Vesper, on 04 April 2010 - 08:11 PM, said:
Was the battle on the plains outside Darujhistan not between Rake, in his soletaken form, and the recently wakened Raest? It was my understanding that Tool and Lorne released Raest to create a situation of mutual destruction between Rake and Raest, removing the Tiste Andii lord from the picture so the Malazan army could conquer Darujhistan. I know that Raest went and possessed a bunch of people, but that was only after he had a running battle with Rake close enough to the free city. I know that the Galayn Lord fight came after, but I'm talking about the huge fight that made all the mages in Darujhistan sick from miles away.
No, that was Sillanah, a true elient, and 4(5?) soletaken Andii. They were sent in to soften up Raest before the big showdown.
Sillanah is probably somewhere around the equal of Rake in size and draconic strength, but Rake has much more up his sleeve than just being a big evil dragon.
Vesper, on 04 April 2010 - 08:11 PM, said:
I understand the power of the Bonecasters, but, if we go back to the start of MoI, we learn that it took a pragmatic alliance between the T'lan Imass and the Jaghut to bind Raest, meaning that the Bonecasters and the Jaghut separately were not enough. With the T'lan Imass armies now scattered around the world (including embroiled in Lether as of MoI) it seems more and more unlikely to me that, according to the point I was trying to make, the 'new players' that have risen are not a match for the old powers, unlike what is implied in MoI.
You have to remember that the world of Wu is big place and various powerplayers and races don't have phoneline connected to a red telephone they can use to warn each other with.
The Imass and the Jaghut who thought Raest were most likely those who were closest and aware of the danger/had finally had enough with his continuing cruelty and growing ambitions. It's not like it took 10 million Imass and 100,000 thousand Jaghut to pacify Raest. More likely we're talking a couple of big clans of Imass and a handful of Jaghut.
What happened when Raest was bound was probably your typical convergence. Power drew power and a mix of players and races converged, an alliance was formed and Raest was bound. I have no doubt that the two parties on their own could have done the same thing, it would just have taken many more of them, and it would have been more difficult.
Vesper, on 04 April 2010 - 08:11 PM, said:
Being venerated as a god is not the same as being a god... not with thrones, houses, and holds to consider. Raest claimed dominion over nothing, he merely exerted his will wherever he desired and toyed with what he regarded as lower life forms. You can bet that any High Priests that may have existed would have not received anything from him, which even Shadowthrone would do (cue Iskaral Pust summoning Hounds of Shadow). No, I wouldn't call Raest a god. Maybe he was an ascendant, but I never saw it mentioned so I was curious.
My memory is faulty. Is it actually mentioned that he "claimed dominion over nothing"? I would imagine that a Jaghut Tyrant like Raest would have claimed dominion over
everything.
Being "venerated as a god" is being a god, no buts, it's a power source. The Elder Gods as far as we understand it, did not control any of the bigger holds directly. They used them as a power source, and they had some kind of personal warrens, but they gained a lot of strength from the worship and sacrifice. Even if forced to do it by Raest, could have gained strength from forcing Imass, Barghast, Trell, etc worshipping him.
Even if this was not the case, just look at his power displays in GotM, most likely Raest didn't even need worshippers, he was himself so strong that he was like a god in his potential.
Personally I don't think the god status thing matters. He's a Jaghut Tyrant.
EDIT: I think Raest may very well have been capable of lending out power to a worshipper. Think the Crippled God as an example of the type of God he could have been.
Vesper, on 04 April 2010 - 08:11 PM, said:
Without trying to perpetuate a 'who'd win' discussion, I would bring up that Rake had blasted the hell out of Raest with his Kurald Galain sorcery/dragon breath to the point that Raest was only held together by his Omthose Phellak (spelling? hah) warren. Then he possessed a bunch of people in Darujhistan and Quick Ben and Hedge blasted him apart. Remember? Silanah and other Eleint soletaken took to fighting Raest first, then were relieved by Rake when he veered into his draconic form that dwarfed even Silanah.
Like mentioned above. Rake and Raest never met.
The damage Raest took, and his soulshifting, is not a sign of weakness rather it displays just how scary Raest was/is. His physical body was wrecked and he still kept on moving. When his body was destroyed he simply took a new body. His strength did not diminish. He was not hampered or hurt by it. He was unstoppable.
I sincerely doubt that Rake could have taken the same kind of punishment as Raest did.
Vesper, on 04 April 2010 - 08:11 PM, said:
Which, my point is, came about when Rake fucked him up. I wonder, however, if it would have been Rake's ass being handed to him with Raest in possession of his Finnest, and what rammifications that would have on the notion that the 'new players' are a match for the 'old players', which is the issue that had confronted everyone when Silverfox's intention to release the Imass became apparent. This is the crux of my question, not a 'who would beat up who' competition, because we all know it would be Icarium destroying everything in a rage before Karsa Orlong rips his head off from behind.
Raest fully powered, or any top level god for that matter worth his salt, is as scary as Icarium is. The difference is that the gods are not insane and they don't wander the earth. The gods are capable of being every bit as destructive as Icarium (in NoK it is mentioned that Tyrants could crush continents) but they stay in their realms because stepping foot on Wu is an invitation for disaster.
Why Icarium was never bound or killed is anyones guess, most likely it is just too difficult and dangerous, so the gods just lets him wander around destroying cities rather than risk their own hide.
Vesper, on 04 April 2010 - 08:11 PM, said:
Aptorian, on 04 April 2010 - 08:11 PM, said:
Vesper, on 04 April 2010 - 08:11 PM, said:
So why would people think that all the potential allies in the world would be too much?
I admit I don't understand what you mean here.
See above.
What?
Vesper, on 04 April 2010 - 08:11 PM, said:
Raest wanted to exert his will over subjects, and the best way to have done that would have been to take command of a Hold... but he didn't, and I think that's really strange.
What makes you think that he didn't? There are lesser, not so well known houses in the Deck of Dragons, it would figure that is also lesser known tiles in the old deck. Maybe Raest has an inactive one in the Ice Hold or an unaligned one.
EDIT: Have to be careful with references to later books than MoI I notice.
This post has been edited by Aptorian: 04 April 2010 - 09:05 PM