Ngamer11
Experienced.
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- Jan 28, 2019
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Now that the name has gone from Deicide to Fraticide, I have no clue as to what it might be about. Does anyone have any good ideas? It has to be something that can work with both names.
Now that the name has gone from Deicide to Fraticide, I have no clue as to what it might be about. Does anyone have any good ideas? It has to be something that can work with both names.
...The title Fratricide squad could have something to do with red lantern, though I doubt it.
Maybe God of War?
If you feel sufficiently levelled then it isn't worthy of being a boss.
Interestingly this is less "I'm not who I say I am" and more "I am not nearly as in-control as I like to pretend.""I'm not actually Grayven! Something stopped me being able to use my actual name and I.. didn't worry about it until the Forever People mistook me for someone called Grayven and I played along to try and get access to their technology! I actually-."
I look down at my body and I'm not.. completely surprised to see that I've regained the form I had when I first arrived on Earth 16. Pyjamas and all.
"Yes, I looked like this, and everything's rather gotten away from me since. I think I'm coping and I'm sure that Darkseid would have turned his attention to Earth before too long anyway, but I've got no idea whether I'm actually ahead on the deal or not and I'm constantly scared that my worst case scenario is happening all around me and I'm just not seeing it!"
Not unexpected. Think Gravyen did a better job than Starlight Glimmer at bringing this issue to light.
Bah, narrative causality cares not for corny-ness. It cares only for the story and for the theme.
He has some serious body-image issues if he genuinely thinks that.
Mantling did not originate in the Dresden files. What we have here is a homophonic/namespace collision, because what Grayven is doing is very similar to mantling in the Elder Scrolls setting, where a character chooses to follow the path of an existing god long enough to acquire their power before slanting off in a direction of their own with it. Which has metaphysical implications for both the god being mantled and the person doing the mantling.
I believe that, even if we can say with any degree of certainty that this isn't what is actually happening, this is the source of the confusion because the form of mantling described in the FAQ and referencing the Dresden Files is not the form of mantling people are referring to when they talk about Paul mantling Grayven like Tiber Septim mantled Lorkhan to become Talos. The mantled god is not so much replaced (though that can happen in some cases because ES is very metaphysically messy) so much as used as a spark to kindle something new, and both mantle and mantler will tend to be altered in the process. Same word, same sound, and similar but pertinently different meaning and implications due to different metaphysical frameworks.
New Gods aren't set roles, and neither are the gods of the Elder Scrolls. The Eight/Nine Divines were not always the Divines before Saint Alessia imposed herself on them. Mannimarco seeks to mantle Molag Bal and usurp him as the God of the Undead, but not necessarily in any other capacity. And even if he succeeds (which it is implied he at least partially accomplished during the Warp in the West), it doesn't remove 'undeath' as a thing Molag Bal has power over.
So as I've said before, I believe this is where the confusion is coming from because Grayven looks an awful lot like he's mantling conquest in such a manner, even to the point of duplicating and expanding upon domains/embodied concepts without replacing the original entity he was impersonating.
If we can't understand that, we're just going to keep having this come up because people are going to keep not talking about the same thing past each other, and people are going to keep ignoring the FAQ when they make this connection because what's described in the FAQ doesn't describe what they're referencing.
I'm pretty sure Grayven knew it would work from the beginning but he didn't (and really, still doesn't) have a good way to pursue that idea. Just because he knows the Life Entity is on Earth doesn't really give him a way to forge a White Ring; he'd still need to build up the emotional compatibility with all of the other concepts and figure out how to merge them, and doing that with a fragment of Anti-Life polluting his soul might not be possible. At the very least, there's a real risk that it would have broken containment before he could pull it off. Grayven was wise to look for alternatives.If it turns out that a white lantern ring could cure an anti-life infection all along Grayven is gonna be so pissed when he finally gets one. I just can't wait for his inevitable "HOW DID I MISS THIS" freakout.
I think that may have been an invalid assumption -- the two ideas are close enough together that it's hard to tell the difference outside of the specific points of deviation.Thing is, you're the first person on the Internet I've heard use it in that context. Everyone else, well, most everyone else uses it in the context of the Dresden files. Or so I assumed, without further clarification.
Not any more than anyone else.
Theres always the possibility that OL mantled Graven so hard he became him.
Holy fuck, did actual character development for Grayven just actually happen!??!?!?!?!
Ok, while I admit I have no idea what the power levels for MLP:FiM are, having never watched it, I fear you are gravely underestimating Darkseid.
Mantling is totally a thing here Mr Zoat said he didn't know what it meant and then that it wasn't intentional, but the actual description of what renegade-Paul did to become a god by claiming the name of someone who already exists, then somehow ended up taking that person's God Domain and getting memories of growing up As that person, on a planet that he had never actually been to...
Ugh okay look. Mantling, from the Dresden Files from where it originates, or was codified, means raking over a role in a story-and-theme based power system such as the Fae Courts in the Dresden Files. The Roles from A Practical Guide to Evil fit mantling as well.
Thing is, you're the first person on the Internet I've heard use it in that context.
