Combination runes (book)
- This article is about the book. For two elemental runes combined into one, see Combination rune.
Release date | 1 February 2010 (Update) |
---|---|
Members? | Yes |
Quest item? | Yes - Rune Mechanics |
Tradeable? | No |
Equipable? | No |
Stacks? | No |
High Alch | 3 coins |
Low Alch | 2 coins |
Value | 5 coins |
Destroy | Drop |
Store price | Not sold |
Examine | An introduction to combination runes. |
Weight | 0.5 kg |
Combination runes is a book found in the basement of the Mage Training Arena as part of the Rune Mechanics quest. It teaches players how to craft combination runes from pairs of elemental runes.
Transcript
Introduction
Combination runes are a highly advanced form of Runecrafting. They allow for the binding of two types of elemental magic into a single piece of essence. Whilst this might not seem essential to the regular mage, combat mages find it vital for saving precious space in their packs.
Making Combination Runes
To make combination runes you'll need runes and a talisman of one elemantal type (e.g. earth), some essence, plus a talisman of the secondary element you wish to bind your runes with (e.g. water).
Example
The following are instructions for making mud runes.
You will need the following supplies:
earth runes
earth talisman
essence
water talisman or tiara
Enter the Water Altar using your water talisman or tiara, then simply use your earth runes on the altar. Your earth runes, earth talisman and essence will disappear and tou will have crafted some mud runes.
You WILL lose your earth talisman in the process.
There is a 50% chance of success when you try to craft combination runes, unless you happen to be wearing a binding necklace, in which case you will have a 100% success rate. The binding necklace can inly be used fifteen times before it disintegrates. Note that you could also craft mud runes by binding water runes at the Earth Altar.
Combination Rune Types
Dust (earth and air)
Lava (fire and earth)
Mist (water and air)
Mud (earth and water)
Smoke (fire and air)
Steam (fire and water)