- Location
- United States
[X] ACTION: Turn back
And if we just up and go home , what are the odds that in a few decades or centuries, possibly not outside the scope of this quest, the fallout of Karag Dum here follows us back?This.
Snorri said it, Borek said it.
The job is done.
We should go home.
Some voted for both, does SV have a function for combining votes while accounting for that?
That part is not that hard, since she could literally never see what Runes do with magic.Dwarfs are skilled enough illusionists to make something that can trick Mathilde's magesight
...he's a massive distance away from his usual stomping grounds, not pursuing the one thing that remains constant in his mind, didn't mutate a mortal that got close to him without heavy-duty divine protection, isn't doing anything similar to his environment (both of which are abilities that he cannot turn off and can barely limit the range of), is greeting a Dwarf as if they were close kin, is worshiping an apparently uncorrupted mountain as if it were a herdstone, isn't indulging in Beastmen's pathological need to destroy the works of civilisation when confronted with the Monitors...I am partial to him being fake as more likely, but its still kind of... nonsensical, ever so. Kurgans have been fighting him, reality fritzes, we know of no runework that seems capable of replicating him, beastmen seems to be here, he offered a prayer to a herdstone...
Consistent illusion of whatever kind is unlikely to work for 200 years in Chaos Wastes. I think whatever we see is real or close enough to real.I've seen it said once or twice, but considering the speed of the thread I want to bring up the possibility that we can't see through a runecrafted illusion, or even detect one, anywhere near as well as we could a more "standard" wind cast one.
And if we just up and go home , what are the odds that in a few decades or centuries, possibly not outside the scope of this quest, the fallout of Karag Dum here follows us back?
We have seen something we barely even comprehend the implications of. We at least need to know if we'll be coming back to the Empire with the Worst Kind of Bad News, or not.
There are a decent chunk of theories that, if true, would mean that we could actually safely ignore this, go home, and declare that there are no dwarves to be saved in Karak Dum. In character, at least.And if we just up and go home , what are the odds that in a few decades or centuries, possibly not outside the scope of this quest, the fallout of Karag Dum here follows us back?
We have seen something we barely even comprehend the implications of. We at least need to know if we'll be coming back to the Empire with the Worst Kind of Bad News, or not.
The notion that Morghur is not who he seems to be is predicated on two things as far as I can tell:
I submit that both the above seem unlikely.
- Dwarfs are skilled enough illusionists to make something that can trick Mathilde's magesight
- Chaos worshipers (including bestmen) are so bad at sensing Chaos that they can't tell a dwarf s counterfiet from a demigod made by their masters
...he's a massive distance away from his usual stomping grounds, not pursuing the one thing that remains constant in his mind, didn't mutate a mortal that got close to him without heavy-duty divine protection, isn't doing anything similar to his environment (both of which are abilities that he cannot turn off and can barely limit the range of), is greeting a Dwarf as if they were close kin, is worshiping an apparently uncorrupted mountain as if it were a herdstone, isn't indulging in Beastmen's pathological need to destroy the works of civilisation when confronted with the Monitors...
Everything about the idea of this being a fake Morghur is nonsensical, but so is everything about the idea of this being the real Morghur. This whole situation is nonsensical.
Eh, the mundane illusion doesn't explainThat part is not that hard, since she could literally never see what Runes do with magic.
So all it takes is a "mundane" Illusion here, they don't need something to stand up to magesight, all runic effects do that inherently.
Then- oh." He looks over his shoulder to check for listeners. "I'd considered it long ago, but no Dwarven force would reach it intact
An illusion is so much less of an issue with that, whereas his reaction here is so much worse.Failure to reach my home will always be the greater evil, and some more riches locked in a Zharr-Naggrund vault does not strike me as being much worse than them being in the hands of whichever Marauder loots my corpse after I try and fail to return alone.
And if we just up and go home , what are the odds that in a few decades or centuries, possibly not outside the scope of this quest, the fallout of Karag Dum here follows us back?
We have seen something we barely even comprehend the implications of. We at least need to know if we'll be coming back to the Empire with the Worst Kind of Bad News, or not.
It's okay.@Omegahugger I apologize for accusing you of arguing in bad faith. I misused the term and did not know how to properly articulate what I was feeling or how I was perceiving your arguments. I still disagree with your conclusions, but you did not deserve to be accused like I did.
Three things: Out of Character KnowledgeThe notion that Morghur is not who he seems to be is predicated on two things as far as I can tell: