Palladin
Muscle head
Jar head
Jar jar binks
Crayons
Cryons
Darth Jar Jar
Star wars
Death star
Mimas moon
Taxes
Repo man
Ultimate warior
Viking palladin
Traits:
Warrior Spirit
Berserk Rage
Divine Magic
Heavy Armor
Runic armor
Self healing
Immortal, dont bleed, buffed when low health
A: realistic base
Full plate
Hemostatic compounds
Painkillers
Stimulants
Armor materials ideas:
Bronze
Iron
Steel
Meteoric iron
Bamboo
Bone
Silk
Eqipment :
Undergarment - linen, silk if aviable
Padded gambeson, compromised of small pockets, pockeds filled with substance that expand when wet, soaked and dried in Hemostatics, painkillers, stimulants
Full plate
Material Composition
Hydrophilic Material: The padding would be made from a hydrophilic (water-attracting) expanding material. These materials can expand several times their original volume when they come into contact with liquids like blood.
Expanded Volume: When blood starts to soak into the padding, it would expand in size, creating a cushioning effect that f compresses the wound, helping slow down blood flow. This would act as a mechanical compression bandage, essentially using the fabric's swelling to squeeze the wound and stop blood flow.
The padding’s expansion rate can be dynamically tied to the amount of blood absorbed. In the case of minor injuries, the swelling would only be moderate, providing basic pressure and clotting. For severe wounds, the swelling would become more pronounced
Summary of Key Features
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Hydrophilic expansion: The padding swells as it absorbs blood, providing pressure to slow bleeding and compress wounds.
Hemostatic compounds: The expanding fabric releases clotting agents, painkillers, and stimulants to enhance healing and maintain combat effectiveness.
Dynamic response: The more blood that is absorbed, the more expansive and compressive the padding becomes, providing an adaptive system for self-healing.
Multi-layered fabric: The initial layer absorbs blood, while the expanded padding offers compression and enhances blood stopping.
Directed Compression System Under Full Plate Armor
1. Design and Placement of Padding
The padding layer would be designed to fit precisely under the plate in strategically placed zones of the armor, where the greatest risk of injury or vital organs are located (e.g., chest, abdomen, thighs).
The padding would be composed of multi-layered, flexible material, designed to stay flat when dry but expand when exposed to blood, essentially creating targeted compression within the armor.
Zones of Pressure: The key areas where the padding will expand (like over the chest, abdomen, and limbs) will be designed to direct pressure inward from the armor. These areas are often where a strike would cause significant blood loss or injury (especially from blades, axes, or blunt force).
2. Expansion Mechanism for Directed Compression
As the blood seeps into the padding, the hydrophilic materials expand. However, because the padding is confined within the rigid structure of full plate armor, the expansion of the material would be directed inward, exerting localized pressure on the wound site.
This compression effect helps to seal the wound and slow down blood flow.
The padding would grow and expand inward toward the injury (rather than outward), focusing the pressure exactly where it's needed.
Blood Absorption: The padding would still soak up the blood and become even more effective the more it absorbs, activating the hemostatic compounds, and increasing stimulants as needed.
3. Compression Functionality Under Armor
Compression Pressure: The armor itself would act as an external compression layer, holding the expanded padding firmly against the injury. This creates a compression sandwich: the external plate armor compresses inward while the internal padding expands, working together to maximize blood stoppage and prevent further blood loss.
For example, if there is an injury to the side of the torso, the side armor panel would apply lateral pressure, while the inner padding expands inward, further pressing the wound and stopping the blood flow more efficiently.
5. Practical Use in Combat
Blood Loss Control: If a warrior takes a hit and starts bleeding, the expanding padding would start to absorb blood and expand inward, pressing against the wound area, while the full plate armor presses on the padding, directing that pressure toward the injury site.
Sustained Combat Effectiveness: As the padding expands and increases pressure, the warrior’s ability to keep fighting would be preserved for a longer period of time. If the injury is severe but not fatal, the padding can keep the warrior in action long enough to turn the tide of battle.
Dynamic Adjustment: The more blood the padding absorbs, the more compression and expansion would occur, keeping the warrior on their feet even in increasingly desperate situations. The padding’s expansion would also focus on vital areas where the threat of blood loss is greatest
Waterproofing and ventilation
Didnt want palladin killed by rain sqished in his own armor
Sweating good ventilation, little bit not problém we get permanently high palladin.
Materials
Beeswax (waterproofing, healing)
Silver powder ( anibacterial)
Homeostatics maybe resins (explore dragon blood resin)
The Illusion of Invulnerability: External Perspective
1. The Visual Effect – No Blood Visible
Absence of Visible Blood: From the outside, no blood is visible, even when the warrior takes puncturing blows or suffers deep cuts. The waterproof layer and hemostatic compounds within the padding would immediately halt bleeding, absorbing it into the internal layers of the armor and stopping any blood from soaking through to the surface.
Instantaneous Blood-Stopping Effect: The blood would be absorbed by the padding and then immediately coagulate, preventing any visible wounds from showing blood. Essentially, the warrior wouldn’t appear to bleed, even though the body is still responding internally to the injury.
This effect would create a psychological advantage over enemies who expect to see blood as a sign of injury and weakness, giving the warrior an air of invincibility or resilience.
2. Compression and Healing Feedback Loop
Internal Pressure: The inner padding would apply a constant compressive force around the injury. While from the outside, the warrior seems to be unscathed, the hemostatic compounds within the padding would be actively working to stop bleeding and stabilize the wound, improving healing.
As blood saturates the inner layers of the padding, it would activate the hemostatic agents, promoting clotting and further reducing bleeding. This would lead to a kind of feedback loop: the more blood is shed, the more stimulation the compounds receive to increase clotting, enhancing the healing process and reducing blood loss.
3. Psychological Warfare: The Appearance of Resilience
Fear and Intimidation: Enemies witnessing this process might assume that the warrior is somehow immune to injury or unkillable, which could instill fear or disorientation. Since warriors typically use blood loss as a sign of vulnerability, having an adversary who doesn't visibly bleed could create a chilling effect on opponents.
Imagine a scenario where a warrior takes several piercing blows, but the armor remains spotless—no blood, no visible sign of damage. This would make the enemy question the effectiveness of their attacks and may even lead them to hesitate or doubt their ability to defeat the warrior.
4. External Observation – Impossible to Track Damage
Difficulty in Assessing Damage: Onlookers or opponents would find it extremely difficult to gauge the severity of wounds. They would be unable to tell if the warrior is seriously injured or if the armor is functioning normally. This could give the warrior a strategic advantage, as the enemy would not know when they had truly injured the fighter.
Tactical Deception: During battle, the warrior could use this to their advantage, leading enemies to underestimate the extent of their wounds or fail to understand the warrior's condition. They could appear to be invincible even when injured, which could lead to overconfidence on the enemy's part, allowing the warrior to counterattack when the opponent is distracted or unsure of their own position.Medical Perspective – The Hidden Bleeding
From a medical standpoint, while the blood loss is effectively sealed and hidden from external sight, the warrior is still experiencing the internal effects of blood loss. If the warrior sustains enough injuries over time, the body would still face the strain of internal bleeding, despite the absence of visible blood.
Ideas:
Bamboo armor
Balsa armor
Cork armor shock absorbtion layer
Inflatable (balloon warior)
Giant wariors
Giants - -) Cyclops
- elephant skulls
Giant - -) Summoning
- chant, green fire, sulfur