- Michael Hitchens <michaelh_at_RFQhQPh1WUJy-kkvhnYjv-ifbQMqkFa4vJiy37FzL2Ry1sspBm-_1USBmSDDATVsj5pskQpfnejuOwjQ.yahoo.invalid> wrote:
> On Tue, 10 Apr 2007, Jane Williams wrote:
>
> > You asked. Do you now regret it?
>
> No - far too intersting for regrets, so thnk you.
> Not what I'd do, but that doesn't matter. Differing
> approaches are always useful.
> Sounds like there should be a steep learning curve -
> are they going to
> make mistakes through inexperience that they will
> have to fix before being
> able to make the changes they want to make?
Oh, I'm sure of it. They (well, we - I was a player
back then) have already done some HQing that went all
experimental, and the unintended consequences are
gradually escalating. That's a thought, I really
should work out the effects of a rather large river
appearing in Caravan Alley :)
At present about all they're doing is finding things
out about Arkat and their sub-cult, and being very
surprised at all the connections that keep cropping
up. We're off to play with the "coincidence" of names
between Kargan (sub-cult of Humakt), Kargan Tor
(ancient god of war) and Kaarg (troll war god) next,
and I'm sure something new will appear about Arkat
King-troll as a result. I just want to throw in a few
more things that have "always been like that" but
clearly didn't used to be, and get them nicely
paranoid about just how many people have been hacking
their mythology, and how many of them were themselves
in the future. They're already half-convinced that
someone they met on a HQ recently was a future version
of themselves, and for all I know, they're right.
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Received on Tue 10 Apr 2007 - 16:42:12 EEST