Are expensive material component costs too specific?
$begingroup$
Reality Revision requires a crystal worth 25,000 gp.
Wish requires a diamond worth 25,000 gp.
"Grand Jewels" in the treasure tables peak at 5,000 gp.
Perhaps there is a work around for Reality Revision if a Cognizance Crystal can be used as the material component (see linked question) as Craft Cognizance Crystal allows the use of 12,500 gp of "raw materials" to create a 25,000gp crystal over 25 days of crafting. "Raw materials" have no meaningful rarity so it's just a matter of having the funds. All good there... maybe.
So, now to Wish... a diamond is specifically cited as the expensive material component. It's not diamonds plural, it is a single diamond. The most expensive diamond you can find in treasure is worth 5,000 gp. A 25,000 gp diamond is so rare it doesn't even warrant a mention in random treasure tables.
To put the rarity in focus, even in a metropolis there is only a 75% chance of finding a magic item of up to 16,000 gp value. The maximum spell level for a metropolis is 8th, so no wish casting even in the biggest population centres listed.
How does someone procure one of these unmentionably rare 25,000 gp diamonds? And if using it for a Wish spell destroys it, how are there any left in a world with any wish casters in it?
It isn't a feasible material component when it is so specific!
The wizard has clawed his/her way up 17 levels, scrimped 25,000 gp, and then is blocked by the rarity of the material component.
Sure, make it cost a lot, but let it be practical to source the materials without becoming BFFs with Dumathoin (or whatever god of gems your setting has handy).
pathfinder spells pricing economy special-materials
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Reality Revision requires a crystal worth 25,000 gp.
Wish requires a diamond worth 25,000 gp.
"Grand Jewels" in the treasure tables peak at 5,000 gp.
Perhaps there is a work around for Reality Revision if a Cognizance Crystal can be used as the material component (see linked question) as Craft Cognizance Crystal allows the use of 12,500 gp of "raw materials" to create a 25,000gp crystal over 25 days of crafting. "Raw materials" have no meaningful rarity so it's just a matter of having the funds. All good there... maybe.
So, now to Wish... a diamond is specifically cited as the expensive material component. It's not diamonds plural, it is a single diamond. The most expensive diamond you can find in treasure is worth 5,000 gp. A 25,000 gp diamond is so rare it doesn't even warrant a mention in random treasure tables.
To put the rarity in focus, even in a metropolis there is only a 75% chance of finding a magic item of up to 16,000 gp value. The maximum spell level for a metropolis is 8th, so no wish casting even in the biggest population centres listed.
How does someone procure one of these unmentionably rare 25,000 gp diamonds? And if using it for a Wish spell destroys it, how are there any left in a world with any wish casters in it?
It isn't a feasible material component when it is so specific!
The wizard has clawed his/her way up 17 levels, scrimped 25,000 gp, and then is blocked by the rarity of the material component.
Sure, make it cost a lot, but let it be practical to source the materials without becoming BFFs with Dumathoin (or whatever god of gems your setting has handy).
pathfinder spells pricing economy special-materials
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Reality Revision requires a crystal worth 25,000 gp.
Wish requires a diamond worth 25,000 gp.
"Grand Jewels" in the treasure tables peak at 5,000 gp.
Perhaps there is a work around for Reality Revision if a Cognizance Crystal can be used as the material component (see linked question) as Craft Cognizance Crystal allows the use of 12,500 gp of "raw materials" to create a 25,000gp crystal over 25 days of crafting. "Raw materials" have no meaningful rarity so it's just a matter of having the funds. All good there... maybe.
So, now to Wish... a diamond is specifically cited as the expensive material component. It's not diamonds plural, it is a single diamond. The most expensive diamond you can find in treasure is worth 5,000 gp. A 25,000 gp diamond is so rare it doesn't even warrant a mention in random treasure tables.
