MrAzuos
of reading
450
Read books
First: the people have no power in the kingdom, only the nobles. Second: Lith was supposed to be the voice of the people, someone of common origins who became a hero through his efforts; it didn't changed a thing; again, the nobles have the power. And Salark is the overlord, so what? What power does she have in the kingdom? How does that change from when he used to fly on the back of a dragon? Did they have no idea who they were messing with? Really? What can Lith do? Kill them, so that he can become a criminal again? As long as they act on the fringes of the law, Lith can do nothing, just like the Ernas plot. Don't get me wrong, I agree with the logic of your argument, but Legion has already set precedents that the plot doesn't follow the logical reasoning. Lith contributing with something unique or important, or even demonstrating that he has alllies never saved him or his family.
I agree, but I think this is more of a future concern. He has the "complete knowledge" and even then he can only perform it thanks to the mastery that his eyes grant him and domination. Complete mastery over the elements takes time and practice, and most human mages don't even have streaks in their hair. By the time they get to that point, Lith has either died or reached the white core and maybe even became a guardian. But I just want the plot to make sense, and at the moment, it doesn't, at all.
It's tragic how, for the sake of the plot, Lith's family has to return to Lutia as if nothing has changed. As if the protection of his family isn't going to continue to be used as a bargaining chip to order him around and as if they're safe now that he has the title of Magus (because the archmage title helped a lot LOL). He has a broken life force, loses more with each fight and he still has to pay to be able to fight Thrud... The only way I can understand what is happening is if the Magus is more than just a title and it gives him full access to the knowledge of the kingdom (royal forgemasters and everything). The problem isn't that he's sharing the knowledge, that's a good thing. I just can't understand the plot behind it.
You speak as if the title of archmage is equivalent to that of beggar. Lith's performance was unprecedented... destroying lost cities was not possible for the mages of the kingdom; recapturing cities was something only the strongest mages were capable of (Manohar and Vastor); he was an ally of the magical beasts; known to have friends who were divine beasts; and all it took was an idiot to convince the ENTIRE royal court AND the people that he was a threat... Magus or not, It doesn't matter. There is no such thing as diplomatic immunity in the SM universe. He's paying to earn the right to fight on the losing side of a war; no matter his contributions, unless he gets involved in the royal court, his family is in danger, either from being used as a bargaining chip or to get to him.
So, in order to overcome his bottleneck, Lith needs to use his knowledge of chemistry to reinvent antidepressants?
The focus is not on banning origin flames, but the idea of using purified metals. Using borrowed origin flames is not what allows the use of forbidden magic. In addition, the awakened from the Desert do not have the same freedom. Their territory is not granted by the council, but by Salaark. So it's strange to see two people casually chatting about something that is banned. It doesn't matter if you're awakaned or not, in the Desert, you have to obey the law.
This is another retconning btw... The conversation that introduced Tesaar and Lesalia (chapter 567) cleary contradicts this. So you have a retconning just to justify a 600 year old phoenix not knowing the item? Wasn't it easier to just say that he never sold his flames?
Spirit blink/warp, the most powerful spells of villains. /s
Also: "This is all my fault. If I didn't go into seclusion for one hundred years just to finish one of my experiments, I would have answered that damn CALL. My disciple and her daughter would still be alive." Chapter 1188.
I don't even know why i'm responding, but: "I fail to understand the reason for your generosity, but what about I change the spell so that night will become unable to harm directly or INDIRECTLY anyone who rsides in Lutia?your gene." READ, Mark, READ.
Can you please stop breaking your on plot, and move on from this failed plotline already? "Baba Yaga changed the slave spell on Night’s core, turning Lutia and all of its inhabitants into something beyond the Horseman’s reach even in her dreams."
And Solus' mana sense, that has always being capable of seeing cores, also missed the fault ones?
So just to clarify because I'm really curious. If I send a 5 year old child to school alone, confident because I put a GPS in her backpack, I'm not responsible if she goes missing, right? Because I am not a God. The apprentices have been sent to be tested, and as a test site, the council should be responsible for their safety. I don't think I need to comment on how incompetent and unreliable the person they sent to oversee the test site is.
When Lith first met Faluel, she asked if she could use her breathing technique to study his hybrid body, and the technique's name was Abyssal Gaze. Later, when Lith became her apprentice, it changed to Lifestream. I think Legion doesn't have an editor, so you can find a few mistakes like this one if you pay attention to details. I usually just take with a grain of salt since it's not big of a problem.
I think I hate this 'Morgar has been planning this for a long time' narrative the most, because it means that the planet is playing puppet master. If you have the planet, the closest concept to God in the novel, manipulating people, what can you even do? Lith was an abomination, Mogar gave him the chance to become something different, but he could still become an Eldritch. In his family's case, they were normal humans but Mogar decided to play mad scientist and now they are something else. If the planet turned you into a lion, would you call that "fair"? So the father of all demons means: I modified all these humans because of you, and that is why you have this title. If Meln doesn't become a demon, it would be even stranger. Lith healing Tista shouldn't be enough for him to turn her into a demon. And then you would have to accept the possibility that Lith could turn everyone in the friend group into a demon. I mentioned plothole because it goes against everything that has been said about Mogar so far. So unless the plot twist is Mogar a manipulator, I see no sense in the narrative. And if that is the case, then I don't like the narrative xD
Honestly, I don't like this development. Not because I want Lith to be special, but because I don't see any logic in this narrative. Mogar said that she was fair, that's why she gave Dereck, someone who never lived in Mogar, a chance. But aparently she just changed the lineage of an entire family without asking for their permission. So how is this considered fair? I've always thought that what she meant was that she directed Dereck's soul to Lith's dead body, a member of a family that carried a recessive lost mutation. And that Dereck's abomination side was the one responsible for regaining that bloodline, just like Xenagross regained her dragon side after becoming an abomination. It's an explanation that makes sense and there's already a precedent. This, for me, is a plothole that lowers the novel's score (just like a few recent developments). But whatever.
So in your opinion, humans beings are such 1D creatures that the ONLY possible reaction they can have after being negatively surprised is to act immaturely, shouting and saying hurtful things? I am honestly curious… I have no problem with how they feel, but how they act. And the last 6 chapters were the pinnacle of immaturity.
I mean...You did show up unannounced, what were you expecting? u.u