Whizbang Dustyboots
Gnometown Hero
Honestly, that makes it more realistic for me.Yeah, “you were all pissing me off so I dropped a mountain on you and then went and sulked for a few centuries” is far from ideal divine behaviour.
Honestly, that makes it more realistic for me.Yeah, “you were all pissing me off so I dropped a mountain on you and then went and sulked for a few centuries” is far from ideal divine behaviour.
Well, Chris de Burgh was popular at the time…When we ran the DL modules the prevalent theory was that the Good gods had lost a massive series of bets with the Evil gods. Because the evil Gods cheat at poker
Sadly, many real-world religious texts also contain many examples of far from ideal divine behaviour, at least by the standards of D&D alignments. If you’re a LG god you should probably have some idea what that means.Honestly, that makes it more realistic for me.
Gygax thought that Lawful Good paladins should be killing orc children and babies. I suspect by early TSR standards (along with Weis & Hickman's religious upbringings), the Cataclysm was within the bounds of divine behavior.Sadly, many real-world religious texts also contain many examples of far from ideal divine behaviour, at least by the standards of D&D alignments. If you’re a LG god you should probably have some idea what that means.
I do like reading dictionaries and studying philosophy, so I may be too much of thr intended target audience...but once the mysterious space traveller thing picks up, ooh boy.I'm still reading Anathem. I can admire the complex world-building and ambition, but...man. There is so much exposition, and that's not even counting the literal dictionary entries that are a significant part of the text. In a way, it's very old school sci-fi, with a bunch of scientists and technocrats arguing and explaining to each other (I like the way Socratic dialogue is acknowledged). I just wish more happened. Thankfully, things seems like they are about to pick up, as our narrator just got assaulted and now the conflict with the mysterious space travellers has begun.
But it's a slog. Maybe I should have finally checked War and Peace off my list, instead.
I didn't realize there was a third. I liked the first two quite a lot--and they seemed like standalones that shared a setting, not a series--so I'll have to see if my local library of choice has (or gets) it in.Finishing up "The Folded Sky", the third of Elizabeth Bear's Whitespace novels. I've found I've enjoyed them a lot more than I would have thought, and its kind of interesting hitting a series that's set in a common setting but otherwise not strongly interconnected.
I didn't realize there was a third. I liked the first two quite a lot--and they seemed like standalones that shared a setting, not a series--so I'll have to see if my local library of choice has (or gets) it in.
They have it, I might swing by and grab it. Thanks.Its been out since March, but I don't think I heard of it myself until about June.