How can you not know the name of the future Quee- ah, yeah, she does that sometimes. Actually, that'd be an incredible impediment to ruling, if you're suddenly extremely unimportant intermittently. Adverbly.
Selectively applied it'd be a great test of loyalty, an Aeira who's mastered her Element might be able to erase parts of people's perception of her. Remove her courtiers' fear, and see which of them remain loyal... the Shadowcord Shogunate would've been an interesting regime.How can you not know the name of the future Quee- ah, yeah, she does that sometimes. Actually, that'd be an incredible impediment to ruling, if you're suddenly extremely unimportant intermittently. Adverbly.
It's below Hunger's level of fucks (and mine), but that could still work in the current setup. Shadowcord and GDS to see who jumps at the "opportunity." Nah, we got towers to knock down.Selectively applied it'd be a great test of loyalty, an Aeira who's mastered her Element might be able to selectively erase parts of people's perception of her. Remove her courtiers' fear, and see which of them remain loyal... the Shadowcord Shogunate would've been an interesting regime.
A 1% yearly risk over a century has a 66% chance of total destruction. Somewhat risky over the short term is super dangerous in the long term.
I was going by the potentially-incorrect interpretation the timeframe of "by the time we return" from Regimentation was the time frame for all of them.Yeah but, it didn't mention it was only somewhat risky over the short term. If it was gauranteed to destroy the sovereignty over a course of time that Hunger is liable to rule through and he has no way to mitigate that with future abilites it's weird to phrase it as only somewhat risky.
*The safest option, almost guaranteed not to blow up the Kingdom by the time you return.
[X] Sky Veil [7 Arete]
[X] Agents of the Throne
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Edit: I don't particularly enjoy the description of charisma doing shit like this either so it would be nice to control it, might become very useful in Human Sphere, who might have ways to deal with memetic hazards.
Do Stances work even if you're lying down?We would probably have ADS before Aeira has that level of control, which would make such tests... problematic. I suppose we could turn it off.
I would hope she'd be smarter than that. No fear means no acknowledgement of the logical consequences of power going outwards, meaning you would also exclude everyone who is loyal to you as an entity rather than as an ideal. All you'd retain are those within your slavish cult of personality, and those too paranoid to trust even their own emotions.Selectively applied it'd be a great test of loyalty, an Aeira who's mastered her Element might be able to selectively erase parts of people's perception of her. Remove her courtiers' fear, and see which of them remain loyal... the Shadowcord Shogunate would've been an interesting regime.
We would probably have ADS before Aeira has that level of control, which would make such tests... problematic. I suppose we could turn it off.
I was going by the potentially-incorrect interpretation the timeframe of "by the time we return" from Regimentation was the time frame for all of them.
Ugh, you'd have to develop the ability to care very much about unimportant details as a survival strategy. The stress levels would be off the charts.All you'd retain are those within your slavish cult of personality, and those too paranoid to trust even their own emotions.
Yeah. I'm not exactly saying we should go big brother. Just that it make sense people with super powers are both taught to use them and prove they can before they use them around other people. What happens if someone thinks they understand their surge but it turns out it has a secondary feature that isn't obvious that accidentally gets triggered and blows up a city block?Yeah fair enough then. If that is really the correct interpretation going for atleast thrones would be pretty much mandatory. I'll be honest,my first vote was kind of kneejerk. Regulating saiyans but with conceptual powers ability to, well, employ their abilities in violent context if nothing else isn't exactly a evil idea here, it seems pretty sensical.
Ahh, you're making me take a second look. That "delicacy of the balance" is a bit ominous.Yeah. I'm not exactly saying we should go big brother. Just that it make sense people with super powers are both taught to use them and prove they can before they use them around other people. What happens if someone thinks they understand their surge but it turns out it has a secondary feature that isn't obvious that accidentally gets triggered and blows up a city block?
And the undercurrent of "It's clearly a good idea to design policy addressing this, so people will address it even without the policy being necessary" in thisTraining will emphasize the responsible usage of power and the delicacy of the balance by which Elementalists exist within, and are supported by, the society around them.
makes me think I might be taking things a biiiit too far, Agents is hardly unreasonable.*Somewhat risky, but social pressure and incentives can do most of the work of a policy, so long as the culture supports it. 'Not being destroyed by a rogue Elementalist' is a great incentive for people to support a culture of care towards these immense powers.
Yeah. I'm not exactly saying we should go big brother. Just that it make sense people with super powers are both taught to use them and prove they can before they use them around other people. What happens if someone thinks they understand their surge but it turns out it has a secondary feature that isn't obvious that accidentally gets triggered and blows up a city block?
Right. And what if Vigourflame had a really high margin before it got destructive? So it wasn't until he tried a major project involving tons of people that he pushed it hard enough that everything started to explode?Yeah, like Aoboru's lucky he's a prodigy, imagine how fucked up using Vigorflame on someone could be if he lost control for a second and accidentally scorched them with it instead?
Yeah. I'm not exactly saying we should go big brother. Just that it make sense people with super powers are both taught to use them and prove they can before they use them around other people. What happens if someone thinks they understand their surge but it turns out it has a secondary feature that isn't obvious that accidentally gets triggered and blows up a city block?
I've see the way these people use toasters! That was added to the constitution for a reason!