To put the rarity in focus, even in a metropolis there is only a 75% chance of finding a magic item of up to 16,000 gp value. The maximum spell level for a metropolis is 8th, so no wish casting even in the biggest population centres listed.
How does someone procure one of these unmentionably rare 25,000 gp diamonds? And if using it for a Wish spell destroys it, how are there any left in a world with any wish casters in it?
It isn't a feasible material component when it is so specific!
The wizard has clawed his/her way up 17 levels, scrimped 25,000 gp, and then is blocked by the rarity of the material component.
Sure, make it cost a lot, but let it be practical to source the materials without becoming BFFs with Dumathoin (or whatever god of gems your setting has handy).
pathfinder spells pricing economy special-materials
$endgroup$
Reality Revision requires a crystal worth 25,000 gp.
Wish requires a diamond worth 25,000 gp.
"Grand Jewels" in the treasure tables peak at 5,000 gp.
Perhaps there is a work around for Reality Revision if a Cognizance Crystal can be used as the material component (see linked question) as Craft Cognizance Crystal allows the use of 12,500 gp of "raw materials" to create a 25,000gp crystal over 25 days of crafting. "Raw materials" have no meaningful rarity so it's just a matter of having the funds. All good there... maybe.
So, now to Wish... a diamond is specifically cited as the expensive material component. It's not diamonds plural, it is a single diamond. The most expensive diamond you can find in treasure is worth 5,000 gp. A 25,000 gp diamond is so rare it doesn't even warrant a mention in random treasure tables.
To put the rarity in focus, even in a metropolis there is only a 75% chance of finding a magic item of up to 16,000 gp value. The maximum spell level for a metropolis is 8th, so no wish casting even in the biggest population centres listed.
How does someone procure one of these unmentionably rare 25,000 gp diamonds? And if using it for a Wish spell destroys it, how are there any left in a world with any wish casters in it?
It isn't a feasible material component when it is so specific!
The wizard has clawed his/her way up 17 levels, scrimped 25,000 gp, and then is blocked by the rarity of the material component.
Sure, make it cost a lot, but let it be practical to source the materials without becoming BFFs with Dumathoin (or whatever god of gems your setting has handy).
pathfinder spells pricing economy special-materials
pathfinder spells pricing economy special-materials
edited 1 hour ago
V2Blast
22.7k371142
22.7k371142
asked 1 hour ago
niekellniekell
18617
18617
add a comment |
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
$begingroup$
The rules for grand jewels don't peak their value at 5,000 gp.
Grand Jewels (5,000 gp or more): clearest bright green emerald; diamond; jacinth; ruby
Grand jewels can be worth more than 5,000gp, instead of setting a cap on them the rules do the opposite and set a minimum. The lowest value diamond you can find is 5,000 gp.
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
Good catch, I missed the significance of "or more". Still, how rare are 25,000 gp grand jewels given the settlement demographics? (Oh gods, is that a separate question too?)
$endgroup$
– niekell
47 mins ago
$begingroup$
@niekell you guessed it
$endgroup$
– william porter
36 mins ago
$begingroup$
Settlements seem to only restrict magic items purchases however.
$endgroup$
– william porter
35 mins ago
$begingroup$
Now I wonder if there's a gem worth more than 5,000 gp in a published-by-Paizo adventure. That is, one that can be discovered without murdering a spellcaster and looting his material components.
$endgroup$
– Hey I Can Chan
21 mins ago
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Use Fabricate to convert 5 5,000gp diamonds into a single one with a 25,000gp value?
From my reading of the Fabricate spell, the caster converts "material of one sort (which in this case would be a pile of diamonds with a total value of 25kgp) into a (single) product that is of the same material" & since the "quality of items made by this spell is commensurate with the quality of material used", the value of the individual gems should be retained allowing for a single 25kgp gem to be produced. Even the most expensive 5kgp diamonds would be small enough for 5 of them to fit in a single cubic foot of space (though if you can't find five of those, use 25 1kgp diamonds - the spell doesn't care) & the finished product isn't going to be used for anything other than as a spell component, so crafting isn't an issue.
