eliakon wrote:Well the 'mercenary' in question works for. wait for it.....a group of GOOD guys, under the comand of a KNOWN hero and savior of the innocent....
Lotsa pro-Larsen bias in dis thread. Here we have a guy known for abdicating his sworn duties and violating the chain of command.
Let's keep in mind that guy employs (and likes, and respects) an evil Juicer with no qualms about murder or torture. He also consorts with alien invaders (dragons and gargoyles), humans who dangerously try to master the chaotic and unstable mystic arcs (LLWs, mystics), people who link themselves to alien intelligences (warlocks), minions of the Splugorth (Kittani), races known to be disposed to evil (orcs, trolls, goblins) and those known to have a link to the Old Ones themselves (minotaurs).
Sorry if I don't trust this guy so implicitly =/
eliakon wrote:How about the mechanical life in the Dimension book. living robotic birds and lizards....from a world where all the life is living machines....thats pretty....out there.
Doesn't ring a bell, which Dimension Book? Might not have this one. Sounds interesting. Would like to read about it. Does it say that the world of living machines evolved, or could it have possibly been designed like the Machine People were?
eliakon wrote:How about Phantoms (living light?)
Sentient lightforms who can build bodies (the Bhlaze are similar to the Phantoms in this) still don't have that 'designed' look.
Entries on the Terrors talk about them looking like robots or suits of armor. With people who design magical suits of armor and robots (TWs) saying they think that's what they are. So it's heavily implied they did not evolve, as they don't appear to be like other things who don't have design-exclusive elements.
Nightmask wrote:Again looks mean nothing.
That you keep saying this doesn't make it true. Looks mean a huge deal.
Nightmask wrote:They aren't doing an actual examination of a Holy Terror just going 'hey that looks like it might be a construct', which means nothing.
You don't know how thorough an examination those TWs did. Furthermore: visual examining is still a form of examination.
Nightmask wrote:Angar power armor and robots look like technology but are actually living demons morphed to look like power armor and robots, so appearances mean nothing.
Your logic doesn't hold up here. The Angar technology, while based on biological components, was DESIGNED by Ahriman and his minions. It did not naturally evolve this way. Demons were forced into that shape. Your example supports my argument, the Angar did not evolve, they were constructed intelligently.
Nightmask wrote:being intelligent and knowing about how to make Techno-Wizard constructs gives no weight to random speculations on their part as to whether something they saw is or isn't a magical construct.
Your phrasing insists that the speculation by TWs is 'random' but you don't have evidence to support that. I would argue that there is no such thing as random speculation, and that compared to laymen (such as us) a TW is in a better position to speculate on the potential of an unknown thing being a magical robot or cyborg, since TWs have actually designed such things.
Nightmask wrote:We don't know who creates the armor for Cyber-Knights (given they're a psionic class would be more likely to be a gizmoteer rather than TW making their bio-armor)
Actually we do. This should have been more prominently mentioned in the OCC description of the living armor ability at level 4, but it is present in SoT4 on pg 21: "When a Techno-Wizard introduced the process of fusing bits of Mega-Damage armor to the human body (made possible only through years of Cyber-Knight training) the final piece fell into place and the Cyber-Knights were born."
I think the way that was written wasn't ideal ("fusing bits of Mega-Damage armor to the human body" describes the basic cybernetic implant that anyone can get, and was introduced by Cyber-Docs, not TWs) I think it's made clear that the 'living armor' upgrade of the cybernetic implant is TW-based.
Nightmask wrote:Techno-Wizards can't make anti-monsters (it's explicitly noted to be impossible for a standard TW to be able to make one and even the Splugorth can't figure them out)
WB6pg34 "a creation of advanced trans-dimensional techno-wizardry" does imply that TWs can make them. That standard TWs can't is irrelevant. Most newbie PC chars are going to lack knowledge of certain things, but that doesn't mean it's impossible for them to learn how. Most Cyber-Docs are going to lack Desmond Bradford or Angel's ability to bio-engineer new species of life or create psynetic implants, but that also is not impossible if they gain that knowledge.
