Thread:ElsaRules!!!/@comment-24588058-20141023231552/@comment-24588058-20141217182854

And to help out with the red links, here are some ideas for our red-linked artifacts:

Aesop's Robe: The robe worn by Aesop when he was thrown off a cliff on a trumped up charge of temple theft. If the wearer is wrongfully killed (not an accident), then the area around which they were killed will suffer pestilence and famine for one year.

Al Capone's Machine Guns: Fires an endless barrage of bullets from the guns. Continued use can lead to a weakened personality and eventual mental breakdown.

Assorted Herbs: These herbs (Parsley, Sage, Rosemary and Thyme) served as the inspiration for Simon & Garfunkel's 1966 record Parsley, Sage, Rosemary and Thyme. Eating all of the herbs together inspires creative breakthroughs and allows the eaters to be excellent instrumentally. They are self-regenerating.
 * -Background Story: The Warehouse received a ping in 1968 from the incredible success of Simon and Garfunkel. After sending a senior agent along with rookie agent Artie Neilson to figure out if their success was coincidence or not, and they found these artifacts behind it. This resulted in less frequent albums being published later.

Tycho Brache's Prosthetic Nose: The copper, silver and gold nose of astronomer and alchemist Tycho Brache (also spelled Brahe). Increases the interest of medicine created by alchemy, leading to attempts to create cures for damaged body parts.
 * -Background story: Warehouse agents, having failed to collect the nose before Tycho Brahe's burial, decided to collect the nose when his body was exhumed in 1901. However, they found that the nose was missing from the body; they replaced it with a brass nose and left. Thirty years later, in 1931, a ping in Germany involving a wounded veteran of the first world war trying to heal himself led to the discovery and subsequent retrieval of the nose.

USS Constitution: Infused with the toughness of iron and the strength of 44 guns, which can be transferred to the crew of the ship during battles.

Marie Laveau's Voodoo Doll: Causes living death in whoever the user wants whom they hate if the doll is torn in two at the waist. Anything done to the doll will happen to the targeted victim (i.e. Stabbing the arm, tearing off the arm, etc.). The effects are reversed if the entire doll is neutralized; if any part of the doll is missing, the effects will not be neutralized. Also, if all of the doll is neutralized after it is torn apart, the doll repairs itself.