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Messages - nomti

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Brandon Sanderson / Re: knights radient
« on: October 18, 2010, 09:27:20 PM »
The spren affinity has some logic.  The problem I have with that theory, however, is the lack of spren in Dalinar's visions.  There are none and there are still Knights Radient...

In the vision with Nohadon, he specifically mentions honorspren, and how the antagonist in the recent civil war had a different, less discriminating kind of spren.

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Brandon Sanderson / Re: Shattered Plain War Questions (Possible Spoilers)
« on: October 12, 2010, 05:00:13 PM »
However, after re-reading the book again I do have a another question about the bridge runs. I'm sure there's a reason that I'm overlooking, but I can't seem to figure it out. Here's my question; why is it that as soon as the crew reaches the chasm with the bridge that the arrows stop?  Put another way, why don't the Parshendi simply wait to fire their arrows until the bridge crews were at the chasms?

<snip>

Am I, once again, missing something obvious here?

I think so.  Once a bridge gets to a chasm, soldiers help push it across, if too many of its bridgemen have died.  Soldiers are armored, and have shields, making them much harder to kill.  For those same reasons, they can't really carry the bridges.  Take a bridge out twenty feet from the edge, it's down.  Take it out at the edge, it's coming across anyway.

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Brandon Sanderson / Re: Timespan for Stormlight Archives? (Spoilers)
« on: October 07, 2010, 01:00:28 PM »
If I recall... age is measured in terms of number of Weepings experienced (survived?), not by birth date.
Do we know when in the year Weepings fall?

Remember, seasons on Roshar last only a few weeks and don't follow any discernible pattern.  The only thing that repeats predictably is the Weepings.  So, they fall at the end.

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Brandon Sanderson / Re: WoK: Making Wishes Out West (*Spoilers*)
« on: October 06, 2010, 02:43:47 PM »
What if you wished to not be cursed?

You piss off the Nightwatcher?  Remember how it works - you tell her what you want, and then she gives you what *she* thinks you deserve, plus a curse to go with it.

And I'm with Fireborn.  An unpredictable supernatural entity that will give me something based on its whims, and then curse me?  Not unless I'm desperate.  But at that point, hell yeah.

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Brandon Sanderson / Re: The Ten Focus Characters of the 10 SA Books
« on: October 04, 2010, 10:05:49 PM »
Szeth gets a book. Jasnah gets a book. Talanel is not confirmed to get a book, but I certainly want it to happen.

Your wish is granted.  From the interview with Stomping on Yeti:

Quote
So you’ve seen pretty much everybody. Now, at this point there are several who are major viewpoint characters for the series who we have not had many or any viewpoints from yet--Jasnah is one, a character who shows up in the epilogue is another, and there are a few others--but there are in my mind essentially eight or ten major characters in this series, and it will stick to that.

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Brandon Sanderson / Re: WoK: Shalan - near end of book **SPOILERS**
« on: October 01, 2010, 07:23:07 PM »
Can't tell you exactly without knowing more about soulcasters, but it is likely that the spren imprisoned in the soulcaster is gone, released (or destroyed?) when the soulcaster was broken.
That is, of course, if soulcasters follow the examples of more modern fabrials in relying on imprisoned spren.

It also assumes that any Soulcasting requires fabrials.  We've only seen a broken fabrial and a decoy.  The ardents, who use the rest of them, always use them in secret.  They could all be fakes, just useful places to carry infused gemstones to use in spren-fueled soulcasting that the ardents still remember how to do from the Shadowdays.


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Brandon Sanderson / Re: Shattered Plain War Questions (Possible Spoilers)
« on: October 01, 2010, 03:50:57 PM »
The Parshendi could use caltrops on the likely Alethi approaches which would disable the bridgemen, or at least slow them considerably.  They could use fire arrows on the bridges, and even if most of the bridges themselves didn't catch fire immediately, the arrows would still kill bridgemen and might set fire to other nearby bridgemen or even the bridges themselves causing them to collapse during the assault.  They could set up a simple spearwall on the opposite edge of the chasm (the attacker side) to slow the assault giving them more time to shoot arrows.  Lastly, and most simply, they could wait for the bridges to be placed and then push them into the chasm.  They are mobile after all.

I think other people have addressed the issue of burning the bridges pretty thoroughly, but there is a point that's been touched on that I'd like to flesh out a bit.  You ask why they don't use caltrops, or set up a spear wall.  Besides possibly not having caltrops, the way they fight precludes them.  The Parshendi do not fight on more than one plateau at a time.  If you attack them, lose, and retreat, they let you go.  They don't have to.  They could jump chasms and harry you and bleed you white.  But they don't.  Similarly, they bring one one force to any given fight.  Chasmfiend shows up, you get your army, they get their army, they meet you at the designated combat zone, and they fight you until one of you wins.  That's it.  We don't know exactly why they do this, but it clearly has to do with their beliefs about how combat is conducted.

I think the same thing explains why they don't use advanced troop formations.  They fight in pairs, and each pair picks a guy, and takes him on.  If they get beat, another pair might step up.  And then another.  But they don't do formations.

And you're right, BTW, that this isn't very smart.   They know where these battles are going to take place.  They don't need bridges to cross most chasms.  They could send one force to a gemheart fight, and then have two more show up halfway through, attack the staging plateau, cut off the Alethi escape, and then overwhelm them.

But instead, they fight fair.  One army of yours, one army of mine.  Two armies of yours, two armies of mine.  Each of your warriors gets to challenge a warpair, even if your warriors fight as a unit.

We don't know exactly what their code of honor is, but I think their way of conducting war is tied up in it, and that's why they fight the way they do.

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