@@exilieaon6256 While true heat doesn't necessarily equal fire, heat metal says it cause metal to instantly glow red, steel and iron glow red at 450ish celsius, wood in a stove will catch fire at a mere 200ish to 300ish celsius. So any wooden parts would end up combusting for sure. And yeah @helwrecht considering that heat metal in DnD does 2d8 damage if you're in direct contact, that probably implies instant 2nd or 3rd degree burns to the areas in contact with metal.
@@huntercreed1 if it was instantly red hot how malleable would the metal be? Could it still be accurately aimed without the barrel or firing mechanism being deformed? I’m picturing a musket or flintlock
we had a grasshopper gunslinger, he was sick as fck. Loved that guy
What a rarity. A random video youtube sent me with actual good content.
@@ryzowypierog6256 Thank you good sir
Heat metal goes brrrr, everyone drops their guns possibly misfiring
That would just make the gun go off
@ heat doesn’t equal fire
@@exilieaon6256 While true heat doesn't necessarily equal fire, heat metal says it cause metal to instantly glow red, steel and iron glow red at 450ish celsius, wood in a stove will catch fire at a mere 200ish to 300ish celsius. So any wooden parts would end up combusting for sure. And yeah @helwrecht considering that heat metal in DnD does 2d8 damage if you're in direct contact, that probably implies instant 2nd or 3rd degree burns to the areas in contact with metal.
@@huntercreed1 if it was instantly red hot how malleable would the metal be? Could it still be accurately aimed without the barrel or firing mechanism being deformed? I’m picturing a musket or flintlock
The fully tiefling party ignoring the burn dmg