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October 6th, 2006, 04:40 PM
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Corporal
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Re: The Future of the World?
Has the "time of man" ever come to an end in fantasy books? I'd love to see how writers do that.
Actually why is the "time of man" so common? pure mankind is rather boreing, and unrealistic, its hard to see how mankind would dominate many of the other fantasy races especially in dominions where there is such a large veriaty. I'd bet on R'lyeh
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October 6th, 2006, 04:43 PM
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Sergeant
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Re: The Future of the World?
Is it actually fading away, or is it simply that more mundane tools are proving more effective?
If all you have are sticks and spears, then a guy who can hurl a fireball across the battlefield is a god. Invent composite longbows and the same guy simply becomes a target.
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October 6th, 2006, 04:50 PM
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Corporal
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Re: The Future of the World?
Its actually fadeing away, Abyssa, Vanheim, T'len Ch'i, for example. just read their entries in the manual.
In addition there are less magic sites as the ages go on (but thats just a default setting)
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October 6th, 2006, 04:52 PM
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Sergeant
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Re: The Future of the World?
Can't because I'm at work at the mo
Doesn't Abysia give a reason for their loss in magic though, since the interbreeding has diluted the purity of the daemonic population? (again, humans outcompeting...). At least that's how I've always read it.
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October 6th, 2006, 04:54 PM
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Re: The Future of the World?
Yeah, but the magic of the Smouldergone is also apparently fading. The magical Vanirs are getting rarer and T'ien C'hi got invaded by spirit-worshipping barbarians and propably had large amount of their magic might killed in process. Etc.
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October 6th, 2006, 05:41 PM
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Major
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Re: The Future of the World?
Quote:
Tortanick said:
Has the "time of man" ever come to an end in fantasy books? I'd love to see how writers do that.
Actually why is the "time of man" so common? pure mankind is rather boreing, and unrealistic, its hard to see how mankind would dominate many of the other fantasy races especially in dominions where there is such a large veriaty. I'd bet on R'lyeh
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I would make that bet too... but you might have to consider Lovecraft to be a science fiction writer instead of someone using mythology conventions. In that case, Mankind always loses.
I would guess the "Golden Age -> Iron Age" trend is more interesting because we would like to think of fantastic things as something that might have actually happened ages ago. Consider the Conan mythology, where he used a Europe that might have existed thousands of years ago. It's more fun to think about Conan and crew running around our real, though distant world rather than some goofy place like Faerun or Krynn.
Speaking of which... who wants to play on a Hyborean Age map? Maybe I'll mod the Enigma of Steel heroes. Conan probably wouldn't play well with your pretender though:
Crom, I have never prayed to you before. I have no tongue for it. No one, not even you, will remember if we were good men or bad. Why we fought, and why we died. All that matters is that today, two stood against many. Valor pleases you, so grant me this one request. Grant me revenge! And if you do not listen, the HELL with you! 
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October 6th, 2006, 05:49 PM
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Corporal
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Re: The Future of the World?
Makes sense but I would have thought that a wider veriaty of fantastic beasts running around a mythical world would easily be more fun than having to give them up just to use earth.
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October 6th, 2006, 07:07 PM
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Lieutenant Colonel
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Re: The Future of the World?
Humans are the cockroaches of fantasy worlds.
Constantly breeding and ever adaptive, they use sheer tenacity and stupidity to overwhelm the opposition.
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October 6th, 2006, 08:24 PM
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Re: The Future of the World?
Sure as heck we do! In fact, in most fantasy settings i have to constantly wonder why humans *don't* dominate everyone else, (say, in the ever-popular Forgotten Realms) Dominions is actually a nice exception to the rule. Ok, the complete undead are out since they kind of obviously win in any fantasy setting but other than that, there are still races that should outcompete humans in the dominions world. C'tis is a likely candidate, due to sheer population volume. (Laying eggs really is more efficient to produce cannon fod.., uh, offspring) But R'lyeh also look good.
Standars elves as seen in a hundred fantasy settings? Pshaw, living a few hundred years while still maintainting a constant population size means a birthrate far too low to compensate even for a single major war.
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October 6th, 2006, 10:53 PM
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Corporal
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Re: The Future of the World?
Quote:
Tortanick said:
Has the "time of man" ever come to an end in fantasy books? I'd love to see how writers do that.
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I can't speak for fantasy books but the game Rudra no Hihou is basically completely about the end of the "time of man" in a fantasy setting.
Anyway I'm apt to think that, in Dominions, magic is fading from the world and in the far far far off future all these "gods" and "mages" are merely legends and the world is basically like our own, with no trace of all the magic in the past. Kind of the idea that Dominions is the history of our own world, as magic was fading from it.
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