Frequently Asked Questions for rec.games.roguelike.moria
Last changes: 7/21/94 (Moria 5.5.2) 
              6/25/94 (Moria 5.5.1)
              6/21/94 (changed RTFM archive name)

First, a general guideline for posters.  When you post any question
related to playing or debugging the game, please give the version
number, which you can get during the game by pressing "v".

These are the questions in the Moria Frequently Asked Questions list.
Quick answers to some questions are given in parentheses; more detailed
answers to those questions with numbers are in the list which follows.

The answers below are separated by form feeds, so that in most news
readers, you can get the answer you want without looking at the rest of
the spoilers.  (Search for the string "Q5", for example.)

Many of the answers are only correct for Umoria versions (4.87 and 5.x);
I don't know much about the other versions of Moria.

Please send any corrections or other suggested questions to me at
grabiner@math.harvard.edu.

A current copy of this FAQ may be obtained by FTP from the RTFM archive,

rtfm.mit.edu:/pub/usenet/rec.games.roguelike.moria/rec.games.roguelike.moria_Frequently_Asked_Questions

or by using the mailserver on RTFM.  To use the mailserver, send a
message to mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu containing the line
"send /pub/usenet/rec.games.roguelike.moria/rec.games.roguelike.moria_Frequently_Asked_Questions"

The most common questions, asked by both beginners and others:

Q1. How do I get the Moria sources/executables/documentation? 
(FTP from ftp.cis.ksu.edu; there is also a mailserver.)

Q2. I can't get Moria/Angband set up on my machine; is there a server on
another machine that I can use?  (Yes; telnet bbs.runet.edu and
login as bbs.)

What does this item do?  (Answer is below with the spoilers.)

Why do most winning characters carry several copies of spell books?
(In case one gets stolen or burned.)

What does the (-2) in Chain Mail (-2) [14,+2] mean?  (It's a penalty to
hit, caused by the heavy armor.)

Q3. How do I use wizard mode, and what can I do in it?  (In 5.x, just type
control-W.)

Non-spoiler questions:

Q4. How does resistance work?  Are two items of resistance cumulative?
(Not if both are worn items.)

Q5. How does speed work?  Do you get faster if you are already Very Fast
and get another speed item?  (Yes.)

Q6. I'm playing Moria version V; how does that compare to the current
version?  Is it compatible?

Q7. I think I've found a bug; what should I do?  (Report it with the
version number and system.) 

Common spoiler requests:

Q8. What are the special abilities of ego weapons?  Crowns?  Amulet of
the Magi?  Cloak of Protection? 

Q9. How much damage do spells and wands do?

Q10. What does spell Y do?

Q11. On what level do you find X?  (Level 25 is best for gain stat potions.) 

Q12. How many attacks can I get with this weapon?

Q13. How do you kill an ancient multi-hued dragon?  (Usually, you don't.)

Q14. How do you kill an emperor lich?  (With speed and spells.)

Q15. What is the grape jelly trick?  Does it work in Umoria 5.x?  (No.)

Questions related to the source code:

Q16. I don't like haggling; can I change the source code to turn it off?

Q17. How do you create objects in wizard mode?

Q1. How do I get the Moria sources/executables/documentation? 

The following Moria files are available by anonymous FTP from
ftp.cis.ksu.edu (IP address 129.130.10.80) or ftp.engg.ksu.edu (IP
address 129.130.41.83).  They should also be available by gopher from
gopher.cis.ksu.edu or gopher.engg.ksu.edu, or from the WWW
server at KSU:

xmosaic http://www.engg.ksu.edu/welcome.html

If you don't have FTP access, there is a mailserver which gives access
to ftp.cis.ksu.edu; see below.  If you can't use the mailserver, see
further below for a BBS which has the files.  

The sources for Umoria 5.5.0 were also posted to comp.sources.games, so
they should be available (in compressed shar form) on any site which
archives comp.sources.games, such as ftp.uu.net.

/pub/Games/Moria/[machine name]
Executables for the Amiga, Atari ST, IBM PC, and Mac; look at the README
files in these directories for more information.  Some of these files
may need to be transferred in binary mode; type "binary" before
transferring the files.  KSU has both color and monochrome executables
for the IBM PC.  European users can also get Mac binaries from jyu.fi,
in a file /maclib/game/moria.sit.bin.

/pub/Games/Moria/source/um5.5.2.tar.Z 
A compressed tar file containing the entire source, for use on any
system; if you have tar on your system, this is probably the file that
you want.  (If you don't have compress, you can FTP it from ftp.uu.net;
it is compress.tar.)  This file must be transferred in binary mode; type
"binary" before getting the file.  Once you have the tar.Z file, type
"zcat um5.5.2.tar.Z | tar xf -" to extract the files, and read the README
files for help in installing.

/pub/Games/Moria/pc/src/mor55src.zip
A ZIP file containing the source.

/pub/Games/Moria/XMoria/xm1.07.tar.Z
The source to Moria for X Windows.

/pub/Games/Moria/doc
The documentation for Moria 5.5, including the official documentation,
the FAQ file, and a complete monster list.

/pub/Games/Moria/pc/mono5.5 
The auxilliary files are in this directory; you may need them if you
have an executable without them.

/pub/Games/Angband
The source to Angband for UNIX, and source and executable for the PC and
Mac.

/pub/Games/Moria/boss
The source distribution, in Pascal, for BOSS.

/pub/Games/Moria/vms
The source discribution, in Pascal, for VMS Moria 4.8 and 5.0.  Umoria
5.x will also work on VMS machines.

/pub/Games/Moria/unofficial
Other unofficial modifications of Moria, including the druid version for
the PC, and the sources for Morgul and Pmoria.

VMS sources for Imoria are available on ubvms.cc.buffalo.edu, in a
directory /maslib/games/imoria.  VMS Moria 4.8 and 5.0 sources are also
there.

Mailserver instructions (from Karl Hagen <greyhelm@cis.ksu.edu>):

For all those unfortunates who don't have Internet ftp access, I've
setup a mailserver to provide access to the archives on
ftp.cis.ksu.edu.

This mailserver can be contacted via mail one of the following
addresses:

...!rutgers!depot!mailserver  (UUCP)
mailserver@cis.ksu.edu        (Internet)
mailserver@engg.ksu.edu       (Internet)

The server accepts commands given in the body of the mail messages;
help is available with the command "help".  

A listing of the files in
the story archive may be obtained by "dir -l /pub/Games/Moria".

Since the files archive consists of binary files, they must
be uuencoded before they are sent on their way.  To specify this mode,
use the command "encode uuencode"  To retrieve the files, use the
"send" command (ex:  send /pub/Games/Moria/pc/mor55-286.zip

If you have a system which cannot handle ZIP files, you may use
the "unzip" filter ("encode unzip") 
which will send you the uncompressed (but not uuencoded) version of the file.

Here is an example mail message:

% Mail mailserver@cis.ksu.edu
~Subject: request 
help
encode uue     
send /pub/Games/Moria/pc/mor55-286.zip
^D
%

Please note that this is completely experimental and is not bug free.
Questions and problems about this mailserver may be directed to
"greyhelm@engg.ksu.edu".

BBS instructions (from Tom Sorensen <gt0040a@prism.gatech.edu>):

I've been making the source code, DOS and OS/2 executables, and all the
spoilers I have available on:

Ravishing Nook
(404)368-9949
2400-14.4k (V.32bis)
Downloads should be available on first call.


Q2. I can't get Moria/Angband set up on my machine; is there a server on
another machine that I can use?  

There is a bbs at bbs.runet.edu which has Moria and Angband installed.
To play either game, telnet to bbs.runet.edu, and login as bbs to set up
an account.

