Talk:Nightmare

Demons?
Since this question was recently raised on the guru forums: Has anybody tested whether Nightmares possibly are a sub-species of Demons? --84-175 (talk) 10:44, 19 August 2006 (CDT)
 * Nevermind, I just read in Talk:Demon that Tetris already tested Fog Nightmares. I think one can assume that the results can be carried over on the whole species. --84-175 (talk) 10:52, 19 August 2006 (CDT)
 * Tested Lightbringer powers on it just to be sure...nada. It's odd as the first place they appear looks like a demon summoning circle.  It may have 7 outer points but the convergence symbol has 6 points which is the number of Abbadon...the source of demons.  According to the Lore he'd technically   be the 7 god b/c he Deposed a previous God. I'm blaming this one on ArenaNet programmers not upholding storyline-consistency  --ilr
 * "... Demonic servant of Abaddon ...". LB doesn't affect Kanaxai & crew. &mdash; Skuld 17:19, 25 April 2007 (CDT)

another type altogether
i think there should be a seperate page for the creatures called simply "nightmares" that appear during archivist ithimar's quest. --User:Aptaleon Griefhaven

Move proposal
&rArr;GuildWiki talk:Style and formatting/Bestiary


 * Yeah, I seem to recall that "Nightmare" existed as a monster name, so, why did we move Nightmare (Species) to Nightmare alone? --Karlos 20:08, 28 September 2006 (CDT)


 * if it's a species, then apply Plurality and be done with it. I searched for "Nightmares" and got mixed results when I should have gotten this page instead.  Whereas if I searched for singular form, I should have gotten that 1 specific monster named Nightmare instead of this page. HTH --ilr

Upon Death
I've only noticed this with Nightmares, but when they die and "fall" underground, they haven't actually gone anywhere. Try killing one right on a ledge and you can see the legs and tail sticking up. It's pretty amusing. :) I want to try this with other "fading" monsters like Undead, but so far no success...the corpses also do not seem to disappear like normal ones would. Perhaps it's because they are unexploitable. (T/C) 21:25, 19 March 2007 (CDT)