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Post By
HH

In Reply To
Anime Jason 
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Member Since: Sun Sep 12, 2004
Posts: 2,834
Subj: Insurance is just gambling with tragedies
Posted: Mon Dec 12, 2016 at 06:46:20 pm EST (Viewed 5 times)
Reply Subj: Might be more than the policy itself!
Posted: Mon Dec 12, 2016 at 11:56:39 am EST (Viewed 338 times)



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      Immortals are often portrayed in literature as perceiving mortals as brief, but I suspect that immediacy of experience is the same whether one has a span of 20 years or two million. Events still unfold at the same time, after all, so unless the immortal has immensely slow perceptios (like a tree) then reaction should be much the same - just a lot more of it eventually.



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    Along those line is that Lara Night, who is constantly "refreshed" by the energy she absorbs, and could live indefinitely that way, feels even *more* urgency of time than most 'brief mortals'. Because she connects so well with other people, she wants to make the most of the time she has with them.


I'm sure there must be an inevitable change with experience over time, but as I'm aging I begin to suspect that the perconality changes are as due to physical and hormonal differences as to character ones.

That said, the longer I've lived the more people have let me down, betrayed, or disappointed me, making it impossible for me to relate to people with the same enthusiasm and trust I once did. So in that sense time inevitably makes persoality differences.



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    The reason though isn't because of her life span or theirs. It's because she joined the superhero gig at 16, and after being involved with that for a few years, she's seen a lot of people die - some of them she worked with. She knows how fragile life is, just how dangerous her job is, and how important it is to love people along the way.


She should mention that to somone in-story.


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      One of my earliest Hood stories including him revealing how he had retconned over 200 failed attacks on the Lair Legion before their "first" meeting.



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    Is that 200 actual attacks, or potential ones?


Presumably they actually happened and then were retconed not to. The Hood may even have allowed himself to erase his own knowledge of the details. He had managed to become an anomaly by altering much of his own history, which is why he appears to be combined from several different origins now. These include a Herringcarp Asylum lunatic, a Herringcarp Asylum Victorian doctor, a moustache-swirling literal comic-boon baddie, and sadistic and lavicious Renaissance Marquis de Herringcarp. He has furnished his past like other people might select things for a room.


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      Sometimes you just have to let the story find its form.



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    I gave up some of the independence to create more future independence. It'll make sense when you see it. Basically I'm blazing a brave path to keep the characters I added from becoming peripheral to others. Unfortunately it's making the tale long and complicated, but I guess you can say the readers will be getting 4 stories in one.


Nothig wrong with that.


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    Something interesting about the new stuff in Part 4: I didn't know about the Intuition Interface before, but now Anna's design (and Nena's too) makes complete sense if you go back to their creators' motivation. "Dr. Lia" was dissatisfied with how sentient robots worked, so she decided to create one that doesn't depend on conventional methods. She wanted more diversification in their design, so one single virus or an event like this story wouldn't wipe them all out.


I'm going to avoid referencing the exeption robots if I can. This is partly because the robot issue is a side-plot to the main event, and I don't want to have to devote time to reintroducing more robots only to then say "but that's okay, because it turns out these are better robots than the ones you;ve been reading about so far and don't worry, they';ll be fine." As with many comic-book crossover crisis stories, the reader must assume that there are plenty of non-featured characters reacting and responding as well that are just not explicity portrayed on the page. In the PV we have tie-ins for that, too.

It doesn't always keep the story entirely focussed (artefact of the shared-universe medium) but it can help. I only have two weeks, about 14 episodes, to finish this plotline - or it'll have to stay hanging for another year!



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    How that relates to the story is Anna and Nena would still immune to the Intuition Interface error, and Dr. Lia would be somewhere saying "I told you so" to the entire industry of robotics.


I try to avoid the Character X is smarter/stronger/sneakier than Character Y stuff when that involves comparing creations from different posters. Various robot geniuses have appeared over the years, from very familiar ones like Al B. and NTU-150 to recurring supporting cast like Dr Wrichards and Rikka Ulz Hagen, to "historic" ones like Baron Zemo and Helen MacAllisfar (Hallie's engram donor). I assume that each was brilliant at the time in their own field, and because this is the Parodyverse, each had their funny flaws and quirks.


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    Of course that also starts the debate over whether the two of them have souls all over again. If it's accepted that the Intuition Interface is what connects the sentient robots to their souls, what are Anna and Nena's respective connections?


Of course, souls are presumably not dependent on software or harware any more than they are on brain patterns and organic punctions.


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    Oh, and I have no idea if Nena or Anna could save any of the robots who are hitting that error and dying. Neither of them had apparent mystic aspects that would allow them to capture robot souls. The only help they could be, maybe, might be if Vinnie binds Tandi's souls to one them temporarily, since they're actually operational and could provide a life-giving anchor. Or maybe if one of them connects to Tandi's body to provide virtualized error correction so her soul could bind back to its own body and remain there.


The problem comes from an actual change in the way the Parodyverse works, not any internal flaw in the machinery or software. It's like saying "the Law of Thermodynamics has changed and now we can't light fires". Different, better, or more flints won't make a difference. The universe just doesn't support it anymore.






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