That's not at all what happened. Fatherbox made a soul for him by copying Graven's soul, which makes him quite a lot like Graven. That's a far different process than pretending to be a god so hard that you actually replace said god.
The concept people are referring to is mantling from The Elder Scrolls. I've no idea where Zoat got the idea that it was from Dresden Files, given that those mantles bear absolutely no resemblence to anything in this story.
I mean, this is atleast partially wrong, because I'm talking about the mantles from The Dresden Files, because that's a settling that uses the phrase 'Mantle' to describe a fae or divine role.
I have no idea what elder-scrolls stuff you're talking about.
On the other hands, DC's gods might work like that. I could easily imagine a storyline where Wonderwoman beats up Ares and unintentionally ends up taking his title as the God of War. Eventually the role starts to effect her and make her more and more warlike until she goes evil, gets beat up by the justice league and has to renounce her godhood so she can go back to being Wonder Woman again.
I think Marvel's Gods already work like that. Sort of, anyway.
If you handwave away the concrete details of the mechanism by which it happened, the overall process matches pretty darn well.That's not at all what happened. Fatherbox made a soul for him by copying Graven's soul, which makes him quite a lot like Graven. That's a far different process than pretending to be a god so hard that you actually replace said god.
That's not just copying someone. There's bleedover from the real Grayven into him.
In Dresden Files "Mantle" is a noun refering to a metaphysical thing you wear (or, more accurately, is usually forced onto you, usually following the death of the previous person to wear it) that gives you a role and the powers to go with it and exerts some influence on your moods and whatnot, but the person wearing the mantle is still themselves. The Winter Lady may be constantly horny now (and possibly being driven slowly insane by her inability to do anything about it), but she is the same person she was before. The Winter Knight may be more prone to anger, but he's not a fundamentally different person than he was before. And, most notably, nowhere in any of the books is it used as a verb.
In Elder Scrolls "mantling" is a verb. Vastly oversimplified, a mortal pretends to be a god so hard that the universe actually turns them into that god and replaces the original with them. There are two really good examples in the lore, but one in particular gives us a very good example of how not-the-same-person someone who has accomplished this feat becomes. The Hero of Kvatch - the main character from Oblivion - mantles Sheogorath in one of the Oblivion DLCs and then shows up in Skyrim so we get a good before-and-after image of them. Now while being a main character means that the before could have been just about anything, in the process of mantling Sheogorath he has completely become Sheogorath, the Daedric Prince of madness, and there is very little left of whoever he was before. While the comparison is not quite perfect, this much more closely resembles what has happened to Grayven.
No it wasn't. It was built in the likeness of Grayven's soul. Grayven still has all his own soul. Grayven didn't even know that the Renegade existed until the last Citadelians informed him.The problem with terminology from other fiction sources is that it carries with it a lot of implications about what's going on, and what will be the result, that are not relevant to the story at hand.
Renegade's soul was "patched (in the software sense)" by Father Box with parts of Grayven's soul.
...If some Citadelians escaped the renegades genocide on their race then did some Citadelians also escape on the paragon side and join Grayven, aside from those Citadelians the paragon "recruited" for Amalac, after shooting 800 of them and leaving, like what, eleven?
Yes.
Yes.Are Paul and paragon Grayven going to meet anytime in your story?
He wasn't there, and was occupied.
Yes.Did they recover that speedster woman that was kidnapped?
I only remember reading that Wally talked her down from giving her powers to those cultists.
Theres always the possibility that OL mantled Graven so hard he became him.
Wait, so... hypothetically speaking, if I just beat a guy to death with a piece of fireplace, you're saying I haven't just trivially stolen his identity‽No... No there isn't... Because that's not actually a thing...
It's mentioned almost every time mantling is in this thread. The elder scrolls version is borrowed from Dresden files to explain how the PC can be the Nerevarine, and several other similar "reincarnations" in the lore.Might well be true, except I was using that as an explanation for my assumption and not anecdotal evidence of who referred to what. I made it clear I hadn't read the whole of the thread and my knowledge could very well be incomplete.
If it turns out that a white lantern ring could cure an anti-life infection all along Grayven is gonna be so pissed when he finally gets one. I just can't wait for his inevitable "HOW DID I MISS THIS" freakout.
I think Apokolips has like three minor gods of war right now, or something.
Except that that would require actually getting his hands on one. I'm not an expert on the various Lantern Corps, but I don't think white power rings even existed until Brightest Day, which is still some time in the future.
IIRC, it was explained in a prior Renegade segment that Darkseid split the domain of war between his sons. Orion got the Glory of War, Grayven got Conquest, Kalibak got... something, I forget what it was.
Cats?Except that that would require actually getting his hands on one. I'm not an expert on the various Lantern Corps, but I don't think white power rings even existed until Brightest Day, which is still some time in the future.
IIRC, it was explained in a prior Renegade segment that Darkseid split the domain of war between his sons. Orion got the Glory of War, Grayven got Conquest, Kalibak got... something, I forget what it was.
The Brutality of War, I believe. Kalibak embodies pretty much everything about warfare that gives people PTSD.
Except that that would require actually getting his hands on one. I'm not an expert on the various Lantern Corps, but I don't think white power rings even existed until Brightest Day, which is still some time in the future.