Logically, it should work (& only needs a 5th level spell to do it too!).
New contributor
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
Welcome to RPG.SE! Take the tour if you haven't already, and check out the help center for more guidance.
$endgroup$
– V2Blast
43 mins ago
add a comment |
$begingroup$
how are there any left in a world with any wish casters in it?
You are aware that fantasy worlds are ... fantasies? That is, they don't actually have things like economics and, you know, people.
Take your head out of the game and look at the metagame.
They have 25,000gp diamonds in exactly the locations and quantities that the Game Master decides that they have them. Having specific and expensive material components are a way for the GM to gate access to these specific PC and NPC abilities.
Some GMs will make 25,000gp diamonds as common as glass because they want their players to have easy access to these abilities. Other GMs may make them rare and precious so that players can use the ability but will go to great lengths to find another way. Still other GMs will use these as McGuffins for adventures - "The only source of such perfect diamonds is in the Lost Mine of Eee, which is, you know, lost. Oh, and infested with demons. And a wizard that can cast Wish."
Virtually no GMs use random generation for significant treasures. Once you've given a randomly generated Staff of the Magi to a 4th level wizard you learn your lesson.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
Your Answer
StackExchange.ifUsing("editor", function () {
return StackExchange.using("mathjaxEditing", function () {
StackExchange.MarkdownEditor.creationCallbacks.add(function (editor, postfix) {
StackExchange.mathjaxEditing.prepareWmdForMathJax(editor, postfix, [["\$", "\$"]]);
});
});
}, "mathjax-editing");
StackExchange.ready(function() {
var channelOptions = {
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "122"
};
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);
StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function() {
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled) {
StackExchange.using("snippets", function() {
createEditor();
});
}
else {
createEditor();
}
});
function createEditor() {
StackExchange.prepareEditor({
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader: {
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
},
noCode: true, onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
});
}
});
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function () {
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2frpg.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f141159%2fare-expensive-material-component-costs-too-specific%23new-answer', 'question_page');
}
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
$begingroup$
The rules for grand jewels don't peak their value at 5,000 gp.
Grand Jewels (5,000 gp or more): clearest bright green emerald; diamond; jacinth; ruby
Grand jewels can be worth more than 5,000gp, instead of setting a cap on them the rules do the opposite and set a minimum. The lowest value diamond you can find is 5,000 gp.
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
Good catch, I missed the significance of "or more". Still, how rare are 25,000 gp grand jewels given the settlement demographics? (Oh gods, is that a separate question too?)
$endgroup$
– niekell
47 mins ago
$begingroup$
@niekell you guessed it
$endgroup$
– william porter
36 mins ago
$begingroup$
Settlements seem to only restrict magic items purchases however.
$endgroup$
– william porter
35 mins ago
$begingroup$
Now I wonder if there's a gem worth more than 5,000 gp in a published-by-Paizo adventure. That is, one that can be discovered without murdering a spellcaster and looting his material components.
$endgroup$
– Hey I Can Chan
21 mins ago
add a comment |
$begingroup$
The rules for grand jewels don't peak their value at 5,000 gp.
Grand Jewels (5,000 gp or more): clearest bright green emerald; diamond; jacinth; ruby
Grand jewels can be worth more than 5,000gp, instead of setting a cap on them the rules do the opposite and set a minimum. The lowest value diamond you can find is 5,000 gp.
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
Good catch, I missed the significance of "or more". Still, how rare are 25,000 gp grand jewels given the settlement demographics? (Oh gods, is that a separate question too?)
$endgroup$
– niekell
47 mins ago
$begingroup$
@niekell you guessed it
$endgroup$
– william porter
36 mins ago
$begingroup$
Settlements seem to only restrict magic items purchases however.
