Candlekeep Forum
Candlekeep Forum
Home | Profile | Register | Active Topics | Active Polls | Members | Private Messages | Search | FAQ
Username:
Password:
Save Password
Forgot your Password?

 All Forums
 Forgotten Realms Journals
 General Forgotten Realms Chat
 Where do dead gods go to?

Note: You must be registered in order to post a reply.
To register, click here. Registration is FREE!

Screensize:
UserName:
Password:
Format Mode:
Format: BoldItalicizedUnderlineStrikethrough Align LeftCenteredAlign Right Horizontal Rule Insert HyperlinkInsert Email Insert CodeInsert QuoteInsert List
   
Message:

* HTML is OFF
* Forum Code is ON
Smilies
Smile [:)] Big Smile [:D] Cool [8D] Blush [:I]
Tongue [:P] Evil [):] Wink [;)] Clown [:o)]
Black Eye [B)] Eight Ball [8] Frown [:(] Shy [8)]
Shocked [:0] Angry [:(!] Dead [xx(] Sleepy [|)]
Kisses [:X] Approve [^] Disapprove [V] Question [?]
Rolling Eyes [8|] Confused [?!:] Help [?:] King [3|:]
Laughing [:OD] What [W] Oooohh [:H] Down [:E]

  Check here to include your profile signature.
Check here to subscribe to this topic.
    

T O P I C    R E V I E W
Mais-Cream Posted - 31 Oct 2008 : 16:03:48
It has been bugging me for awhile now, and I haven't found an answer yet, so I'm hoping someone knows the answer here.

I remember that Cyric killed lots of gods and stole their portfolio (like Cyric killing Bhaal and Leira). What happened to those gods?
Also, what happened to Mystra (or Midnight -- one of my all-time favourite Characters)? I know the death of Mystra was very important in order to get to 4th ed, but still...I'm still sad Mystra is..well..gone. *crossing fingers she is still...somewhere... --albeit not in physical or "godessly" form -- waiting to return..someday*

Anyways....Do gods truly die? Do gods have "souls" that are immortal and that goes to another...higher plane?

I know normal people/races go to the place of their gods (or not), but the souls go "somewhere" and the people don't "really" die.

So, what happens to gods? Do they disintegrate? Explode, get assimilated/absorbed by their killer? Does the consciousness of the killed/murdered gods become omnipotent -- their body dies, but not their mind?).

Also, is Ao also possible to kill-able, as he is also a god (I know..the biggest of all), but still...
30   L A T E S T    R E P L I E S    (Newest First)
The Sage Posted - 12 Nov 2008 : 22:56:51
quote:
Originally posted by Mais-Cream

No, I wasn't sarcastic ^_^;

Anways, An encyclopedia about dead gods/goddesses would be indeed wonderful to have. What are vestiges?
Vestiges were featured in the 3.5e Tome of Magic. You can learn more about them [as well as how to create new ones] here and, also, here as well.
Mais-Cream Posted - 12 Nov 2008 : 21:22:05
No, I wasn't sarcastic ^_^;

Anways, An encyclopedia about dead gods/goddesses would be indeed wonderful to have. What are vestiges?

Sigh, our local comic shop doesn't have the Grand History of the Realms...already asked. Seems there are some problems with their distributor.
Jamallo Kreen Posted - 08 Nov 2008 : 21:59:28
Ahem.

Gray Richardson, I think that you have been over-generous and projected your own marvelously well-thought ideas onto a poorly-planned contrivance. Of course, I am cynical about 4.New.Coke, and the more I see of it the more I despise it.

As for windsurfing on the corpus dei, I was being glib. The dead god's body is a planar touchstone site in the Planar Handbook, so presumably the Guardian of Dead Gods approves of adventurers going there.

What I would love to see is an encyclopedia of dead gods, many of whom would be vestiges, I'm sure. Do vestiges even exist in 4.New.Coke or was the money I spent on Tome of Magic and Dragon wasted?










