• 👍Maximum Derek👍
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    3 months ago

    My grandparent’s had that same uranium glass set. They used one of the ones with a lid as a candy dish. I haven’t thought about that in close to 40 years.

    • @VelvetStorm
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      83 months ago

      Fuck I would kill to get my hands on that set. I’ve been trying to find some at a thrift store for a long time.

  • @VelvetStorm
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    383 months ago

    FYI it’s totally safe to have and handle. Infact a report published by the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission in 2001 stated that uranium glass is considered to be safer than household electronics. but it is recommended that you do not eat or drink off it in the unlikely event that you chip or scratch it and ingest some of it. If you go thrift shopping or to antique shops bring a small uv light with you. If the glass glows green under the uv it’s uranium glass.

    • Tar_Alcaran
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      283 months ago

      The arsenic book covers, on the other hand, are very much still risky. Mostly because it does in fact rub off

    • Uranium 🟩
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      273 months ago

      If you really want that passive poison effect, you need to get fiestaware: bright orange/yellow ceramics where the concentration of uranium is way higher and it’s used as the glaze!

      It’s known to leech into acidic foods, such as tomato sauces with pasta.

      I also feel like we can also add antique top hats to this; I recently found out that my grandfather’s childhood top hat, which I used to play with all the time growing up, contains mercury nitrate

  • @omega_x3
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    183 months ago

    Not really an HP drain. More that they apply a very weak disease that stacks the longer it is applied. If it stacks enough it begins adding other status debuffs.

    • @Sanctus
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      173 months ago

      I guess it depends on how you define HP. I tend to define it as “a character’s ability to not die” instead of health

  • @fireweed
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    53 months ago

    Okay I get the appeal of the uranium glassware, but why the arsenic book covers?