$endgroup$
– william porter
35 mins ago
$begingroup$
Now I wonder if there's a gem worth more than 5,000 gp in a published-by-Paizo adventure. That is, one that can be discovered without murdering a spellcaster and looting his material components.
$endgroup$
– Hey I Can Chan
21 mins ago
add a comment |
$begingroup$
The rules for grand jewels don't peak their value at 5,000 gp.
Grand Jewels (5,000 gp or more): clearest bright green emerald; diamond; jacinth; ruby
Grand jewels can be worth more than 5,000gp, instead of setting a cap on them the rules do the opposite and set a minimum. The lowest value diamond you can find is 5,000 gp.
$endgroup$
The rules for grand jewels don't peak their value at 5,000 gp.
Grand Jewels (5,000 gp or more): clearest bright green emerald; diamond; jacinth; ruby
Grand jewels can be worth more than 5,000gp, instead of setting a cap on them the rules do the opposite and set a minimum. The lowest value diamond you can find is 5,000 gp.
answered 1 hour ago
william porterwilliam porter
1,122114
1,122114
$begingroup$
Good catch, I missed the significance of "or more". Still, how rare are 25,000 gp grand jewels given the settlement demographics? (Oh gods, is that a separate question too?)
$endgroup$
– niekell
47 mins ago
$begingroup$
@niekell you guessed it
$endgroup$
– william porter
36 mins ago
$begingroup$
Settlements seem to only restrict magic items purchases however.
$endgroup$
– william porter
35 mins ago
$begingroup$
Now I wonder if there's a gem worth more than 5,000 gp in a published-by-Paizo adventure. That is, one that can be discovered without murdering a spellcaster and looting his material components.
$endgroup$
– Hey I Can Chan
21 mins ago
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Good catch, I missed the significance of "or more". Still, how rare are 25,000 gp grand jewels given the settlement demographics? (Oh gods, is that a separate question too?)
$endgroup$
– niekell
47 mins ago
$begingroup$
@niekell you guessed it
$endgroup$
– william porter
36 mins ago
$begingroup$
Settlements seem to only restrict magic items purchases however.
$endgroup$
– william porter
35 mins ago
$begingroup$
Now I wonder if there's a gem worth more than 5,000 gp in a published-by-Paizo adventure. That is, one that can be discovered without murdering a spellcaster and looting his material components.
$endgroup$
– Hey I Can Chan
21 mins ago
$begingroup$
Good catch, I missed the significance of "or more". Still, how rare are 25,000 gp grand jewels given the settlement demographics? (Oh gods, is that a separate question too?)
$endgroup$
– niekell
47 mins ago
$begingroup$
Good catch, I missed the significance of "or more". Still, how rare are 25,000 gp grand jewels given the settlement demographics? (Oh gods, is that a separate question too?)
$endgroup$
– niekell
47 mins ago
$begingroup$
@niekell you guessed it
$endgroup$
– william porter
36 mins ago
$begingroup$
@niekell you guessed it
$endgroup$
– william porter
36 mins ago
$begingroup$
Settlements seem to only restrict magic items purchases however.
$endgroup$
– william porter
35 mins ago
$begingroup$
Settlements seem to only restrict magic items purchases however.
$endgroup$
– william porter
35 mins ago
$begingroup$
Now I wonder if there's a gem worth more than 5,000 gp in a published-by-Paizo adventure. That is, one that can be discovered without murdering a spellcaster and looting his material components.
$endgroup$
– Hey I Can Chan
21 mins ago
$begingroup$
Now I wonder if there's a gem worth more than 5,000 gp in a published-by-Paizo adventure. That is, one that can be discovered without murdering a spellcaster and looting his material components.
$endgroup$
– Hey I Can Chan
21 mins ago
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Use Fabricate to convert 5 5,000gp diamonds into a single one with a 25,000gp value?