Brimstone Posted - 08 Nov 2008 : 17:42:35
-Wher do the Dead Gods Go To? I figure a folder in a WotC Office somewhere for when the next edition change comes around so they can bring some of them back.


BRIMSTONE
Wooly Rupert Posted - 07 Nov 2008 : 18:32:36
Let's drop the whole race thing right now, please, before it gets ugly.
Rinonalyrna Fathomlin Posted - 07 Nov 2008 : 16:52:41
quote:
Originally posted by Mais-Cream
Yes they are of different race, just like Asian, Africans, Antartica-ans, NorthPole-ans, USA-ers, etcetc. Even though the latter are humans, they are of different race...


I hope you aren't serious.

Dalor Darden Posted - 06 Nov 2008 : 20:08:17
quote:
Originally posted by Mais-Cream

@ Brian James;
I think there is a difference, kinda.

<snip by DD>



I think Brian was just being sarcastic Mais-Cream...I'm rather sure about it.

Perhaps you read the Grand History of the Realms that he published with Ed Greenwood?

EDIT: Unless...you are being sarcastic too?
Mais-Cream Posted - 06 Nov 2008 : 18:16:25
@ Brian James;
I think there is a difference, kinda. Elves have pointy ears (yes, I know...humans can have pointy ears with some help of plastic surgery).
Elves have different DNA, they live much much longer, they have a different mindset, and are in balance (with nature).
Oh and, they tend to favour dressing in Green (products made out of nature -- not extra-vagant).

Yes they are of different race, just like Asian, Africans, Antartica-ans, NorthPole-ans, USA-ers, etcetc. Even though the latter are humans, they are of different race...
But the definition of race is kinda...different here *agh*
At least the elves, gnomes, heck..even devils (poor kids of Wolfgar and one-of-the-many-Succubus), can make off-spring...so technically...there are no differences, you think?
*I guess I'm contradicting myself here >_<;;)

Here's another one; humans --> Europeans, Americans, Africans, Asian, etc = Elves --> Aquatic elves, Moon Elves, Gold Elves, etcetc ??
As every different sub-elves have different properties (as in feats, bonuses, etc), Do humans also have sub-races (meddling of gods excluded e.g. Tiefling).

Difference of Church and Cult; I think Church is commonly accepted by majority, so they don't have to do everything in secret. They are not small groups of individuals who do secret things (that people frown upon --unless the is another secret society in a church society that have hidden agenda's).
A cult is a group that is not accepted by most, have to do most things in secret...and yes,...are in minority.
Rinonalyrna Fathomlin Posted - 06 Nov 2008 : 14:31:18
quote:
Originally posted by Brian R. James
Bah, that's like saying there is no difference between humans and elves.



I'd actually be the first to argue that there is no huge difference between the two.

I totally agree with the quotes regarding churches and cults, and I'll leave it at that.
UNSpacy Posted - 06 Nov 2008 : 12:47:04
They go to HEAVEN.

...

Oh wait...
Tyranthraxus Posted - 06 Nov 2008 : 11:22:52
Good thinking.

But back on the Sylune and Shar thing. I don't think they ever were primordials. If I remember correctly a god's power was independent of his worshippers before the ToT. As a lesson and punishment Ao based a god's power on his/her worshippers. Don't forget Sylune and Shar were there from the start in a time before mortal worshippers.

But if you look at it that way, it could mean all gods were primordials bfore the ToT and after that Ao distinguished the difference between deities and primodrials. This may sound a little silly but hey, nothing beats WotC with their whole Spellplague stuff
Gray Richardson Posted - 06 Nov 2008 : 07:50:15
quote:
Originally posted by Dalor Darden

What I'm confused on is this: what is the true difference between a Primordial and a God???
That's a really good question, and one I have been pondering very hard of late. It's a question in need of an answer and I think I have an idea, a tentative idea at least.

