Talk:Disease

Epidemic is not a disease causing skill. It will spread it but not cause it. - Marcubus


 * You are correct. On another note, why is epidemic not part of the condition transfering skills? --Karlos 11:52, 20 Sep 2005 (EST)
 * On another note, why is the list of condition removing/transferring skills duplicated at each condition? 134.130.183.83 04:28, 18 October 2005 (EST)
 * Because it is pertinent in each condition's page. We can't always assume the user will get to these pages through Condition. Sometimes the user will land here through a skill page that causes one of these conditions. Got any ideas on how to better do this? --Karlos 10:03, 18 October 2005 (EST)
 * Furthermore, there are some condition removers, specifically Antidote Signet (Blindness, Disease and Poison), Illusion of Haste (Crippled) and Tainted Flesh (Disease), that only remove specific conditions.


 * For what it's worth, does Epidemic do anything with Disease? Disease already transfers to adjacent characters!  Maybe Epidemic has no effect on Disease?  (There's the note about "same species" in the Disease description?) --JoDiamonds 17:13, 23 October 2005 (EST)
 * You could test it out with Rotting Flesh, Epidemic and Fragility. If Epidemic transfers Diseased then Fragility should trigger twice, once for losing the Diseased condition and once for getting re-infected.

This article claims that Zhed Shadowhoof will spread disease to human characters. Zhed Shadowhoof's article claims otherwise. Which is true? --Cereseternal 22:54, 11 March 2007 (CDT)

transfer only to same species??? not so!
I just tested Rotting Flesh now. Cast on a renegade (human), spreads to a devourer. Went else where, cast on devourer, spread to gargoyle.

Does the "Diseased" icon description actually say it only spreads to creatures of same species, and I am seeing a bug, or did someone made that bit up and no one bothered to check? -PanSola 19:34, 5 January 2006 (UTC)
 * It probably does say that, but I know it's worked as you described for months. Outside Lion's Arch, I had disease spread from a Fire Imp to Bog Skales to Tengu, so either they are all considered the same species, or the description is wrong. It's not limited to foes however, unless all pve monsters are considered part of the same meta-species. In pvp, it's possible to disease your foe, and then have them walk up to you and spread it to you. I don't believe it'll spread to pets, so perhaps it is limited to species, but in pve everything is considered one big species? LordKestrel 23:17, 5 January 2006 (UTC)
 * Nope it can spread to pets as well but only from certain enemies (or at least that's how it worked a month or two ago). It was kind of a bit like if you put disease on a enemy creature, the pets would then get it, if you put it on a human type enemy, the players would get it. Sort of like the game divides enemies into creatures (so disease spreads to pets) and humans (so it spreads to players) and others (that can't be diseased or don't spread disease to pets or players). Somebody probably knows more on this than me but pets can get disease from the enemy. Oh and this is all in regards to PvE. --Xasxas256 23:38, 5 January 2006 (UTC)
 * Renegade, which is of hte Human species according to Edge of Extinction, does not spread disease to players.

--- Disease does not spread between different species.. However i think this may be a bug because it does transfer between some different species from my tests. For instance a training dummy will infect all other training dummies but it wont infect me... However i can infect disease on a grawl or char and it will infect a devourer. Also in PVP disease does transfer between hostle and friendly players and happanes often. --Requiem 22:37, 22 February 2006 (CST)

It spreads between bog skale blighters and lightening drakes.. hmm 22:25, 12 March 2006 (CST)


 * I'm pretty sure I've already updated the text of the article to be in line with how it actually works in game at the moment. Basically, it only ever spreads to players from players. -- 22:28, 12 March 2006 (CST)

Disease in Tombs
starting to think they changed this in recent updates. i can infect a Grasp of Insanity with Rotting Flesh, and it will spread to Scythe of Chaos, but not Terrorweb Dryder, and if i infect a terrorweb, invariably a nearby spider pet will be infected too. i'll make more tests as i get time over the weekend. --Honorable Sarah 14:10, 23 June 2006 (CDT)

Disease contagious...
when I was in the Acension Missions in Prophecies campaign. The Ghost Hero got "Diseased" from an enemy (in the Dunes one) I am thinking that this means that ALLIED characters can get diseased in PvE, but not really sure. can someone else verify?

--Faqcorner 00:06, 14 August 2006 (CDT)


 * To my understanding, the race/species barriers of this game are very, very vague. Most of the enemies in this game are merely considered creatures. There are a few defines enemies in this game, but you always find those few in bulk... So, the disease does exactly as it is supposed, it's just the fact that a creature is always a creature, and that is its species...

(While some creatures resemble animals, I suppose they can transfer to pets?)Vanagander 03:54, 22 August 2006 (CDT)

It seems that with the Nightfall update this no longer affects only enemies in PvE. It also affects allies. Dustin Fay --67.8.146.248 00:04, 27 October 2006 (CDT)
 * Yep. If the foes are human, it will now spread to your party. I've tested it with Kournan, Corsair, White Mantle, Am Fah, and Jade Brotherhood so far. --Thervold 17:18, 2 December 2006 (CST)
 * This seams retarded. Skills like rotting flesh have become useless now in early Nightfall. -- Saranis [[Image:User-Saranis Green Dot.jpg]]  (talk | contribs) 02:02, 10 March 2007 (CST)

disease duration question
The article doesn't make it clear, and I will admit i don't know. How does duration of disease work with regard to contagion. If a character is diseased for 20secs, and 10secs elapse before it spreads to a second character, is that second characters disease duration 20secs or just the remaining 10?
 * It's remaining duration. -- Gordon Ecker 01:23, 1 December 2006 (CST)