Difference between revisions of "Stone mausoleum"

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A [[mausoleum]] is a small building similar to other small buildings.  However, they can only be built inside a [[graveyard]].  They can accommodate space for six (6) people (weight capacity for 12), but are primarily meant for burial purposes, such as installing [[sarcophagus|sarcophagi]], and can be fitted with a lock.  There is no limit to how many mausoleums can be built within a graveyard.
 
A [[mausoleum]] is a small building similar to other small buildings.  However, they can only be built inside a [[graveyard]].  They can accommodate space for six (6) people (weight capacity for 12), but are primarily meant for burial purposes, such as installing [[sarcophagus|sarcophagi]], and can be fitted with a lock.  There is no limit to how many mausoleums can be built within a graveyard.
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See also:  [[brick mausoleum]], [[marble mausoleum]]
  
 
== Destruction ==
 
== Destruction ==

Latest revision as of 21:34, 28 October 2021

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Stone mausoleum
Manufacturing
Object typeBuildings
Skill usedBuilding
Time28 day(s)
Materials25000 grams of stone
Toolsiron, bronze or wooden trowel
Locationgraveyard only
Building
Capacity
People6
Weight720,000 grams

A mausoleum is a small building similar to other small buildings. However, they can only be built inside a graveyard. They can accommodate space for six (6) people (weight capacity for 12), but are primarily meant for burial purposes, such as installing sarcophagi, and can be fitted with a lock. There is no limit to how many mausoleums can be built within a graveyard.

See also: brick mausoleum, marble mausoleum

Destruction

A stone building can be destroyed in 28 days using a sledgehammer or bronze sledgehammer, pickaxe or bronze pickaxe, and crowbar.



The light did him harm, but not as much as looking at things did; he resolved, having done it once, never to move his eyeballs again. A dusty thudding in his head made the scene before him beat like a pulse. His mouth had been used as a latrine by some small creature of the night, and then as its mausoleum.
— Sir Kingsley Amis