Chapter 7 lore posted on GameZone, reposted here.
#1
Posted 13 February 2009 - 02:47 PM
[quote=The Abyss: The Asmodian Perspective]One day a curious thing happened. The shards of the great tower that had plunged into our soft land started emanating light again, and then pulled themselves from the ground and into the air around us. Asphel ordered the Archons, the strongest of our Daevas, and the unit of which I was now a part, to investigate.
We left straight away, and found a portal of some description which took us to a world, somewhere between Asmodae and the lower half of Atreia, where pillars of rock floated in the air. This was a world where the Aether that I relied on for my powers was present in abundance, and I felt a sense of enormous relief upon finding my abilities still intact. I returned to Pandaemonium and told our Shedim Lords what we had seen. Asphel immediately ordered other Archons to guard this portal, and when I asked why, he did not answer, but instead simply gazed up at the sky, towards the lower half of Atreia.
Two days later, while we were planning a second expedition through the portal, we noticed our guards stationed in Morheim had not reported in to us. Zikel, one of the Shedim Lords and our god of destruction, took the remaining Archons, including myself, to investigate.
We hadn't traveled long when we found a group of men, claiming to be from the lower half of Atreia, standing in their stead, their weapons drawn. These beings looked like angels, and though they said little, they cast judgment on us instantly. Imagine - being judged for a crime that they, not we, had committed! It was not us who had been soft-hearted cretins, welcoming the Dragon Lords into our tower during full-scale war - it was them!
Zikel's rage was more than evident, and he threw these "Elyos" to the ground, demanding they curse Nezakan, one of the Empyrean Lords who was weak enough to call for peace with the Balaur. Time, Zikel spat, had proven which side was at fault. Would these Elyos acknowledge their Lords' mistake, and condemn them for their foolishness?
Their leader, a man named Deltras, refused. With the pride that we now know is the taint of all the Elyos, he piously refused to blame his own Lords, cursing Zikel instead. Swords were drawn, and we charged, cutting them down like the cowards that they were. Still, some of their numbers escaped; most fled towards our home city where in their anger they butchered our women and children before we finished them. Two fled back to their homeland, bloodied but not vanquished. Not yet.[/quote]
[quote=The Abyss: The Elyos Perspective]All that remained of our great tower following the Epic Cataclysm were two stumped remains, one on our world, the other still visible on Atreia's upper half. The majority of the tower had been destroyed, its remains left scattered over the two halves of our world.
One day, however, the earth around these shattered remains began to shift, and slowly the fragments levitated themselves into the air. We sent our bravest guardians to investigate the phenomenon, and they discovered portals leading to huge floating chunks of the Aion tower, in a bizarre realm where Aether flowed like water.
We labeled this world the Abyss, and slowly our Daevas ventured forth, exploring this new and volatile environment. They found a world rich in the Aether that Aion had granted to the Empyrean Lords, and which the Daevas had managed to manipulate when we were at war with the Balaur. Many Daevas were lost, though; these portals were unstable, and once closed seemed to stay shut, exiling anyone who had gone through.
One day another portal opened, larger and more stable than the others. A Guardian by the name of Deltras passed through it, and on the other side, he found something astounding. His legion were standing on the upper half of Atreia, and when they looked across the sky, they didn't see the shaded remains of the Aion tower, and the upper half of Atreia, but instead saw their own world of Elysea, bathed in warm sunlight.
Slowly, nervously, they moved on, carefully exploring this strange land which once was part of their home. It was now a dark and foreboding place, full of whispers and fleeting shadows. There they discovered the Asmodians, men and women who were once our brothers, but now had been warped into twisted and foul creatures. Even worse, these nightmares were led by one of the murderous Empyrean Lords, a cruel being named Zikel.
It was dark; our Daevas could not see well, and were soon captured by Zikel and his monsters. This being, who we had once revered alongside the mighty Ariel, threw Deltras to the ground, demanding he curse the Seraphim Lords for their "weakness". Deltras, brave and noble as he always was, kept the pride of the Elyos. He refused to curse the Seraphim Lords, and instead cursed arrogant Zikel to his face.
The Asmodians attacked, and those of us who were waiting on the other side of the portal saw only two of our number return, bloodied and injured.[/quote]
#2
Posted 13 February 2009 - 02:59 PM
I have huge doubts this game is even going to see the light of day; things certainly are downhill from here.
(P.S. you called game zone worthless and then edited it; why? you were on the money)
#3
Posted 13 February 2009 - 03:18 PM
RiGoRmOrTiS said:
I have huge doubts this game is even going to see the light of day; things certainly are downhill from here.
(P.S. you called game zone worthless and then edited it; why? you were on the money)
Because it wasn't appropriate for a news post, more appropriate for my blog.
#4
Posted 13 February 2009 - 03:20 PM
#6
Posted 13 February 2009 - 04:13 PM
Quote
The Asmodians attacked, and those of us who were waiting on the other side of the portal saw only two of our number return, bloodied and injured.
