{ "name": "Aura, conceptually", "icon": "naturesaura:gold_leaf", "category": "naturesaura:intro", "pages": [ { "type": "text", "text": "Contrary to popular belief, $(aura) isn't stored in single, floating $(italic)nodes$(), but rather, it is present everywhere in the world.$(br)While touching it is impossible, making use of its powers certainly is not. When $(aura) is used right, it can assist in the $(thing)production$() of materials, the $(thing)creation$() of new ideas and the $(thing)harnessing$() of the world and its components." }, { "type": "text", "text": "However, it isn't always as easy as that. Making use of it wrongly, specifically $(thing)draining$() it completely from an area, will face the culprit with diminishing returns.$(br)So while $(aura) is plentiful and useful, abusing it would certainly be ill-advised.$(p)An additional thing to note is that, based on the world you are in - specifically, the $(item)dimension$(), different types of $(aura) will be present, making some mechanics work unlike expected." }, { "type": "text", "text": "When it comes to the inner workings of $(aura), scientists are troubled to admit that they have not quite figured out how exactly it works yet.$(br)The only thing they know is that excess or missing amounts of $(aura) affect an area of varying size (based on the apparatus used) around the place the modification happened from.$(br)If an area is drained and a new generating instrument is added, it will renew the drained area first before creating its own luscious area." }, { "type": "text", "text": "Similarly, if a draining instrument is placed close to a rich area, it will first drain that area before moving on to draining the area directly around itself.$(p)While this behavior surely sounds complicated, the consensus is that letting the apparatus and $(aura) do their thing for a while seems to be a good approach of analysis, as sometimes $(aura) tends to migrate and move around to balance itself out naturally." } ] }