Gods channel divine power, they have clerics, they grant those clerics divine power, and seem to derive their power from mortal belief. The strength of that belief sustains them and determines their rank or relative power ration. The absence of belief and worship in them can cause a god to lose power, to the point of death or quiescence once they have been forgotten.

Myths say that Selūne and Shar are the only two gods that existed before mortal life, but this may be a chicken-and-the-egg paradox: did gods create mortals or did mortals create their gods through belief?

Gods live in the Astral plane, which is to some extent the plane of thought, will and the psyche. The Astral plane itself may also be created by or a function of collective mortal thought.

Primordials are different from gods in several respects. Firstly, they arose before mankind, generated spontaneously, independent of belief. They are essentially "elemental spirits", though not necessarily "elementals". Primordials arose and live within the Elemental Chaos, which in prior editions was the "inner planes", the planes of potentiality.

Primordials wield a degree of power comparable to gods (at least some of them do) but we do not know if their power is actually divine in nature. I don't think it is. Their power, like their origins, appears to be independent of faith. They would seem not to require mortal worship to sustain them. Rather, they seem to derive their power from an elemental source, or location, channeling the "potential energy" of the substance, location, or even the plane itself, rather than tapping into divine power.

For instance, Titans seem to be tied to the substances they embody. Whereas demon lords bond with a layer of the Abyss and channel the power of that layer.

There does, however, appear to be some overlap between gods and primordials. Clearly, there are gods who wield divine power whose sphere (or portfolio) is elemental in nature, ie: Auril is the incarnation of cold; Umberlee the god of the sea, etc. And conversely there appear to be primordials who have gained worship by mortals and have learned to channel divine power. For example: Kossuth, Akadi, Istishia, and Grumbar are primordials who seem to have "ascended" to godhood. Perhaps also the giant deities, like Annam, Skoraeus, Grolantor, etc. All started out as primordials and then by means of worship from mortals, they became "like" gods.

You know, going back to the Selūne and Shar thing, perhaps their secret is that they spontaneously generated before the existence of mortal life for the reason that they are secretly primordials. Perhaps Selūne is the elemental spirit of light, and Shar the primordial incarnation of darkness. Perhaps they are crossover gods like Akadi & Grumbar, having acquired divine power from picking up mortal worshipers through the ages. I don't know for sure, but ith strikes me as something to consider anyway.






Jakk Posted - 06 Nov 2008 : 06:45:59
quote:
Originally posted by Jamallo Kreen


To paraphrase a button of mine:

"A *church* is a cult with political power."


Ahem. Dodging the real world, I pray to remind scholars that at least one "dead" god (Threphocris) has created hang gliding and kite flying opportunities on and in his (?) corpus dei, presumably because having adventurous sportsmen traipsing around on his corpse discourages the githyanki from building a city on his face (or other parts).



Heh. Regarding the quote, my fave version is: "A religion is a cult that won a popularity contest." Anyway, on to other things: what's the source for this deity Threphocris anyway? It sounds like something published in April, if you get my meaning.

Still, having people jumping off your face (or landing on it) is far better than having githyanki building stuff on it, don't you think?

In my Realms cosmos, there are no dead gods. Events in the Year of Blue Fire, instead of causing the Spellplague, brought all the dead gods back to existence. Partly to spite all those people who didn't like the large number of gods in the Realms and were listened to by Wizbro, but mostly just because existing gods are more fun than dead ones. Especially gods like Moander and Karsus... although Karsus is insane now, and still trapped within his immobile petrified corpse until someone frees him.
Ayunken-vanzan Posted - 06 Nov 2008 : 06:24:04
quote:
Originally posted by Jamallo Kreen

[quote]Originally posted by Rinonalyrna Fathomlin

Ahem. Dodging the real world, I pray to remind scholars that at least one "dead" god (Threphocris) has created hang gliding and kite flying opportunities on and in his (?) corpus dei, presumably because having adventurous sportsmen traipsing around on his corpse discourages the githyanki from building a city on his face (or other parts).