Keep in mind that I'm not arguing that these TWs could build a holy terror (or an anti-monster) but merely that they could recognize TWishness to it. Clearly the Splugorth (who have lots of TWs on staff... recent additions I guess, since apparently it was invented on Rifts Earth, right?) recognize some TW (or maybe bio-wizardry) aspects to anti-monsters, they just lack the specific design schematics and can't replicate them.
It's the same reason why operators with CS or Naruni Enterprise schematics could eventually produce such weaponry, but since they lack the data and facilities, can't by default.
Nightmask wrote:Techno-Wizards aren't educated in xeno-biology and can no more determine something is actually a living being or race by looking at it than anyone else can.
You don't need to be educated in xenobiology to call a car a car and not a robot in disguise.
Also the argument is not that the Holy Terrors aren't alive (they clearly ARE alive) but whether or not they are a created being or an evolved being. I and the TWs are arguing that their armor-like design belies a creator.
Nightmask wrote:Since they never allow themselves to be examined
Where are you getting this? Ralph says he doesn't let people examine him. That doesn't mean all Holy Terrors do. Tell me where it says all the Terrors forbid examinations. Not to mention: the Unholy's forces probably have some TWs on staff and have probably captured a Terror or two, so they may have examined them without consent.
The assumption that TWs are making random speculations is groundless. Even visual examination is valid (even a peasant could tell you they look like armor and not evolved plating) and TWs probably aren't just jumping to conclusions.
Nightmask wrote:random speculation from some random TW is worthless.
More 'random' assumptions and minimalization of TW credentials which eclipse our own.
Nightmask wrote:an Astronomer's without the background to have any say about the existence of alien life or how it might evolve, it takes a completely separate educational background to have an opinion on those things that's worth listening to.
Physics and biology are important considerations here, but astronomy is also part of that discussion.
You seem to think that a TW would need special knowledge on how something like a Holy Terror might evolve on its own (something not even established) to discount that possibility though. Rather than the obvious: we know things like Holy Terrors have been built by Techno-Wizardry (the Anti-Monster) or Bio-Wizardry (Rune Statues). If a TW speculates something has TW elements, that is a worthwhile observation. A lack of knowledge to prove something we don't even know can be true disqualifies nothing here.
Nightmask wrote:those random speculations aren't given any weight at all over any other theories.
Oh? Then why aren't other sources of speculation besides TWs mentioned? That they're mentioned prominently in the RCC description is 'weight' to me.
Nightmask wrote:Tor wrote:They can at minimum change between Miscreant and Diabolic. The 90/10 stat I see reflects the initial requirements of becoming a Wraith, and the composition of NPCs at the time of the Uprising. The class doesn't explicitly say the alignment can never change, so I think eventually we may see an Aberrent or Anarchist one out there some day.
Only in some house-ruled game
Why do you think it requires house rules to have an Aberrent Murder Wraith?
Nightmask wrote:Murder Wraiths are complete monsters, their entire existence requires being a complete monster to become one.
No, it doesn't. They're just PPE vampires who need to eat living flesh. PPE and flesh can come back with time. If a Wraith had a means of healing those they fed upon, that's a moot consideration. They need to inflict pain to feed, which has a chance of inflicting insanity upon those they feed upon. A Wraith could potentially choose volunteers, perhaps people who are resistant to insanity (high save bonuses), perhaps masochists who enjoy pain and would relish the procedure. Someone willing to pay the costs for a greater good, such as how a Wraith may protect their town from danger.
Wraiths could also choose to feed upon those who are evil and who might otherwise be executed. Being chosen as Wraith-food might be a stay of execution for a condemned criminal, which is for their own good.
Nightmask wrote:They aren't ever going to undergo any kind of enlightenment or shift from being thoroughly and utterly evil.
Why not? What forbids this? If it could happen, it'd be rare, but I don't see anything forbidding this.
Nightmask wrote:You need to reread the Apok OCC, they're 100% committed to opposing evil in all its forms, even becoming an Apok required they start as thoroughly evil sorts who chose to reject their past life of evil utterly and completely.
The part about 100% dedication relates to the moment of becoming an Apok. It doesn't say anything about this 100% being fixed for the rest of their life. Cosmo-Knights and Wormspeakers also require this dedication and good alignment, but they can fall, so why not the Apoks?
Nightmask wrote:They can't be anything but good.