If possible, please try to set up Moria or Angband yourself first, to
avoid overloading the BBS.  The game will also play better on your own
machine, because there will be no network delays.

This BBS is maintained by Brian Kirouac, bri@ltpsun.gsfc.nasa.gov;
please mail any questions or problems to him, not to me.

Q3. How do I use wizard mode, and what can I do in it?  

In Umoria 5.x, anyone can use wizard mode by typing ^W.  However,
characters who play in wizard mode are permanently barred from the
scoreboard; wizard mode should be used only for debugging and
experimenting.

In 4.87 on Unix systems, only the person who installed the game can use
wizard mode; if you are the installer, the passwords are in the source
file constants.h.

In PC-Moria 4.8x, you need to know the passwords to use wizard mode, and
the password will depend on who compiled your game.

4.87 has both wizard and god modes; 5.x's wizard mode is equivalent to
the old god mode.  The 4.87 wizard mode allows you to do only things
related to the game (cure all problems, teleport, identify).  The 5.x
wizard mode and 4.87 god mode allow you to test the program by editing
your character, creating objects, deleting monsters, and similar things.

In wizard mode, ^H or DELETE will give you a list of the available
commands.

Q4. How does resistance work?  Are two items of resistance cumulative?

Resist heat/cold potions and spells give temporary resistance to heat or
cold.  All other resistance items give permanent resistance.  Two
permanent resistances are not cumulative, and two temporary resistances
are cumulative only in duration.

Fire and cold do 1/3 damage if you have single resistance, 1/9 if you
have double.
Acid does 1/2 damage if you have any armor to corrode, 1/3 if you have
resistance but no armor, and 1/4 if you have resistance and armor.
Lightning does 1/3 damage if you have resistance.
There is no resistance against poison gas.

Q5. How does speed work?  Do you get faster if you are already Very Fast
and get another speed item?  

Very Fast is the highest speed that can be displayed, but if you are
fortunate enough to find several speed items, you can get still faster.
Permanent speed items (rings and boots) are cumulative, and temporary
speed (potions, spells, and staffs) can add one more point to your
speed.  Multiple uses of temporary speed are cumulative only in
duration.

Q6. I'm playing Moria version V; how does that compare to the current
version?  Is it compatible?

Moria versions:

Umoria 5.5.2: This is the current version of Umoria.  It will accept
characters from all Umoria 5.x versions.

Umoria 5.3.1-5.5.1: These are essentially identical to 5.5.2, and
compatible with it, although 5.5.2 fixes a few bugs, and there have been
a few minor changes.  Upgrading from 5.5.1 to 5.5.2 is probably not
necessary.

Umoria 5.2.2/5.3.0: These are in good condition, and compatible with the
current version.  One bug: don't rest more than 10,000 turns in place,
and leave the level if you start seeing lots of "Compacting monsters..."
messages, or the game may lock up.

Umoria 5.2.1: This is playable, but has no high scores file; you
probably want to upgrade if possible.

Umoria 5.1.0-5.2.0: These versions can be played, but are somewhat
buggy.  If you run into an invisible, invincible monster which doesn't
move or attack, get off the level.  If you can FTP the sources or
executables, you should upgrade.

The U is often omitted from the names of the following Umoria versions.

Umoria 4.87/PC-Moria 4.87x: This version is based on the old VMS Moria.
It is relatively bug-free, but it doesn't have the features of the 5.x
versions, such as monster memory.  The save file format is incompatible
with 5.x, and several people have failed in attempts to write a
conversion program.

Umoria 4.85: A moderately buggy version, also based on VMS Moria.

Umoria/PC-Moria 4.83: An extremely buggy version, based on VMS Moria.
This version is essentially unplayable (see invisible doesn't work,
stores all close after 32768 turns, etc.)

The following versions are not compatible with Umoria, and Umoria
spoiler files may not apply to them.  I don't know much about these
versions.