Oh. And the Guardian of Dead Gods approves such behaviour?
Jamallo Kreen Posted - 06 Nov 2008 : 05:40:25
quote:
Originally posted by Rinonalyrna Fathomlin



Yeah, that was Rich's answer. Of course, I've already given my honest opinion about it (there's no effective difference between a "church" and a "cult").


To paraphrase a button of mine:

"A *church* is a cult with political power."


Ahem. Dodging the real world, I pray to remind scholars that at least one "dead" god (Threphocris) has created hang gliding and kite flying opportunities on and in his (?) corpus dei, presumably because having adventurous sportsmen traipsing around on his corpse discourages the githyanki from building a city on his face (or other parts).






The Sage Posted - 06 Nov 2008 : 01:01:17
Dunmanifestin?
Markustay Posted - 06 Nov 2008 : 00:31:05
Primordials are just the 'old gaurd' in the deific food-chain.

Come to think of it... we pre-4e FR fans are sort of like primordials...

I guess the Titans and Jotuns will just have to move over and make room for us to in the Old God's Home.
Brian R. James Posted - 05 Nov 2008 : 22:25:11
Bah, that's like saying there is no difference between humans and elves. Well, I didn't invent primordials. I just get to play with them.
Rinonalyrna Fathomlin Posted - 05 Nov 2008 : 18:56:48
quote:
Originally posted by Dagnirion

-But, in effect, no there is no real* difference. Just like, in effect, there is no real* difference between 'Deities' and 'Primordials'.



I have to say I think I agree with that, too.
Lord Karsus Posted - 05 Nov 2008 : 18:52:18
quote:
Originally posted by Rinonalyrna Fathomlin

Yeah, that was Rich's answer. Of course, I've already given my honest opinion about it (there's no effective difference between a "church" and a "cult").



-Perception of legitimacy and validity (that's actually the theological/anthropological answer, garnered from that class I have this semester.)

-But, in effect, no there is no real* difference. Just like, in effect, there is no real* difference between 'Deities' and 'Primordials'.

*Qualitative, quantitative, whatever you want it to be.
Rinonalyrna Fathomlin Posted - 05 Nov 2008 : 18:48:45
quote:
Originally posted by Dagnirion

-Let's see...

Deities:
Have 'Churches'
Have Toril

Primordials:
Have 'Cults'
Have "Abeir"

-That's all I've got. Basically, as the saying goes, "Same [stuff], different smell".



Yeah, that was Rich's answer. Of course, I've already given my honest opinion about it (there's no effective difference between a "church" and a "cult").
Zanan Posted - 05 Nov 2008 : 10:49:43
quote:
Originally posted by Brian R. James

quote:
Originally posted by Rinonalyrna Fathomlin

Their bodies float in the Astral Plane--or at least, that's how it was prior to 4E. Maybe it's still the same way (only with the Astral Sea).
This is still true in 4E. In fact, the decaying bodies of fallen Primordials also float on the Astral Sea (as you'll read in Open Grave: Secrets of the Undead).



Ha! This is surely NDA?! Can someone bring the tar and the feathers?!

Why there is a distinction between Toril and Abeir with regards to the primordials and the deities is somewhat beyond me. I sure can forget the old material, but Kossuth & Co. have been in/on Toril since it came into being ...
Lord Karsus Posted - 05 Nov 2008 : 02:27:20
-Let's see...

Deities:
Have 'Churches'
Have Toril

Primordials:
Have 'Cults'
Have "Abeir"

-That's all I've got. Basically, as the saying goes, "Same [stuff], different smell".
Markustay Posted - 05 Nov 2008 : 02:19:06
As far as I can tell, about seven letters.




