The Doom of Valyria- Any Chance?
#1
Posted 07 September 2006 - 07:00 AM
Perhaps if you are running with the idea of a maester's notebook we could have a couple of maps, one before the Doom and one after with the maester's notes on what was suppose to have happened, the hearsay and the myths surrounding the smoking seas? Perhaps some fragments copied from older texts giving tantalising clues to the role of dragons, Valyrian magic (and subsequent decline) and the collapse of the Freehold would be very nice as well.
#2
Posted 08 September 2006 - 06:30 AM
#3
Posted 08 September 2006 - 09:24 AM
Thanks
#5
Posted 10 November 2007 - 05:54 PM
Maybe its me but I would rather see the actual story than more plodding off into something that has nothing to do with the plot. Unless it has something to do with the plot in which case I will happily read it.
I will happily read whatever he writes. As long as he gets down to writing it.
#6
Posted 26 November 2007 - 06:10 PM
Once D&D 4th Edition goes online I may even invite players from this forum to play.
#7
Posted 26 November 2007 - 08:31 PM
Blue Roses, on Sep 7 2006, 07.00, said:
Perhaps if you are running with the idea of a maester's notebook we could have a couple of maps, one before the Doom and one after with the maester's notes on what was suppose to have happened, the hearsay and the myths surrounding the smoking seas? Perhaps some fragments copied from older texts giving tantalising clues to the role of dragons, Valyrian magic (and subsequent decline) and the collapse of the Freehold would be very nice as well.
#8
Posted 01 May 2008 - 09:38 AM
#9
Posted 01 May 2008 - 10:05 AM
Hitman8D, on Oct 24 2007, 05.11, said:
Nope. The Doom was only 400 years ago. The Freakish Long Seasons have been around since at least the Long Night, which was (very roughly) 8,000 years ago.
#10
Posted 01 May 2008 - 04:00 PM
Werthead, on May 1 2008, 09.05, said:
The Doom of Valyria may be a different matter. That seems to me to be somthing having to do with tremendous amounts of sorcery gone awry or something. Maybe the uncontrollable magic contributed to volcanic eruptions and/or earthquakes that basically destroyed the place and made it virtually uninhabitable? I don't know - this is all just speculation.
Or, maybe the Long Night, the Freakish Long Seasons, and the Doom of Valyria are all just "magical" phenomena and we can just leave it at that? :dunno:
#11
Posted 04 June 2008 - 01:38 PM
#12
Posted 04 June 2008 - 05:59 PM
#13
Posted 05 June 2008 - 01:34 AM
George has said that the cause of the strange seasons is primarily magical, not scientific, in explanation.
#14
Posted 16 June 2008 - 07:05 PM
i mean, a charred smoking landscape surrounded by charred smoking seas with nothing left on the land but charred smoking ruins...
sounds like someone let a dragon get to big, especially when they supposedly grow indefinately.
#15
Posted 16 June 2008 - 07:10 PM
kettleblack, on Jun 16 2008, 19.05, said:
i mean, a charred smoking landscape surrounded by charred smoking seas with nothing left on the land but charred smoking ruins...
sounds like someone let a dragon get to big, especially when they supposedly grow indefinately.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volcano
#16
Posted 16 June 2008 - 07:17 PM
#17
Posted 06 June 2010 - 04:31 PM
The nice thing is that we don't really need to know more about the Doom. It happened, it's mysterious, no one lives there, so it's mostly there for the general world atmosphere by providing a more dramatic parallel to the fall of the western Roman empire.
#18
Posted 04 July 2010 - 01:01 PM
nategator, on 06 June 2010 - 04:31 PM, said:
Or perhaps the official encyclopedia (well, as near as we're going to get in the short term) that we're talking about in this very subforum?
#19
Posted 04 July 2010 - 02:25 PM
Maybe I'm wrong, but didn't the Targaryens give up on magic once they came to Westeros? Maybe this was because of the Doom. In which case, maybe Dany has to start using some of it to handle her problems. Maybe Marwyn will teach her how.
#20
Posted 10 July 2010 - 08:12 AM
But it seems that most of the real valyrian magic stuff (glass candles, for example) went out of use, or did no longer work properly after the Doom. On the other hand, if Dany's dragons triggered the reawakening of fire magic all over the world, it makes no sense to assume that the glass candles should not have worked during the first 150 years of the Targaryen reign. Maybe they used them, too. If they did, it was likely not announced to the public, and thus we may just not know.







