blackzoid, on 13 August 2012 - 05:34 PM, said:
Aptorius, on 13 August 2012 - 05:15 PM, said:
Urizen, on 13 August 2012 - 05:07 PM, said:
blackzoid, on 13 August 2012 - 03:30 PM, said:
Doesn't need to be century candles. Consider that there has been much more advanced civilizations before the age of the Malazan Empire. Back in the day Kallor had the greatest physicians, alchemists and mages working for him. They probably had rituals and injections and healing stones that could make you live for ever. Probably. The century candles Kallor uses now may simply be the best thing he is able to get his hands on currently.
We might also need to consider that Kallor was probably always immortal. And always really powerful. Remember Rake wanting to use 1100 Andiis against Kallor when 70 Andii or something like that was enough to destroy a small warren.
Maybe Kallor didn't need the century candles before he was cursed? Perhaps the curse that stated that he would know mortal life unending didn't make him immortal. It made him frail. It stripped his agelessness and agility, which he now instead needs alchemy to sustain.
This all hinges on the question of who the High King across the sea really is. Maybe it's Kallor's father. Maybe it is Nefarias Bred. Maybe it is the Mule God.
QuickTidal, on 14 August 2012 - 11:15 AM, said:
Iamme, on 14 August 2012 - 08:55 AM, said:
There are Gods and then there are Gods in waiting. A god needs worshipers. A god needs to claim his/her position. Just existing doesn't make you one.
Yeah, that whole conversation was a bit of a convoluted mess wasn't it? It also makes the water the gods exist in a rather weak tea to me...
You're going about this idea wrong. There aren't gods and gods in waiting. There are powers and there are manifestations of these powers. Powers waiting for somebody to give them shape and form. Remember Grizzin Farl talking about Azathanai being able to take what ever form they wanted? A tiste, a butterfly, etc. How Olar Ethil was once somebody else or something else but not she's a hideous flesh beast with a furnace inside her that spits out clay figurines.
The powers don't need worshippers to be powerful but they do need the worshippers to give themselves shape and form and ultimately a purpose with their existence.
What I wonder about is what they are doing in the village and why they (if I recall correctly) are worshippers of the Azath. And why are the Azathanai so enthralled with building stuff? Why is Old Man waiting to chose a role?