Posted: Tue Aug 01, 2006 9:57 pm
That means - if nom was sucessful undoing their prison - a sandgorgon could not answer a call.
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Does anyone else feel that this is an example of poor writing on SRD's part?Relayer wrote:Bump.
This was in the latest batch of GI responses:
Stephen R. Donaldson wrote: Nom's ability to answer Covenant's summons to Revelstone was a function of Kasreyn's magic in creating Sandgorgons Doom; it was not a power inherent to the Sandgorgons.
I recall it was the "one flaw" in his perfect magic. The summoning was by Kasreyn's design. Now, one wonders what powers Nom has from consuming the shards of the Raver!!High Lord Tolkien wrote:Does anyone else feel that this is an example of poor writing on SRD's part?Relayer wrote:Bump.
This was in the latest batch of GI responses:
Stephen R. Donaldson wrote: Nom's ability to answer Covenant's summons to Revelstone was a function of Kasreyn's magic in creating Sandgorgons Doom; it was not a power inherent to the Sandgorgons.
Or too high expectation on mine?
Was this answer actually in the book but we all missed it or didn't understand it (like why Vain had to be struck by the One Tree)?
Or did he make it up for the GI?
Sort of like, entering a caesure-exiting a caesure....?Xar wrote: Heh, this is difficult to explain properly... Imagine something like this:
[Doom] [Bhrathairealm] [Ocean] [Lower Land] [Landsdrop] [Upper Land] [Revelstone]
Now, this is the journey a normal human would have to do in order to get from Sandgorgons' Doom to Revelstone. When a Sandgorgon is summoned, it not only travels at inhuman speed, it also contracts this journey into, say:
[Doom][skip][skip][Lower Land][skip][skip][Revelstone]
Whereas "Skip" means that, for the Sandgorgon, those parts of the journey simply do not exist. An outside observer would see a Sandgorgon start from the Doom at terrible speed, and soon be out of sight; if he could follow the Sandgorgon from an outside perspective through the whole journey, he would probably see the Sandgorgon running at terrible speed over the ocean, translating from Lower to Upper Land in the blink of an eye, and slowing down its speed gradually as it approaches Revelstone (while from the Sandgorgon's perspectiv the fabric of space is "stretched" again to its normal length).
It's in a way similar to taking a sheet of paper and tracing a line from edge to edge (normal travel from one edge to another) or folding it in two until the two edges meet and tracing a "line" from one to the other (a Sandgorgon's travel).