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DF Spoilers / Re: Pyrofuego
« on: Today at 08:55:17 PM »Except she wasn't just "repeating" it.actually that's a Symantec trap pulled before. An considering your alway the co-conspirator.. 👀 you rallying to her defense is less than anything to me.
For one thing, you used a specific jargon term, "aspect" (his aspect of happy light fire) which (depending on who is reading, and how much they know of the "extended canon") might be taken specifically as a reference to game-mechanics from the Dresden Files Roleplaying Game, where "aspects" are a Really Big Deal, and only change at "milestone" events.
For another, she was explicitly disagreeing with you (more to do with his own emotional state... than any floodgates he opened).
Let me break that down properly then...
Harry states I believe that after Susan was half turned and went away that he was never able to capture sunshine in a hanky again.so, after Susan was changed, an he unleashed his passion and outrage, he couldn't do the hanky? 🤔 most auspiciously what i said...
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It has more to do with his own emotional state, which though he is more at peace now, the unhappiness remains, than any floodgates he opened.the emotional state of a man on fire?
👏 yes. You prove my point most directly here. If you don't understand what I'm saying, ask. Because you also seem to think she disagreed. 👀 show me.
I've limited knowledge of the dfrp, my references were taken directly from the book. However, the game lore as I remember was so overlapping with the actual story they had to take things our so not to ruin future plots.
So thanks for bringing in the extracurricular evidence to back my theory 🙃 Harry's fire aspect changed because of how he used it. Intentions, even subconscious ones, color the magic used after all. An fire is directly related to sunlight aspect because it's all a flavor of summer as confirmed by hiding his blasting rod.
Maybe ask what a metaphorical man on fire is if you lack understanding of the concept off rip? Like hey, I didn't know that's the metaphor you gathered from Soul of the fire, Braveheart and other examples where the injustice of loss calls even the most broken men to war. Passion eh?