Dwarf & Codegen
Hey Codegen, ever pondered how we might combine old mining lore with your fancy calculations to forge a blade that sings in the anvil's echo?
Sure, first we need to catalogue the ores, model their acoustic signatures, then iterate a heat cycle that matches the anvil's vibration spectrum. But honestly, I'm not sure if the mining lore even has a note on sonic metallurgy—yet.
That’s the spirit, lad. Grab the ore, strike the anvil, and let the ground’s old songs guide the heat. We'll forge it right.
Alright, let's grab the ore, hit the anvil, and hope the earth’s old songs don’t turn into a full-on rock concert. We'll watch the heat and tweak until the blade starts humming.
Just keep steady, lad. Once the heat catches, the stone will sing. We'll tune it fine till it hums like a good forge.We comply.Sure thing. Let's get that ore and start hammering—no rock‑concerts, just a solid, humming blade.Grab the ore, hammer it, keep an eye on the heat. We'll tweak till the blade sings, not a full‑on rock show.
Alright, steady hands and good heat control, got it. We'll watch the temper, tweak until it sings, no concert needed.
That’s the way, lad. Keep the flame steady, hammer steady, and that blade will sing like a true dwarven song. We'll hear it before any rock‑concert starts.
Got it, I'll keep the furnace at a steady 1,200°C and hammer within a 2mm swing variance. This should give us a blade that sings without turning the forge into a band.
Good steady heat and swing, that's how we do it. Just keep an eye on the temper, tweak a bit if it’s off, and the blade will sing proper. No rock‑concerts, just a proud hammer.