UB Moria 5.0: Also known as VMS Moria 5.0, this is the current version
of VMS Moria.  It has more monsters, a Black Market, and other features.

Imoria 4.9: This is apparently a very good game, with new character
classes and other features.  It hasn't been released widely outside of the
University of Washington, but it is now available from the University of
Buffalo; see the FTP instructions.  It is available only for VMS.

Amiga Moria 3.0: Although this version was originally based on 4.85, it
has many added monsters, features, and bugs (including items which make
you virtually invincible).

BOSS: This game changes the setting of Moria, but keeps many of the
items.  It is based on VMS Moria 5.0.

Pmoria: A version of Moria based on 5.5.0, with many enhancements.

Morgul: An expanded version of Moria, keeping a similar setting.  It is
based on Umoria 5.5.0.

Angband: Another expanded version of Moria with a similar setting.  It
is based on Umoria 5.2.1; current versions include some of the bug fixes
from later versions.

Q7. I think I've found a bug; what should I do?   

When you are reporting a suspected bug, make sure to give the version
number and the system.  The bug report can be posted here or sent to me.
If someone else maintains the game on your machine, the bug report
should also be sent to him or her; the bug may be in a change on your
machine but not in my code.

If you have a patch for the bug, it would be best to send the patch by
Email, so that I can check the patch before releasing it.

If you report a bug which has been fixed in the current version, I may
be able to send you a patch, or at least tell you that you can fix the
bug by upgrading.  If the bug hasn't been fixed, a good bug report may
make it easy to fix.

Q8. What are the special abilities of ego weapons?  Crowns?  Amulet of
the Magi?  Cloak of Protection? 

All version-dependent changes are marked in brackets.

Amulet of the Magi    free action, see invisible, searching, +3 AC.
                      [no searching bonus in 4.87]
Cloak of Protection   no special ability, just a larger bonus than usual.

Ego weapons:

(HA) Holy Avenger   +(1-4) str, +(1-4) AC, (SE), (SU), sustain stat,
                    see invisible.
(DF) Defender       stealth, regeneration, free action, see invisible,
                    feather fall, RF, RC, RL, RA, +(6-10) to AC
(SM) Slay Monster   Damage (x 2) vs. monsters, see invisible. [found in
                    4.87 only]
(SA) Slay Animal    Damage (x 2) vs. animals, [does not exist in 4.87;
                    has see invisible through 5.1.4]
(SD) Slay Dragon    Damage (x 4) vs. dragons.
(SE) Slay Evil      Damage (x 2) vs. evil monsters.
(SU) Slay Undead    Damage (x 3) vs. undead, [see invisible in 5.1.5 and later]
(FT) Flame Tongue   Damage (x 1.5) vs. monsters harmed by fire.
(FB) Frost Brand    Damage (x 1.5) vs. monsters harmed by cold.

A HA which is +1 to strength sustains strength; +2, intelligence; +3,
wisdom; +4, constitution (not dexterity).

Crown of the Magi     +(1-3) int, (RF), (RC), (RA), (RL)
                      [In 4.87, it had see invisible instead of RL]
Crown of Lordliness   +(1-3) wis, chr.
Crown of Might        +(1-3) str, dex, con, free action.
Crown of Seeing       see invisible, +(10-25) searching.
                      [+(2-5) to seach in 4.87]
Crown of Regeneration Regeneration.
Crown of Beauty       +(1-3) charisma.

Regeneration lets you recover mana and hit points at 1.5 times the
normal rate, but also makes you use up food much more quickly.

Free action prevents you from being slowed or paralyzed by monsters.

Q9. How much damage do spells and wands do?

