Editing Talk:Darkness
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:::Which of the following statements include assertions that are inaccurate, or were made up by me: | :::Which of the following statements include assertions that are inaccurate, or were made up by me: | ||
1. ''Nacre'' (the ship) was released on June 4, 2024, the date that ''The Final Shape'' expansion released. | 1. ''Nacre'' (the ship) was released on June 4, 2024, the date that ''The Final Shape'' expansion released. | ||
2. The Lore Tab for Nacre was unreadable upon the ship's initial release on June 4, but became readable on June 18. | 2. The Lore Tab for Nacre was unreadable upon the ship's initial release on June 4, but became readable on June 18. | ||
3. The ''Salvation's Edge'' Raid was released on June 7, 2024, and the ''Excision'' story mission became available after the Raid was completed for the first time. Thus, we as players did not see the Witness defeated until/after June 7. | 3. The ''Salvation's Edge'' Raid was released on June 7, 2024, and the ''Excision'' story mission became available after the Raid was completed for the first time. Thus, we as players did not see the Witness defeated until/after June 7. | ||
4. The Lore Tab for Nacre is narrated by an entity who claims to have spoken with us before, in a friendly, casual manner ("''one more nice sit-down for the books''"), exactly like the Winnower did in ''Unveiling''. The narrator also references the same Darkness-affiliated philosophy of self-interest and survival-of-the-fittest that the Winnower upholds in ''Unveiling''. There is also a metaphorical use of "flowers" to refer to universes (i.e. a callback to the flower game), a "final pattern," radiolaria, and various other cues that- although it is not explicitly stated- seem to draw obvious connections between this Lore entry and ''Unveiling''. One could thus argue that the entry certainly at least ''sounds'' like it is narrated by the same Winnower from ''Unveiling'', and seems to be a direct continuation of that series of messages. | 4. The Lore Tab for Nacre is narrated by an entity who claims to have spoken with us before, in a friendly, casual manner ("''one more nice sit-down for the books''"), exactly like the Winnower did in ''Unveiling''. The narrator also references the same Darkness-affiliated philosophy of self-interest and survival-of-the-fittest that the Winnower upholds in ''Unveiling''. There is also a metaphorical use of "flowers" to refer to universes (i.e. a callback to the flower game), a "final pattern," radiolaria, and various other cues that- although it is not explicitly stated- seem to draw obvious connections between this Lore entry and ''Unveiling''. One could thus argue that the entry certainly at least ''sounds'' like it is narrated by the same Winnower from ''Unveiling'', and seems to be a direct continuation of that series of messages. | ||
5. The narrator of ''Nacre'' references "my sedimentary necrolite, frozen in time," and says "you've seen that". "Sedimentary" means "rock that has formed through deposited minerals," which alludes to the Witness's Final Shape involving turning everything into something that resembles polished stone. The word "necrolite" can refer to a type of feldspar (i.e. a rock), but if one breaks the word down into its component parts, we get "necro" = death, and "-lite", a suffix sometimes used to refer to types of stone (e.g. ammolite, which is a type of gemstone made from ammonite fossils). Therefore one could easily interpret "necrolite" as "death stone/gemstone", which describes the Witness' Final Shape very well. "Frozen in time" is self-explanatory: the Witness' Final Shape involved freezing the entire universe in time. The narrator says "you've seen that", indicating that this thing it is describing has already happened - in other words, the Witness' Final Shape has come and gone. | 5. The narrator of ''Nacre'' references "my sedimentary necrolite, frozen in time," and says "you've seen that". "Sedimentary" means "rock that has formed through deposited minerals," which alludes to the Witness's Final Shape involving turning everything into something that resembles polished stone. The word "necrolite" can refer to a type of feldspar (i.e. a rock), but if one breaks the word down into its component parts, we get "necro" = death, and "-lite", a suffix sometimes used to refer to types of stone (e.g. ammolite, which is a type of gemstone made from ammonite fossils). Therefore one could easily interpret "necrolite" as "death stone/gemstone", which describes the Witness' Final Shape very well. "Frozen in time" is self-explanatory: the Witness' Final Shape involved freezing the entire universe in time. The narrator says "you've seen that", indicating that this thing it is describing has already happened - in other words, the Witness' Final Shape has come and gone. | ||