From my reading of the Fabricate spell, the caster converts "material of one sort (which in this case would be a pile of diamonds with a total value of 25kgp) into a (single) product that is of the same material" & since the "quality of items made by this spell is commensurate with the quality of material used", the value of the individual gems should be retained allowing for a single 25kgp gem to be produced. Even the most expensive 5kgp diamonds would be small enough for 5 of them to fit in a single cubic foot of space (though if you can't find five of those, use 25 1kgp diamonds - the spell doesn't care) & the finished product isn't going to be used for anything other than as a spell component, so crafting isn't an issue.
Logically, it should work (& only needs a 5th level spell to do it too!).
New contributor
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
Welcome to RPG.SE! Take the tour if you haven't already, and check out the help center for more guidance.
$endgroup$
– V2Blast
43 mins ago
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Use Fabricate to convert 5 5,000gp diamonds into a single one with a 25,000gp value?
From my reading of the Fabricate spell, the caster converts "material of one sort (which in this case would be a pile of diamonds with a total value of 25kgp) into a (single) product that is of the same material" & since the "quality of items made by this spell is commensurate with the quality of material used", the value of the individual gems should be retained allowing for a single 25kgp gem to be produced. Even the most expensive 5kgp diamonds would be small enough for 5 of them to fit in a single cubic foot of space (though if you can't find five of those, use 25 1kgp diamonds - the spell doesn't care) & the finished product isn't going to be used for anything other than as a spell component, so crafting isn't an issue.
Logically, it should work (& only needs a 5th level spell to do it too!).
New contributor
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
Welcome to RPG.SE! Take the tour if you haven't already, and check out the help center for more guidance.
$endgroup$
– V2Blast
43 mins ago
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Use Fabricate to convert 5 5,000gp diamonds into a single one with a 25,000gp value?
From my reading of the Fabricate spell, the caster converts "material of one sort (which in this case would be a pile of diamonds with a total value of 25kgp) into a (single) product that is of the same material" & since the "quality of items made by this spell is commensurate with the quality of material used", the value of the individual gems should be retained allowing for a single 25kgp gem to be produced. Even the most expensive 5kgp diamonds would be small enough for 5 of them to fit in a single cubic foot of space (though if you can't find five of those, use 25 1kgp diamonds - the spell doesn't care) & the finished product isn't going to be used for anything other than as a spell component, so crafting isn't an issue.
Logically, it should work (& only needs a 5th level spell to do it too!).
New contributor
$endgroup$
Use Fabricate to convert 5 5,000gp diamonds into a single one with a 25,000gp value?
From my reading of the Fabricate spell, the caster converts "material of one sort (which in this case would be a pile of diamonds with a total value of 25kgp) into a (single) product that is of the same material" & since the "quality of items made by this spell is commensurate with the quality of material used", the value of the individual gems should be retained allowing for a single 25kgp gem to be produced. Even the most expensive 5kgp diamonds would be small enough for 5 of them to fit in a single cubic foot of space (though if you can't find five of those, use 25 1kgp diamonds - the spell doesn't care) & the finished product isn't going to be used for anything other than as a spell component, so crafting isn't an issue.
Logically, it should work (& only needs a 5th level spell to do it too!).
New contributor
New contributor
answered 46 mins ago
IanIan
111
111
New contributor
New contributor
$begingroup$
Welcome to RPG.SE! Take the tour if you haven't already, and check out the help center for more guidance.
$endgroup$
– V2Blast
43 mins ago
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Welcome to RPG.SE! Take the tour if you haven't already, and check out the help center for more guidance.
$endgroup$
– V2Blast
43 mins ago
$begingroup$
Welcome to RPG.SE! Take the tour if you haven't already, and check out the help center for more guidance.
$endgroup$
– V2Blast
43 mins ago
$begingroup$
Welcome to RPG.SE! Take the tour if you haven't already, and check out the help center for more guidance.
$endgroup$
– V2Blast
43 mins ago
add a comment |
$begingroup$
how are there any left in a world with any wish casters in it?
You are aware that fantasy worlds are ... fantasies? That is, they don't actually have things like economics and, you know, people.
