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Aftereffects For Loss of Longevity/Immortality

1d100
Normal life: Character is now a normal individual of his apparent age with a normal life expectancy. If the power can be later restored before a natural death occurs, he continues living on as if little had happened. If death occurs meanwhile, an immortal might still resurrect himself if the power is restored to his remains.

Sudden Aging: The character rapidly ages to his true age but doesn't necessarily die. A character whose age exceeds his normal life expectancy withers to a mummy-like state. If his age exceeds 4Xs his normal life expectancy, the mummy is apparently lifeless. Consciousness remains, though, and the "mummy" is free to use its other powers as best as it can. If the Longevity or Immortality power is later restored, the character might regain his previous appearance, depending on the circumstances and the Judge's discretion.

Aging & Death: The character rapidly ages to his true age. The shock tends to be fatal, especially if the character's actual age is more than 2Xs that of his normal life expectancy. Rapid decomposition occurs in 1-100 turns; the remains attain a state similar to that of a normal body the same age as the recently deceased's actual age. Bodies under 4,000 years old are mummified; those up to 10,000 years old become skeletons, and those older than that collapse into dust. If the power is restored to an immortal's remains, the immortal can eventually return to life (traditional vampires are an example of this). Longevity-powered characters require aid from such powers as Resurrection or Self-Revival before they can regain their previous physical conditions.