traditionally consists of four or five curved blades affixed to a crossbar or glove, and is designed to slash through skin and muscle, mimicking wounds inflicted by a wild animal. The bagh nakh is similar to Brass Knuckles or neko-te.
The weapon was developed in India, primarily for self-defense, though there are conflicting reports of the time period in which they appeared. The first well-known usage of the weapon was by the first Maratha Emperor Shivaji. He used a variation of the bagh nakh (the Bich'hwa bag'hnak) to kill Afzal Khan, a Bijapur Sardar. |}