Spell Name              4.87 damage     5.1.0 and later damage
Magic Missile           2d6             2d6
Stinking Cloud          8               12
Lightning Bolt          3d8             4d8
Lightning Ball          24              32
Frost Bolt              4d8             6d8
Frost/Cold Ball         32              48
Acid Ball               40              60
Fire Bolt               6d8             9d8
Fire Ball               48              72
Wand of Drain Life      50              75 [in 5.1.4 and later]

In 5.x only, a wand of wall building will do 4d8 damage to any creature
buried in the wall (except one that moves through walls), and will kill
any immobile creature.  On the creature's next turn, it will attempt to
move out of the wall, and if it is unable to do so, it will take 10d8
damage and dig its way out.

Everything below is the same in all versions.
Wand of Light/Staff of  2d8 (if sensitive)
Starlight               
Stone to Mud		100 (if sensitive)
Orb of Draining         3d6 + caster's level, double to evil creatures
Dispel Undead/Evil      1-60 from scroll or staff; 1 up to triple
                        caster's level from spell
Holy Word               Dispel evil for 1 up to quadruple caster's level

Notes:

All mage spells in 4.87 do the damage listed in the table above if cast
from a wand, and 1 point more if cast by a mage.
All ball spells do full damage for a direct hit, half damage one space
away, and 1/3 damage two spaces away.

Q10. What does spell Y do?

Non-obvious spell effects:

Mage spells:

Phase Door: short-range teleport.
Find Hidden Traps/Doors: also detects stairs.
Sleep I: sleep one monster in a given direction.
Recharge Item I: fewer charges than Recharge Item II, and more likely to
		 fail. 
Sleep II: sleep all monsters adjacent to player.
Sleep III: sleep all monsters with a line of sight to player (including
	   invisible ones). 
Word of Destruction: obliterates everything within 15 spaces of the
		     player; Balrog will teleport to another level.

Priest spells:

Bless: +2 to AC, and +5 to chance to hit (equivalent to +1-2/3 bonus on
       weapon) for a short time.
Blind Creature: blinded creatures wander around confused until they recover.
Portal: medium-range teleport.
Chant: double duration Bless.
Sanctuary: sleep creatures adjacent to player.
Protection from Evil: prevents any evil creature of the player's level
		      or lower from attacking the player.
Earthquake: causes random walls and ceilings in the area to collapse,
	    possibly injuring anything nearby.
Turn Undead: all undead of the player's level or lower, and some of
	     higher level, will attempt to flee [in 5.5.0 and earlier
             versions, they will be confused]
Prayer: quadruple duration Bless.
Dispel Undead/Evil: affects all undead/evil within line of sight (even
		    invisble ones in 5.x versions), damage is from 1
		    up to 3x player's level, 1-60 from scroll or staff.
Glyph of Warding: creates a glyph which monsters cannot enter, but have 
		  a small chance of breaking.
Holy Word: heals player completely, cures poison and fear, and dispels
	   evil for 1 to 4x player's level.  In 5.5.1, also restores 
	   all stats, and makes player invulnerable for 3 turns.

Q11. On what level do you find X?   

Where important objects are found:

In 4.87, 1/20 of items are chosen as if you were on level 50.  In 5.1
and all later versions, 1/12 of items are chosen as if you were on a
deeper level, which has (current level/50) chance of being level 50, and
is always level 1 in the town.

Items become somewhat less common as you go deeper than the indicated
levels; however, if you can survive down there, this is compensated for
by the fact that there are more treasures on deeper levels.

Item type			Level
Ego weapons, special armor,	Progressively more common as you get
boots, gloves, helmets		deeper, all the way to level 55
Healing potion			12
Gain stat potions		25
Restore mana potion		25
Invulnerability potion		40
Gain experience potion		50
Genocide scroll			35
Destruction scroll		40
Rune of Protection scroll	50
Mass Genocide scroll		50
Amulets of wisdom, charisma	20
Gain str/int/dex/con rings	30
Amulet of the magi		50
Ring of speed			50
Staff of speed			40
Staff of mass polymorph		46
Staff of dispel evil		49
Staff of destruction		50
Wand of clone monster		15 [2 in 4.87]
Wand of drain life		50

Q12. How many attacks can I get with this weapon?