Can Elyos be any more cruel? :(
Elyos lost just their soldiers, but asmodians lost their families(kids, wifes).
#7
Posted 13 February 2009 - 04:22 PM
Errr... umm **** guys... CHAPTER 7 LORE RELEASED ZOMG!!!!
NCSoft fails at distraction >.>

Ayase said:
Tworak said:
Snoozle said:
#8
Posted 13 February 2009 - 04:41 PM
edit: i see this was released on gamezone.. so then the na/eu sites don't do these, they just act like they do.. and put it on their site? which basically means they do nothing.. *sigh
This post has been edited by Fire: 13 February 2009 - 04:47 PM
#9
Posted 13 February 2009 - 04:47 PM
i think I'll go eat some cake, that should cheer me up a bit at least.
Ico/Izanagi said:
#14
Posted 13 February 2009 - 07:32 PM
"The Melody of Logic will play out the Truth."
Intel Core 2 Quad Q8200 | HIS Radeon HD 4850 IceQ4 1GB | Intel DP45SG Motherboard| 4 Gigs of Corsair XMS3 DDR3 | Ultra 750-Watt Power Supply | Windows Vista 64 bit
#15
Posted 13 February 2009 - 07:44 PM
NightFall said:
They probably fired the person that updates their site :rolleyes:

Ayase said:
Tworak said:
Snoozle said:
#17
Posted 13 February 2009 - 11:06 PM
I think the main reason the Asmodian storyline is built to draw more sympathy is because many people, attracted to being the 'good' guys, will pick Elyos. By using the Lore to show the points of view it helps add even more appeal to the Asmodians. Hate to bring up WoW in this, but in that game Blizzard getting people to play Horde was a real problem, and caused alot of bad balance between the two sides. Maybe NC Soft saw this and decided to make, in a way, the Asmodians the good(?!) guys. After reading this far, it almost is ironic that if you take it into consideration, its the Elyos that are the bad guys and the Asmodians that are the victems of their mistakes. All I know is that reading the Lore makes me really really wonder about going Elyos... After reading this recent chapter I almost feel ashamed about my choice.
#18
Posted 13 February 2009 - 11:13 PM
The Elyos tried to make peace, the Asmodians attacked the Balaur, causing the tower to be destroyed. Whether that would have happened if they hadn't initiated violence, the story tellers didn't say. So this one we can say the Asmodians were on the wrong for attacking, but Elyos on the wrong for inviting the Balaur in.
The Elyos go into a new land out of curiosity, and are of course defensive because they see people who they don't know, but are again attacked by the Asmodians (violent much?), so in retaliation they attack their families. The Asmodians started it, but the Elyos continued it. Both are at fault.
>>>Spiritmaster MiniFAQ<<<
#19
Posted 13 February 2009 - 11:18 PM
Finnalie said:
The Elyos tried to make peace, the Asmodians attacked the Balaur, causing the tower to be destroyed. Whether that would have happened if they hadn't initiated violence, the story tellers didn't say. So this one we can say the Asmodians were on the wrong for attacking, but Elyos on the wrong for inviting the Balaur in.
The Elyos go into a new land out of curiosity, and are of course defensive because they see people who they don't know, but are again attacked by the Asmodians (violent much?), so in retaliation they attack their families. The Asmodians started it, but the Elyos continued it. Both are at fault.
Thank you for making me feel good about Elyos again XD I'd forgotten that the Asmodians didn't know that their leader (can't remember his name) was the one that struck down the dragon.
#20
Posted 14 February 2009 - 06:23 AM
Serina said:
I think the main reason the Asmodian storyline is built to draw more sympathy is because many people, attracted to being the 'good' guys, will pick Elyos. By using the Lore to show the points of view it helps add even more appeal to the Asmodians. Hate to bring up WoW in this, but in that game Blizzard getting people to play Horde was a real problem, and caused alot of bad balance between the two sides. Maybe NC Soft saw this and decided to make, in a way, the Asmodians the good(?!) guys. After reading this far, it almost is ironic that if you take it into consideration, its the Elyos that are the bad guys and the Asmodians that are the victems of their mistakes. All I know is that reading the Lore makes me really really wonder about going Elyos... After reading this recent chapter I almost feel ashamed about my choice.
in the case of wow lore - the horde are shown as largely good guys too, the atrocities commited during the first and second wars by the orcs for example was under the influence of the blood of mannoroth, the Orcs themselves were a largely peaceful and spiritual race lead by shamans. The orcs, trolls and taurens are basically looking for a place to live in peace - the forsaken are undead free of the will of the lich king trying to survive versus the likes of the rather zealous scarlet crusade, and the blood elves are only part of the horde because the alliance turned on their leader Kael thas for accepting help from naga in WC3.
if the lore is to be believed each side thinks they are the good guys and the other side is their enemy.
personally I think the lush greenery, bright sunshine, and white angelic wings is likely to sway most people to being Elyos rather than Asmodians -no matter the lore.
:grin:
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