When deploying the Covetous Crown upon a meister/shylock (whatever you prefer to call it), it drains like normal, however when removed if the process hasn't finished, it keeps going anyway, until the meister breaks completely, even if you backpack the Covetous Crown.
also it places the coin where its mapped to face direction wise, instead of the direction you mounted the crown on from, which lead to a comedical timing where we drained a meister into the shutters and the crown itself was removed into said shutters.
Steps to Reproduce:
for the first issue
1: Apply crab to meister, 2: right click, it does its work anyway while not attached, 3: literally profit
for the second
1: go to artificer, top one above their shutters in the middle of the street, 2: apply drill to shutter, 3: remove drill or wait for coin to spawn, 4: alt-click the shutters, its inside of them since it places where its mapped in facing, not where it visually faces.
Problem 1 fixed in my latest PR. Problem 2, uh, I'll look into it. You should still be able to grab the stuff from under the shutter still. But its not ideal.
Describe the bugs
When deploying the Covetous Crown upon a meister/shylock (whatever you prefer to call it), it drains like normal, however when removed if the process hasn't finished, it keeps going anyway, until the meister breaks completely, even if you backpack the Covetous Crown.
also it places the coin where its mapped to face direction wise, instead of the direction you mounted the crown on from, which lead to a comedical timing where we drained a meister into the shutters and the crown itself was removed into said shutters.
Steps to Reproduce:
for the first issue 1: Apply crab to meister, 2: right click, it does its work anyway while not attached, 3: literally profit
for the second 1: go to artificer, top one above their shutters in the middle of the street, 2: apply drill to shutter, 3: remove drill or wait for coin to spawn, 4: alt-click the shutters, its inside of them since it places where its mapped in facing, not where it visually faces.