Here is the table (for 5.x) for the number of blows for a given strength
and dexterity.  If your strength or dexterity is 18+xx, that is stored
as 18/xx; thus, for example, you need an 18/90 strength to use the
bottom row of the table with a katana (12 pounds).

If you don't know the weight of a weapon, set the option "Show weights
in inventory."

/* used to calculate the number of blows the player gets in combat */
int8u blows_table[7][6] = {
/* STR/W:	   9  18  67 107 117 118   : DEX */
/* <2 */	{  1,  1,  1,  1,  1,  1 },
/* <3 */	{  1,  1,  1,  1,  2,  2 },
/* <4 */	{  1,  1,  1,  2,  2,  3 },
/* <5 */	{  1,  1,  2,  2,  3,  3 },
/* <7 */	{  1,  2,  2,  3,  3,  4 },
/* <9 */	{  1,  2,  2,  3,  4,  4 },
/* >9 */	{  2,  2,  3,  3,  4,  4 }
};


Q13. How do you kill an ancient multi-hued dragon?  

Usually, you don't want to try; one gas breath from a full-strength AMHD
does 693 damage, with no resistance.

If you can get to speed 3 (one permanent speed item, and either another
permanent speed item or a haste self spell or staff), you can try this
technique.  First, create (or find in a maze room) a wall with one open
space on all four sides.

   .
  .#.
   .

Stand on one side, with the dragon on the other side.  When the dragon
moves adjacent to you, attack it once, and then hide behind the pillar.
The dragon can't see you, so it won't breathe, and will instead chase
you to another side.  Now attack once, and hide again, and so on until
the dragon is finished.

Q14. How do you kill an emperor lich?  

You can kill an emperor lich if you can get to speed 2, which is its
speed.  A mage or ranger can do this with the spell of haste self;
anyone else needs a staff of speed, potion of haste self, or permanent
speed item.  You will also need about 10 cure critical wounds or cure
serious wounds potions, and some item giving you free action.

You also need some ranged spell attack.  Liches take double damage from
lightning in 5.x versions, so the spell of lightning bolt or wand of
lightning balls is a good choice.  Rogues and warriors will need several
wands, with a total of about 30 charges to guarantee that they can kill
the lich with them.  A priest or paladin has Orb of Draining, which is
even better.

Now, try to line up with the lich while you are not adjacent to it,
either in a room or a corridor.  This gives you a chance to cast your
spell.  The lich will get one action.  If it cast a spell and you
resisted, or the spell didn't do anything harmful, you have another
chance.  If you were confused or blinded, drink a cure wounds potion;
the lich isn't adjacent to you, so it can't hurt you.  If the lich moved
and is now adjacent to you, move back.  Try to avoid getting cornered,
and phase door or portal away if you are.  A priest can make this easier
by putting down a glyph of warding, but this must be done *before* the
lich chases you across the glyph.  (Don't stand on the glyph; it isn't
foolproof.)

If you run low on mana and don't have a wand, teleport out and come back
later to finish the job.

A priest with glyph of warding can also set up the following
configuration (the exact length doesn't matter as long as you are within
spell range):

#L#####
#^^...@
#######

The lich cannot cast spells from this position, because it cannot see
you.  As long as it doesn't break the glyphs, you are safe, and can fire
Orb of Draining down the corridor; the lich will take some damage each
time.  If the lich breaks either glyph, run or teleport out, and
continue the battle elsewhere.

I do not advise trying this technique against an AMHD; it will probably
break a glyph before the battle is over, and if your teleport spell
fails, or if you haven't hasted yourself, the AMHD gets a chance to
breathe.

