Grond

From Eamon Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This is a Class A (gold star) article.
Medieval officials around a balance scale. (Codex Manesse, c. 1304)

The grond is the standard measure of weight on Eamon and is the unit used for all weights in the game. The unit was first defined by Donald Brown in the Eamon Player's Manual. A grond is subdivided into ten dos (singular: do).

It's uncertain how the grond compares to other units of weight; Brown writes that "with the stellar tides varying weights so much, the exact metric equivalent of a grond cannot be determined; however, an average weapon weighs about three gronds, and a coin weighs about a do." He does, however, define one precise equivalence: each point of an adventurer's hardiness represents the ability to carry 10 gronds.

Brown also uses the grond as the standard unit of weight in SwordThrust, where he defines it slightly differently: "A weapon will weigh roughly two gronds, a shield will weigh four gronds, a suit of armour will weigh one grond, and a coin weighs 1/100 of a grond (so a bag of one thousand coins will weigh ten gronds)." In SwordThrust a character can carry up to 20 times his hardiness in gronds.

In adventures

  • Temple of the Trolls: "You recognize the black rocks to be common coal. It's market value is about 5 gold pieces per 10 gronds."
  • Orb of My Life: "You see a masterfully carved jade idol. It depicts a sea serpent in classic pose of arched back and must weigh several gronds."
  • Thror's Ring: "You see a large ingot of pure mithril, known as true-silver among the dwarves. It must weigh 500 gronds."
  • Search for Mack: "Three gronds of iron"; "Thirty gronds of gold".

Grond is also the name of a character in the Eamon Deluxe version of Castle of Doom; his name in the original version of the adventure is Lilith.

See also