Board Thread:Off Topic/@comment-26397825-20170410034737/@comment-25936766-20170612235944

Sentry 616 wrote: 1: It's ground level to whatever I set the max at. I meant that if 100 is the max, then that would be a rare occoasion, say hassling aircraft attempting to flee.

2: 20 feet seems perfectly fine, but 100 feet seems excessively high. Finding exact numbers can be a finnicky business.

3: I don't drink. Let's just slap 10 foot diameter on this, if you need a number.

4: I was having a little trouble finding an example of weather that occurs on ground level. Alternately they could generate winds instead of directly contolling the mists.

5: Um, what else?

6: Also, I didn't think I would have to make a detailed set of specific rules. 1-Then what is the fucking maximum? On normal circumstances.

2-20ft=6.1 meters. 100ft=30.5 meters. If 100ft seems excessive, then just state a lower number. Or if 20ft is really perfectly fine with you, just leave it there.

3-That's much better. Pretty small (3.05mt), but much better.

4-Technically any kind of weather can occur at "ground level". The question is if said ground is high enough, or if said weather phenomenum can extend to the surface (like with tornados and lightning strikes). Fog is among the ones that generally stay "close to the ground", though a good number of times it's only because said ground is pretty high-up (like with mountains).

5-I don't know, just had to make sure because you were not being clear in what you were responding to in each point.

6-I'm not telling you make a detailed set of specific rules. I'm telling you to be clear.