Ganurath
Apologizes For Nothing
- Joined
- Aug 18, 2014
- Messages
- 2,535
- Likes received
- 20,800
To put it in a DC context, this is a Rule 63 of the Beast that John Constantine's Shadow Dog was tasked with keeping contained.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
To put it in a DC context, this is a Rule 63 of the Beast that John Constantine's Shadow Dog was tasked with keeping contained.
An entity... or group.Boss Smiley said that he was responsible fro making sure magic wasn't in widespread use, so it's most likely the work of some magical entity that is keeping magic from becoming common knowledge for some reason.
Oh look. Glory.
Paul was looking for a replacement for the sword of second and third.
the Sword of the Fallen would really come in handy now.
Here's an idea.
Paul can ask the Silver City to make him two new powerful demons like the Second and Third, kill them and make a new godkilling sword.
I know the angels probably won't do it , but it was just a thought.
Well he can always ask Hephaestus to make him a godkilling sword like the one n52 Hephaestus made, called Godkiller for lack of a better word.
Nice to see that some Paul's actually use magic.
I raise my hands, calling upon the spirits of the vengeful dead to answer my-
I'm not a fan of magic in DC or Marvel. It lacks internal consistency. I've toyed with the idea of doing a magic using SI primarily to address that. Also because elemental magic is cool and it bugs me that Zoat has it be the most basic sort here.
I don't think the Silver City could make him replacement demons to make a sword out of. I don't think anyone outside one of the Skyfathers (or whatever DC calls the pantheon heads) could do it, and iirc theurgy would be entirely incapapble of creating demonic magic, being its opposite
.
I agree on the (complete) lack of consistency. Unfortunately that's part and parcel of having 100+ different writers making stories in shared universe while not having time or motivation to fact check who knows how many issues their predecessors made. That and not carrying enough to figure out implications of various instances of magic having on a setting. I don't have much desire to see even more elemental magic users. Everyone and their dog seems to use it in from of blasts (or bending at most). But if you ever do end up writing it I'd give it look.
Even as a little kid I always imagined kicking Finster out of his own lab and taking it for myself because even back then I knew he wasn't using it to the full use it could be.Given how much people underestimate the characters from that setting, that could be hilariously tragic.
This right here. FTL transition her ass to Venus and problem solved.She only has durability, super speed, and super strength right? If all else fails, just juggle her into space and leave her. Eventually she'll turn back into Ben and that problem will solve itself.
It's 1997. Dawn doesn't exist yet.OK, Glory. In Sunnydale. Which strongly implies Dawn. And, potentially multiversal apocalypse of a highly unfortunate variety. Which might fit in with what Mr Big Blue Hand is up to?
Glory and OverGirl are probably about as strong and fast, it's practically impossible to compare/evaluate beings on that level. Glory has got access to ritual magic, which is... unfortunate. Assuming OverGirl has the usual issues with magic (though maybe with some warning/prep time she can use its energy) if Glory counts as 'magic' one blow could splatter her. Relying on your flying brick to go HtH with the local evil brick, unwise.
Buffy and Co. have probably got obscure prophecies about what is going on, if the PtB (or whoever feeds info to the Slayer Spirit) have got their act together. And, none of them are noticing anything strange about Dawn. Who is totally ignorant about what's going on.
Yup. Messy. And going to get more messy. Though some might consider Spike having his heart ripped out entertaining...
Interesting, as Dawn was regarded as the reason Glory came to Hellmouth City... I guess this might imply Glory is a playing piece moved there by the local Powers that Be? To deal with intrusions into the local universe? I don't know, of course.
Interesting, as Dawn was regarded as the reason Glory came to Hellmouth City... I guess this might imply Glory is a playing piece moved there by the local Powers that Be? To deal with intrusions into the local universe? I don't know, of course.
So, Glory has been travelling cross-county, in Hulk-style leaps, after forcing Ben to take her shape, in whatever US hospital he happens to work in, at the time? Or, her aim is bad and she teleported in high? Trying to figure-out exactly where the extra-universal intrusion is? Could be interesting...She detected the portal Paul, Raúl and Democratic Socialists girl used. That is why she came to Sunnydale early.
Remember in other episodes it has been mentioned that parallel travelers have a lingering energy signature when they go from one universe to another, in the same way time travelers leak chronowhatervers.
Raul has at least managed to retain his tendency towards politeness.
Neil Gaiman attempted to answer the multiple magic styles thing in the original Books of Magic comic, which was also a bit of a tour through DC's magic characters and their fantasy comics history. IIRC, the answer then was "magic is basically a force, and the expression is dependent on societal traditions, mores, thought processes and individual beliefs".
And blood. Lots and lots of blood.
As others have said, this appears to be the season 5 Big Bad, showing up roughly 3 seasons early,I have no knowledge whatsoever of Buffy. Is this related or something from a different source?
Oz didn't introduce himself, no, but Raul recognised him from his own memories of the show. Oz likely is just chalking it up to 'superhero stuff'I... don't think Oz actually introduced himself. Also, when are we in the series? You got his demeanor perfectly but why does he act so clueless?
Sunnydale was at least 100 years old. Mayor Wilkens was officially portraying his own grandson as far as the human inhabitants were concerned. He was the Big Bad of Season 3 after having been revealed to be the subtle 'power in the shadows' running the city while keeping people from noticing the monsters. He was portrayed as fitting the trope of 'Affable Evil', and actually didn't mind the Slayer being present in town (She dealt with jerks threatening to mess up the town/region before they could disrupt his plans)Honestly, if Sunnydale was founded in the fifties, I would not be surprised. Wasn't the founder an immortal who wanted sacrifices for the Hellmouth or am I wrong?
General public also doesn't do parkour.
Um, that's… that's not even close to right.
I mean, there could be a Somebody Else's Problem field on magic - and it was at one point more popular. Also magic being caused by belief might only work to a point. If every child believes that waving a stick over a top hat and saying "Abracadabra" makes whatever is in it disappear, doesn't mean it will.I honestly never understood arguments like this. Learning parkour requires you to get really fit and general athleticism aside the main benefit is the 'coolness' factor, it doesn't allow you to violate laws of physics on a whim. I can't do math to save my life but if it was a generally accepted fact that learning to do integral calculus in your head will give you literal fucking superpowers you can bet I would pour myself into it even if all I get in the end are D&D cantrips.
So sure, if you want to make learning magic so hard that most people wouldn't bother you can - your story - but that isn't actually what we see in DC comics. Given the portrayed difficulty there should be far more magic users around and more importantly they sould've been around since the dawn of time. The world would realistically be literally unrecognizable even if only 1% of population bothers learning the Craft.