Dalor Darden Posted - 05 Nov 2008 : 01:58:05
quote:
Originally posted by Rinonalyrna Fathomlin

quote:
Originally posted by Brian R. James

quote:
Originally posted by Rinonalyrna Fathomlin

Their bodies float in the Astral Plane--or at least, that's how it was prior to 4E. Maybe it's still the same way (only with the Astral Sea).
This is still true in 4E. In fact, the decaying bodies of fallen Primordials also float on the Astral Sea (as you'll read in Open Grave: Secrets of the Undead).



Well, thanks for the heads-up.



Aye...thanks for the info...

What I'm confused on is this: what is the true difference between a Primordial and a God???
Rinonalyrna Fathomlin Posted - 05 Nov 2008 : 01:18:24
quote:
Originally posted by Brian R. James

quote:
Originally posted by Rinonalyrna Fathomlin

Their bodies float in the Astral Plane--or at least, that's how it was prior to 4E. Maybe it's still the same way (only with the Astral Sea).
This is still true in 4E. In fact, the decaying bodies of fallen Primordials also float on the Astral Sea (as you'll read in Open Grave: Secrets of the Undead).



Well, thanks for the heads-up.
Brian R. James Posted - 04 Nov 2008 : 19:41:39
quote:
Originally posted by Rinonalyrna Fathomlin

Their bodies float in the Astral Plane--or at least, that's how it was prior to 4E. Maybe it's still the same way (only with the Astral Sea).
This is still true in 4E. In fact, the decaying bodies of fallen Primordials also float on the Astral Sea (as you'll read in Open Grave: Secrets of the Undead).
Tyranthraxus Posted - 04 Nov 2008 : 18:26:29
quote:
Originally posted by Mais-Cream

@Tyranthraxus: Did the Energy Well exploded and caused the plague (the 4th edition big event thing)? Is it the same as the Weave?




The Energy Well caused by the death of Mystra might have created a flux in time and space, and caused the cosmology to change a (with the help of Asmodeus moving the Abyss to the bottom of the Elemental Chaos) and reshaped Toril's landscape and the return of Abeir.

However, I think the Spellplague occured because there was nobody to maintain the Weave after Mystra and Azuth died. This is like what happened durig the ToT when magic malfunctioned and created dead and wild magic zones.
Markustay Posted - 04 Nov 2008 : 03:59:07
quote:
Originally posted by Dagnirion

-I don't think that 'Manifestation' is the best word to use.
Perhaps not, but I'm just using the canon terminology established by Eric Boyd in Powers and Pantheons. I would assume a God's Manifestation is a different thing entirely then divine manifestations.

A bit confusing, to say the least.

We could call them 'Uber-Avatars', but I'm afraid WotC might actually jump on that.
Lord Karsus Posted - 04 Nov 2008 : 03:26:34
quote:
Originally posted by Mais-Cream

@ Dagnirion: So, Incarnum Energy or divine energy that gives Gods their powers (portfolio). Did this also happen with the 7 sisters, Arunsun, Elminster (and other..chosen ones)? I mean...they got their powers from Mystra right...so the power should be...the divine energy (if it's the same).



-Kinda, sorta.

-Incarnum Energy, according to the book, is the energy that makes up the souls of all things living, dead, and not even born yet. Importing this into the Forgotten Realms, peoples' souls would be made up of Incarnum. Deities would be a mixture of Incarnum and "Pure Divine Energy" (which comes from their portfolios). The source of this "Pure Divine Energy" (which comes from their portfolios) would be, in all likelihood, Ao.

-The Chosen of Mystra, like all Chosen, are invested in by the deities that sponsor them. I like to use the Planescape Proxy approach concerning Chosen, since they've all been melded to be the same thing. Planescape Proxies were indeed given so much power by their deities that they gained something of a Divine Ranking (extremely minimal, but existent, nonetheless). The Chosen of Mystra would, in theory, have the Incarnum of their souls "mixed" with slivers of the "Pure Divine Energy" that deities are made of.

Candlekeep Forum © 1999-2024 Candlekeep.com Go To Top Of Page
Snitz Forums 2000