An emperor lich has 1520 hit points, plus anything additional that it
gains by draining mana (6 points per mana point drained) and charges (40
points per charge).  Never let it attack you in melee, because it can
destroy your wands, healing itself in the process, as well as draining
your experience and dexterity.

If you can get to speed 3, faster than the lich, it is easy to kill;
just fight, move back, fight, move back, and so on.  You will still need
a lot of cure wounds potions, unless you let it chase you around a
pillar, as in the AMHD technique.

Q15. What is the grape jelly trick?  Does it work in Umoria 5.x?  

The Grape Jelly trick is a spoiler/workaround/trick which is no longer
necessary in 5.1 and later versions.  

In 4.87, when your intelligence and constitution changed, your mana and
hit points did not change.  Thus, in order to get the benefit of the
increased values, you have to let a grape jelly (or other creature, but
grape jellies are otherwise harmless) drain you to a low level, and then
drink restore life levels potions to go back up with the increased
stats.

Q16. I don't like haggling; can I change the source code to turn it off?

If you have the source code for any 5.x version, you can turn off
haggling with a simple change.  Here is the change you would need to make.
(Note: This is *not* an official patch.)

In the source file store1.c, this is the routine for determining whether
you need to haggle.  You can change the function, or simply change the
return(flagnoneed) to return(TRUE) to eliminate all haggling.  The code
here is from versions 5.5.1 and 5.5.2; the text of the function is
slightly different in earlier versions.

int noneedtobargain(store_num, minprice)
int store_num;
int32 minprice;
{
  register int flagnoneed;
  int bargain_record;
  register store_type *s_ptr;

  s_ptr = &store[store_num];
  if (s_ptr->good_buy == MAX_SHORT)
    return TRUE;
  bargain_record = (s_ptr->good_buy - 3 * s_ptr->bad_buy - 5);
  flagnoneed = ((bargain_record > 0)
		&& ((long)bargain_record * (long)bargain_record
		    > minprice/50));
  return (flagnoneed);
}

Q17. How do you create objects in wizard mode?

You will need the source; if you have only executables, get the source
files constant.h and treasure.c from ftp.cis.ksu.edu, which contain the
necessary definitions.  This is an explanation of some of the
parameters.

Tval: This is defined in constant.h; it is the value for the item type.
For example, TV_WAND is 65.

Tchar: The character used to represent this object; it should usually be
proper for the item type.

Subval: This identifies the specific item.  If you are duplicating an
item from the item list, use the same subval (and tval) as that item;
otherwise, don't.  Use subvals 0-63 for items that shouldn't stack,
64-127 for items that should always stack (potions and scrolls), 193 or
more for items that are generated in a group, and should stack as that
group (arrows).

Weight: In tenths of a pound.

P1: Used for all special bonuses which don't appear elsewhere:
bonus to stats/searching/stealth/speed, which stat to sustain (warning:
constitution is 4 and dexterity 5), tunneling value, food value, light
value of a lamp, torch, or flask of oil.  
For missiles, different values of P1 distinguish different groups of
missiles; use small negative numbers if you create groups as a wizard.
For bows, slings, and crossbows, the values identify the weapon type;
use the same value that is used for the corresponding weapon in
treasure.c.

Flags: A hexadecimal number which contains:
for wearable items, all special effects (bits beginning with TR_ in
constant.h).
for chests, trap flags (CH_ bits in constant.h) and treasure flags (CM_
bits in constant.h).  The CM_WIN flag is cleared when you open a chest,
so you can't create a chest with that bit set in order to get an instant
win.
for potions/scrolls/staffs/wands, the effects of using the item (see the
items in treasure.c).  Many potions have multiple effects (cure light
wounds also cures blindness). 
for books, which spells are in the book (spell 1 is the units bit).

Level: Level on which the item would be found.  This affects the
difficulty of using wands and staffs.

The object will have no name, except for the inscription {wizard item},
and possibly a type name, such as "Potion of"; you can change the
inscription.