Why not? The Apoks are described as having "stared into the blackness of his own soul and potential for evil". Nothing is said about this potential going away. The very source of an Apok's power is being reminded of his own capacity for evil. So I'd argue that they must be able to return to evil. What makes an Apok is not an inability to become evil, but rather a choice not to.
Nightmask wrote:it's not an educated assessment, an educated assessment actually requires you to ASSESS something of which just looking at it is NOT an educated assessment that's a random speculation.
TWs are educated. Looking IS a way to assess. The issue being assessed is if Terrors may have TW origins. Thus it IS an educated assessment. It says "many TWs suspect". You seem to be implying that TWs just randomly suspect things.
Nightmask wrote:Much like 'if all you have is a hammer' if all you are is a Techno-Wizard you're going to look around and see everything in terms of techno-wizardry no matter how wrong you actually are.
Implying the TWs are wrong (based on what?).
Also, TWs don't necessarily think it's TW, but possibly related things. Arguably things like rune magic are related to Techno-Wizardry (though moreso to Bio-Wizardry). All Lizard TWs (save K'zaa) knowing the secrets of rune magic illustrates that. TW speculation is "some sort of magic robot" and "may not be human or even alive" and "merging of man, machine and magic".
Nightmask wrote:it LOOKS like, and all the TW has is LOOKS which are worthless.
1. you assume TW suspicions are founded solely on looks, without evidence.
2. you call looks worthless, when judging things by appearance is NOT worthless, rather it is a part of established technological and biological assessments.
Nightmask wrote:A thousand techno-wizards can look at the android 'son' ARCHIE-3 created and they'll all think he not only looks but is human like everyone else does because looks are worthless.
You're using an example of a technological construct mimicing an evolved being as evidence that an evolved being's fixed default form would mimic a technological construct? That's quite flipped around, no? I mean, I'm not disputing that some shapeshifters (Amorphs for example) can consciously mimic technological objects, but that is a form of intelligent design because a mind (the Amorph) is constructing the form out of ectoplasm. While the Amorph may have evolved, their choice of form did not.
Nightmask wrote:you keep operating under the underlying belief that Holy Terrors are magical constructs
I don't think I am, I'm considering it a possibility and a possibility which is implied.
Nightmask wrote:therefor that makes Techno-Wizards experts to understand them
No, I'm saying that TWs are experts at noticing the signs of techno-wizardry. Any layman can see that the Terror looks like a designed suit of armor though. They lack the organic Je ne cai quois. I continue to welcome you to present any other being in the Megaverse as obviously as mechanical-looking as these guys who are implied to have evolved that way.
Nightmask wrote:that underlying belief is purely your opinion and not even close to being valid in the books.
It's not purely my opinion: it's the opinion of many Techno-wizards. I'm sharing their opinion. It doesn't originate with me. It's also very close to being valid, because it's the most reasonable explanation we have for why they are the way they are.
Nightmask wrote:It's a fallacy that assumes the answer in the question
I don't see how that could be. Isn't assuming you need to be a xenobiologist to disprove as having evolved more of a fallacy? Proving negatives is pretty hard. Can you prove that computers did not evolve? Or rather, would you make an argument for the greater likelihood that they show evidence of having been built?
Nightmask wrote:no proof exists that Holy Terrors are magical constructs
I never claimed there was proof. But it's very clear: "what looks to be artificial armor". These beings look artificial. Indeed these artificial parts are alive, but we know full well that artificial things can be made alive (rune statues, Dweomer Automatons, god minion races) so that doesn't disqualify design.
Nightmask wrote:some Techno-wizard's opinion based on just seeing something
"TWs suspect" doesn't mean "suspect just based on seeing". We don't know what the assessment is based on. So we shouldn't be insisting either way that it's based purely on sight or that a friendly Terror let a TW ally pull them apart and check out their specs.
Nightmask wrote:is a worthless opinion because he has nothing to base it on other than looking and that's completely inadequate to qualify as an informed opinion.
I'd strongly appreciate it if you'd stop with the whole 'based on looking' thing. We don't know.
Nightmask wrote:Right in the books regarding Holy Terrors, they never:
1. speak of their homeworld
2. answer questions about their origins
3. let anyone examine them.
Where does it say this? Keep in mind we're talking about all of them and not Ralph. I'm reading the RCC over and over and not finding this. Is it written somewhere else in Wormwood besides pgs66-68? Any quotes?
Nightmask wrote:you're just trying to move the goalposts because you don't like the answer invalidating your claims.
I don't see how it invalidates them. Having traits of various species (when theories about the evolution of life usually imply that all species on Earth have common ancestors) hardly disqualifies design. The Holy Terror does not have the traits of various evolved species: they have the traits of platemail, robots, spiked armor, mechanical claws, hinge joints, knee pads, rivets and belts.
Nightmask wrote:When the first platypus was sent in it was dismissed as an 'obvious' hoax because it looked like it was assembled from a range of animals and biologists at the time were sure such a creature couldn't really exist. It took quite a bit of effort to eventually get them accepted as alive.
It's still not a good example, because it had organic traits in common with its relatives. We have no evolving mechanical relatives to compare the Holy Terror to, unless of course that 'machine dimension book' thing posited by another poster turns up something.
Nightmask wrote:Given the megaverse has a range of living creatures that are inorganic
There is a difference between inorganic and designed, let's keep that in mind.
Nightmask wrote:look like living armors or plate mail
Like who? Let's keep in mind: being alive and looking like a suit of armor doesn't mean that you evolved. There are evolved-looking living suits of armor and designed-looking living suits of armor.
Nightmask wrote:by the biology of the setting the idea of Holy Terrors being a naturally occurring lifeform is completely within the context of the setting.
No idea what 'biology of the setting' you're talking about here. What context? If you mean Wormwood's Battle Saints, it's hypothesized that Wormwood itself is a designed planet. If not the planet itself then certainly the Saints at least exhibit a reaction to imagination if not being a direct product of it, rather than pure non-designed evolution.
Nightmask wrote:it's not 'strongly indicated' in the text, 'some techno-wizards think they might be constructs' isn't a strong indicator
'Many', not 'some'.
Nightmask wrote:everyone's got an opinion and no one has anything to back it up.
Not having absolute proof doesn't mean that TW's opinions are unbacked. TWs have the backing of their education and expertise. They're not another drop in the pot of superstitious vagabonds. They are well respected experts in many settings and their mention prominently in the first paragraph of the RCC is not coincidence.
Nightmask wrote:'I saw a Holy Terror and it looked like a construct' isn't worth the breath it took to speak it, it has nothing to make that opinion have more value than anyone else's
This is a valid opinion for those who have experience with constructs and how things don't tend to evolve this way independent of sentient designs.
Plus again, a request to drop the 'it looked like' arguments as TW suspicion sources aren't clarified, nor is your insistence that none of them allow thorough analysis.
Nightmask wrote:being smart and trained in techno-magic doesn't make their opinion of something they've never examined worth more than anyone else's opinion.
Actually it does. Sort of like how Hardware in HU have better analytical skills than laymen, based on their expertise. The problem here is that this obvious proficiency is not reflected in a skill percentage for TWs, like how Nightbane OCCs have a 'Principles of Magic' skill to reflect this. A 'principles of techno-wizardry' skill would clarify it. That said, even without this knowledge reflected in percentile, TWs can obviously be assumed to have it, since they design them.
Nightmask wrote:Nothing about Holy Terrors say that they look like welded and scupted armor (since welding implies being constructed)
Descriptions like "Appears to be artificial armor" .. "silver spikes" .. "walking talking giant suit of armor", "cyborg, robot or something else" are not referring to evolved biological armor like we might see on lobsters or Kreeghor. Terms like 'welded' and other things are adjectives I'm using based on how they look in the pictures.
Nightmask wrote:you can't go 'well earth elementals look like raw earth and that's how other non-organic creatures would look too'
I think you should probably just drop Elementals from your argument. The true form of elementals is actually as formless energy beings. When they take physical form it is through their powers to possess and move matter that they do so. These are not Elementals' true forms.
Nightmask wrote:that race of living armor-like creatures that parasitically take over other living beings looks like sculpted armor but is very much alive.
Again: this is not about whether or not they are 'alive' (we know Terrors are alive) but rather if that life is built or evolved. I don't have access to Aliens Unlimited at the moment, so I'm not able to do a visual comparison. Nor do I know if the Riathenor (or however it's spelled, been a while since I heard about them on the forums, assume this is what you mean) were an evolved species or a designed species.
