Dire Bare
Legend
Well, okay then . . . .Shame it can’t be dumped into a sub forum basement where it belongs.
Well, okay then . . . .Shame it can’t be dumped into a sub forum basement where it belongs.
. . . It is now confined to one thread. Unless I missed some posts, most of the Cataclysm debate has been moved there.I’m sorry but multiple closed threads are my evidence that this topic is just not something that you can have discussion about. The same people repeating the same points over and over again.
Look I get it. You don’t like how the cataclysm was written. Fine. I understand why you don’t like it as well.
But at least can we confine it to one place so it doesn’t turn every conversation into a dumpster fire? WotC is obviously recognizing the issue and is doing something about it.
What more is there to say?
It's not just modern day religions, mythologies all around the world deal with the gods punishing humans. Greek and Egyptian myths all have that motif, great floods are so common in world mythology that I wouldn't be surprised that there's more than one instance of a god flooding humanity (maybe that was also the Greek one?).That can't be true... if it is it is ANOTHER reason to fix it. There should not be additional reading of non gaming books needed to understand the campaign world. No one should be forced to read or discuss religion of the real world just to understand the concepts of the game.
I am not engaging anymore in this crazy 'you need to understand this religion' talk. If you (and I don't mean Micha Sweet I mean a general you) can not make a coherent argument without reaching for a religiose book that has nothing to do with the game that says MORE about the issue then anything I can.
I guess you didn't see the 'You can't tell me what to do, I defy you' post over there then. Some people desire the war to come to all threads.. . . It is now confined to one thread. Unless I missed some posts, most of the Cataclysm debate has been moved there.
Yeah, I saw that post after replying to @Hussar in this thread.I guess you didn't see the 'You can't tell me what to do, I defy you' post over there then. Some people desire the war to come to all threads.
Far from an expert on the subject, but I believe the Epic of Gilgamesh references such a "Great Flood".It's not just modern day religions, mythologies all around the world deal with the gods punishing humans. Greek and Egyptian myths all have that motif, great floods are so common in world mythology that I wouldn't be surprised that there's more than one instance of a god flooding humanity (maybe that was also the Greek one?).
Kenders, am I right?Nah... That's just the story they tell people - what really happened is that one day Tasslehoff found the gods in his pouch...
They would have returned years ago, but Tass had stolen them without realizing it.
From what I've read, most scientists that study this subject think that the stories of "Great Floods" are distorted oral histories of the flooding and rising sea level that happened after the last Ice Age's glaciers melted. That's why a bunch of cultures and religions around the world have stories of the world being flooded.Far from an expert on the subject, but I believe the Epic of Gilgamesh references such a "Great Flood".
Even has a character that is pretty obviously shares the same literary roots as the biblical Noah, if not being the original inspiration thereof, who was made immortal (along with his wife) by the gods after the fact for faithfully following their will (i.e. stop what you're doing and build a ship ASAP if you and your people want to survive).
Utnapishtim - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
Another point to consider is that the Epic of Gilgamesh is from ancient Mesopotamia, where the primary water sources stem from the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers, which tended to flood violently and unpredictably, as I understand it, unlike the comparatively mild and predictable flooding of the Nile.From what I've read, most scientists that study this subject think that the stories of "Great Floods" are distorted oral histories of the flooding and rising sea level that happened after the last Ice Age's glaciers melted. That's why a bunch of cultures and religions around the world have stories of the world being flooded.