Sujet : Re: Gaming Prophecy?
De : tnusenet17 (at) *nospam* gmail.com (Tony Nance)
Groupes : rec.arts.sf.writtenDate : 30. Aug 2024, 20:54:59
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <vat82j$k24v$1@dont-email.me>
References : 1
User-Agent : Mozilla Thunderbird
On 8/27/24 6:11 PM, Ted Nolan <tednolan> wrote:
We touched briefly on Cugel today, and this sequence was on my mind:
<snip transcription of Cugel doing Cugel things> >
I know that Offut & Lyon's "War Of The Wizards" trilogy has a good
example (not to mention they are really fun books!) and I understand
there was a run on "Thor" where Odin tried a strategy of making all
the Ragnarok prophecies come literally true in a survivable way.
What are some other good examples of characters trying (succesfully or no)
to game prophecy?
When I read this post three nights ago:
a) I knew I would be very busy for a few days[1]
and
b) I knew there were plenty of examples that would come to mind
While a) was sadly correct, b) was sadly incorrect.
However, after staring at my bookshelves and also getting some help from the internet, I have come up with a few (two successful, two not):
[SPOILER ALERT - titles are ROT13'd and concatenated]
Two successful ones:
1a) In evbeqna'fcreplwnpxfbafntn, the protagonist is told "And you shall fail to save what matters most, in the end." It turns out that he does indeed fail to save his own mother, but that's because he gives her the ability to save herself.
1b) In another part of the same series, a character receives a prophecy from an oracle telling her she will "fail without friends, and fly home alone”. Sure enough, she fails because it is the protagonist who captures the MacGuffin. However, the protagonist immediately gives her the MacGuffin, and then buys her a plane ticket so she can fly back to their camp alone (because if protagonist and sidekick fly back with her, they’ll lose their earthly protection and probably be killed).
Two unsuccessful ones:
2a) In guruneelcbggrefrevrf, the Big Bad Guy tries to kill his prophesied nemesis, not realizing that the nemesis didn't actually didn't become his nemesis until the moment Big Bad tried to kill him.
2b) In qvnanjlaarjbarf’ pnfgyrvagurnve sybjrevaguravtug'f father locked her up since her birth, after hearing a prophecy that the first man she sees will become her husband. If he hadn't done that, she would have never met the main protagonist ...
- Tony
[1] "stupid busy" in our local lingo[2]
[2] where "local" means "in my house"