Take your head out of the game and look at the metagame.
They have 25,000gp diamonds in exactly the locations and quantities that the Game Master decides that they have them. Having specific and expensive material components are a way for the GM to gate access to these specific PC and NPC abilities.
Some GMs will make 25,000gp diamonds as common as glass because they want their players to have easy access to these abilities. Other GMs may make them rare and precious so that players can use the ability but will go to great lengths to find another way. Still other GMs will use these as McGuffins for adventures - "The only source of such perfect diamonds is in the Lost Mine of Eee, which is, you know, lost. Oh, and infested with demons. And a wizard that can cast Wish."
Virtually no GMs use random generation for significant treasures. Once you've given a randomly generated Staff of the Magi to a 4th level wizard you learn your lesson.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
how are there any left in a world with any wish casters in it?
You are aware that fantasy worlds are ... fantasies? That is, they don't actually have things like economics and, you know, people.
Take your head out of the game and look at the metagame.
They have 25,000gp diamonds in exactly the locations and quantities that the Game Master decides that they have them. Having specific and expensive material components are a way for the GM to gate access to these specific PC and NPC abilities.
Some GMs will make 25,000gp diamonds as common as glass because they want their players to have easy access to these abilities. Other GMs may make them rare and precious so that players can use the ability but will go to great lengths to find another way. Still other GMs will use these as McGuffins for adventures - "The only source of such perfect diamonds is in the Lost Mine of Eee, which is, you know, lost. Oh, and infested with demons. And a wizard that can cast Wish."
Virtually no GMs use random generation for significant treasures. Once you've given a randomly generated Staff of the Magi to a 4th level wizard you learn your lesson.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
how are there any left in a world with any wish casters in it?
You are aware that fantasy worlds are ... fantasies? That is, they don't actually have things like economics and, you know, people.
Take your head out of the game and look at the metagame.
They have 25,000gp diamonds in exactly the locations and quantities that the Game Master decides that they have them. Having specific and expensive material components are a way for the GM to gate access to these specific PC and NPC abilities.
Some GMs will make 25,000gp diamonds as common as glass because they want their players to have easy access to these abilities. Other GMs may make them rare and precious so that players can use the ability but will go to great lengths to find another way. Still other GMs will use these as McGuffins for adventures - "The only source of such perfect diamonds is in the Lost Mine of Eee, which is, you know, lost. Oh, and infested with demons. And a wizard that can cast Wish."
Virtually no GMs use random generation for significant treasures. Once you've given a randomly generated Staff of the Magi to a 4th level wizard you learn your lesson.
$endgroup$
how are there any left in a world with any wish casters in it?
You are aware that fantasy worlds are ... fantasies? That is, they don't actually have things like economics and, you know, people.
Take your head out of the game and look at the metagame.
They have 25,000gp diamonds in exactly the locations and quantities that the Game Master decides that they have them. Having specific and expensive material components are a way for the GM to gate access to these specific PC and NPC abilities.
Some GMs will make 25,000gp diamonds as common as glass because they want their players to have easy access to these abilities. Other GMs may make them rare and precious so that players can use the ability but will go to great lengths to find another way. Still other GMs will use these as McGuffins for adventures - "The only source of such perfect diamonds is in the Lost Mine of Eee, which is, you know, lost. Oh, and infested with demons. And a wizard that can cast Wish."
Virtually no GMs use random generation for significant treasures. Once you've given a randomly generated Staff of the Magi to a 4th level wizard you learn your lesson.
answered 44 mins ago
Dale MDale M
106k21274472
106k21274472
add a comment |
add a comment |
Thanks for contributing an answer to Role-playing Games Stack Exchange!
- Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!
But avoid …
- Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.
- Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.
Use MathJax to format equations. MathJax reference.
To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function () {
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2frpg.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f141159%2fare-expensive-material-component-costs-too-specific%23new-answer', 'question_page');
}
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown