Weapon materials.
Gold is a really good conductor, and it could be made into copper-gold alloy for dark colors according to wikipedia. Other than that, mithril and orichalcum could be great conductors for energy for all we know.
I’d imagine that the Inquest would want to use magic-conductive metals in their weapons – which we know includes copper and gold at the very least (though copper less so – I would imagine oricalchum would as well, as an inbetween of the two metals, both in conductivity and in strength).
I would also imagine that they’d use a multitude of materials, in order to properly direct said magic (don’t want to go zapping your own hand do you).
Gold […] could be made into copper-gold alloy […] and orichalcum could be great conductors for energy for all we know.
You should probably wiki what Orichalcum is.
Hint: It is (or rather, can be interpreted as – it’s never really clear in the ancient folklore and texts apparently) a copper-gold alloy.
Stop treating GW2 as a single story. Each Season and expansion should be their own story.
(edited by Konig Des Todes.2086)
Hint: It is (or rather, can be interpreted as – it’s never really clear in the ancient folklore and texts apparently) a copper-gold alloy.
In GW2 it is clearly not the case as it’s a natural mineral out of itself, so I talked about it as is.
Element compounds can naturally exist in the ground, so it wouldn’t be so far fetched to believe a copper-gold alloy can naturally form (though I now wonder what kind of combination of Cu and Au would make Oricalchum – Cu2Au? CuAu? CuAu2?).
Stop treating GW2 as a single story. Each Season and expansion should be their own story.
It’s probably something ridiculous like a 42:39 ratio of gold to copper
Yaks Bend
Well, I thank you all for your input, it’s definitely helped and given the people I talk with a few ideas about the weapons and what goes into them. We’ll give these ideas consideration, thanks again!
I personally find it hard to believe that one of the top metals in the game, to be used for the creation of high end weapons in crafting stations, is an alloy of two of the most malleable metals found on earth.
I very much doubt that orichalcum as it exists in GW2 is an alloy of gold and copper. More likely it is simply a name borrowed from mythology and given to a fictional ultra-rare/dense metal found in Tyria, the same way that mithril and adamantium/adamantine have made their way into just about every fantasy game out there.