Nightmask wrote:There's nothing but your own bias looking to spin it that Holy Terrors are constructs
This isn't my spin. I'm not making a claim here. I accept the (obscure, unevidenced, unindicated) possibility that they evolved to be this way. It just violates the odds to assume so. It's more likely (and more indicated) that they are constructed and designed beings.
Human beings evolved, but human beings as cyborgs (or anti-monsters) were designed to be the way they're presented, which is what I mean. I accept that the Terrors may at their core be (or have been) an evolved species of life. But whatever form they're in now looks designed, and it is indicated that it was designed by every reference to them. Every single reference indicates design, not a single reference indicates evolution. That's my point here. Mine is the supported assumption. You seem to be obsessing over the trivial possibility that something like this would've just popped into existence.
If you have access to AU please drop some quotes about how these things evolved and what it is they look like, or if it's acceptable to post a picture of them (not sure about board policies on this, any Riathenor icons?) that'd be useful. I oughtta get this book some day.
Nightmask wrote:seeks to dismiss the idea that they're naturally occurring beings by playing up some things as being less likely than they really are.
I don't seek to dismiss the possibility, but I do dismiss that it's likely or implied.
Nightmask wrote:you keep changing the goalposts and setting requirements as restrictive as possible to make it look as if something can't be as likely as it actually is.
I haven't changed anything: it's inherently unlikely and there aren't any indications (except for vague Riathenor or Machine Dimension Book theories which haven't been supported with quotes) that this is even possible. In spite of that: I accept possibility, but not likelihood. Nothing about the Holy Terror's description describes a likelihood or indication of these being their born evolved forms.
Nightmask wrote:Your requirements are geared towards excluding Holy Terrors as being naturally developed (you express your personal bias with the 'unlikely of being evolved' line)
I would prefer 'consciously developed' because I include intelligent design as part of 'nature'. The bias I have towards evolution producing this being unlikely is not personal, it's based on the text and the TWs.
Nightmask wrote:the impression that you've determined that they have to be created rather than natural
'Have to be' is more strawmanning that I don't entertain the idea of evolution. I do. It's just not the best candidate for an explanation.
Nightmask wrote:you over-inflate the worth of the opinions of some techno-wizards
'Many' techno-wizards. I'm not inflating anything: they're exceptionally intelligent magic-technology professionals.
Nightmask wrote:try to make it out that in spite of the vast range of creatures in Rifts and the megaverse in general that somehow living creatures that look like armor somehow can't exist
No, I am not trying to make it out that they "can't" exist, as you keep inserting. Please stop paraphrasing (you do it inaccurately) and only represent my views in the words I give it in. I am arguing that it is not indicated or likely that creatures like this are a product of evolution, that it is indicated and likely that they are products of intelligent design.
Nightmask wrote:while accepting all the even crazier things (including eldritch abominations) as being just fine.
I need specificity here, which Eldritch Abdominations which Evolved are you talking about?
Nightmask wrote:mercenaries can fight for causes
Yes, but that doesn't change the economic incentive inherently associated with them.
Nightmask wrote:you can't keep fighting for causes if you don't earn an income to support your troops. The average mercenary isn't lucky enough to be like Superman or Batman being vastly wealthy (Batman) or having everyone tossing stuff your way as gifts as well as inheriting a vast range of useful technology (Superman), most have to actually say 'hey look buddy I want to help your town out but I have to eat too so I really need something to help keep me going'.
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I'm aware that some groups (such as PCs) might do mercenary acts to earn money to support non-mercenary altruistic initiatives. We could compare this to doctors who get paid to practice medicine earning income to support efforts to do voluntary uncompensated medical acts for the poor.
Larsen's Brigade isn't described as doing this though. Ralph himself has a history of this, of course, having once adventured with paladins led by a cyber-knight. It also mentions that his conditions for staying include choosing worth clients and regularly fighting evil. Odds are this means that Larsen doesn't include Ralph on missions with questionable clients and good people as targets.
Ralph himself, Unprincipled as he is, is not my poster-boy for the Unholy Terror. He isn't the worst known alignment (this is Anarchist, 1 in 20) so his being generally good (though still capable of turning evil) doesn't discount their dark potentials.